Alpena Lumber Co. v. Fletcher

12 N.W. 849, 48 Mich. 555, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 889
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 12 N.W. 849 (Alpena Lumber Co. v. Fletcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alpena Lumber Co. v. Fletcher, 12 N.W. 849, 48 Mich. 555, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 889 (Mich. 1882).

Opinion

Cooley, J.

The purpose of the original bill was to establish the right of complainant’to certain undivided interests in pine lands, in which defendant Fletcher also had interests, and to have partition made. The complainant having subsequently made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors, a supplemental bill was filed by the assignees having in view the same general ob ject.

The history of the controversy, as disclosed by the pleadings and accompanying exhibits, is substantially as follows r

In the summer of 1872, George Prentiss, then resident in Detroit, entered into negotiations with George N. Fletcher of the same city for the purchase of certain pine lands. owned by Fletcher in common with James Campbell, of Boston. The negotiations resulted in obtaining from Fletcher an optional contract, bearing date August 1, 1872, of which the following is a copy:

“ It is .agreed by and between Geo. N. Fletcher of the first part, and George Prentiss of the second part, whereby the party of the first part agrees to sell unto the party of the second part all the pine lands owned by him in town 32 north, range 3 and 4 east, in the State of Michigan, at eleven dollars per acre, it being the undivided half of some eight thousand acres, and also the other undivided half owned by James Campbell, of Boston, Mass., for nine dollars per acre, or for such sum as said Campbell and said Prentiss shall agree upon, and it is at the option of said Prentiss to take all or none, or only Campbell’s half, and if he takes only Campbell’s half, then the said party of the first part agrees to hold in common and to sell his interest as may be desired, by stumpage or otherwise, to said Prentiss or others, as shall seem best to both parties; the said Prentiss to have three months to decide if he takes said lands or not, and in consideration of the above-the said Prentiss gives his note for $6500, sixty days, in part payment of said Campbell’s half, and the balance to be paid within six months from date-, and if he does not take said lands then said Fletcher is to give said Prentiss a contract to lumber on said lands the coming winter at $2.00 for Norway and $3.00 for white pine, payable first of June next; the-[558]*558$6500, with interest from time of payment to June 1st, 1873, to be in payment for said stumpage. If the said Prentiss takes the said Fletcher’s half, time to be given for payment, with interest at 7 per cent., and in case any unforeseen accident shall hinder the parties from getting off the coming winter sufficient stumpage to meet said note, then said Fletcher agrees that "he will pay to said Prentiss the difference on or before the 1st of June, 1873, with interest.”

This paper was signed in duplicate. It will appear from its terms that Fletcher assumed to act for Campbell as agent, but that negotiations by Prentiss directly with Campbell were left to his option. Accordingly Prentiss went to Boston and saw Campbell, and without apprising him of the negotiations already had with Fletcher, secured from him a new optional contract for his undivided one-half interest. This is in the form of a letter addressed by Campbell to Prentiss, of the date of August 9,1872, and is as follows:

“ Dear Sir : In consideration of $1.00 to me in hand paid by you, and $6500, to be paid by you to Geo. N. Fletcher of Detroit, Mich., for me, to apply ás the first payment on this purchase, by August 13, 1872, I hereby sell and assign to you my undivided one-half interest in all the pine land owned by me and George N. Fletcher in town 32 north, range 3 and 4 east, in the State of Michigan, being my entire interest in said lands, estimated at some 3000 acres more or less, the price to be seven and seventy-five one-hundredths dollars ($7.75) per acre; payments to be $6500 down — to George N. Fletcher as above — and the balance in one, two and three years from date of your acceptance of this proposition — equal annual payments— with interest at seven per cent., you to have three months from this date to examine said lands and accept or reject this proposition, and in case you reject it, the money advanced by you is to be either taken out in stumpage or the money refunded to you by June 1, 1873, as agreed by you with George N. Fletcher.”

The prominent differences between this agreement and that which Fletcher had given, so far as concerns the interest of Campbell, are seen to be that in this the price named is one dollar and twenty-five cents less per acre, and the quantity named is a thousand acres less. In each the quantity is given as an estimate. No written acceptance [559]*559was ever made of either of the optional propositions contained in the contract bearing date August 1st, and Prentiss denied that there was ever any oral acceptance, or that he ever made any .purchase of either interest under it. On November 5, 1872, Prentiss caused to be delivered to Campbell a note signed by himself in the following terms:

“ Dear Sir : I beg to notify you that I this day accept your offer of August 9, 1872, as to certain pine lands in Michigan, and that I have paid to Geo. N. Fletcher the sum of six thousand five hundred dollars as stipulated in said offer.”

Before this acceptance was received, and very soon after the date of the offer it refers to, Campbell, learning of the contract of August 1st, and of its better terms, addressed a letter to Prentiss, who was then .in Maine, notifying him that he could not abide by the proposition of August 9th, and desired that it should be returned to him. Prentiss, in response to this, on his return from Maine called upon Campbell, who repeated his request for a return of his proposition, but without avail. Campbell also wrote Fletcher to see Prentiss and have the agreement of August 9th can-celled, and he repeatedly from that time on, to both Prentiss .and Fletcher, protested against it as wrong and as having been obtained from him by deception. Prentiss, however, insisted upon it, and the matter remained unsettled until the spring of 1873. Meantime Prentiss had been cutting timber upon the land, and was naturally anxious to perfect his title. Campbell on the other hand was in need of money, and negotiations were opened anew which resulted in Fletcher giving Prentiss another contract in the following terms, dated April 14, 1873 :

“ In consideration of two thousand dollars this day paid me by George Prentiss to apply on the 2100 odd acres of land purchased by him of James Campbell of Boston, I hereby agree as follows:
“ The said Prentiss shall have the six thousand and some •odd acres of pine land owned by myself and others, in town 32 north, range 3 and 4 east, State of Michigan, as shown- by the minutes and estimates of the same made in 1872 by John Keating and Frank Dyer of Alpena, Mich., for said parties, on the following terms:
[560]*560About twenty-one hundred acres, Campbell’s lands, at seven and seventy-five hundredths ($7.75) per acre, and about one thousand acres, White’s lands, at same prices, both purchases dating from November 4, 1872. The Campbell tract, 2100 acres, to be paid for after deducting-the six thousand five hundred dollars paid last fall, as follows: Two thousand cash — paid to-day* — note for' three months for one thousand dollars, and balance October 15, 1874, with interest at seven per cent.
“ The White tract — 1000 acres — to be paid for in one, two and three years from date of purchase, with interest at seven per cent.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.W. 849, 48 Mich. 555, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alpena-lumber-co-v-fletcher-mich-1882.