American Cedar & Lumber Co. v. Gustin

210 N.W. 300, 236 Mich. 351, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 848
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1926
DocketDocket No. 82.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 210 N.W. 300 (American Cedar & Lumber Co. v. Gustin) 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
American Cedar & Lumber Co. v. Gustin, 210 N.W. 300, 236 Mich. 351, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 848 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

In 1908, William H. Sanborn, William T. Hoey and Frederick H. Reibenack were the owners of a considerable tract of land in Alpena and adjoining counties and conducted lumbering operations thereon. The title to the lands was in Sanborn. At the same *354 time the defendant Gustin owned a still larger tract in the' same counties. Under agreement between the parties, Gustin transferred his lands to Sanborn as trustee. The lands were to be lumbered and sold on joint account and the net proceeds divided. Soon after this agreement was entered into, the plaintiff corporation was organized, the three parties above named holding equal shares of stock therein, and the title to all the lands, including those conveyed by Gustin, lodged in it. Lumbering was conducted and sales made by the plaintiff until 1911, when Beibenack bought the stock of Sanborn and Hoey and transferred a share to two other persons in order that the corporation might continue to function. Operations were continued until 1913, when the defendant Gustin, after expressing some dissatisfaction concerning the result of the operations, offered to sell his lands to plaintiff for $16,000 or purchase plaintiff’s at the same price. Gustin’s offer to purchase was accepted. It was arranged that as Gustin disposed of any lands or timber the proceeds should be credited on the $16,000. In December, 1918, approximately 9,600 acres were deeded to Gustin. In 1920, Gustin claimed that he had not only paid this amount in full but had overpaid it, whereupon plaintiff filed its bill of complaint herein for an accounting as to the amount due. Gustin answered, consenting to the accounting, and by cross-bill averred that moneys were due him thereon, and prayed for delivery of a deed of the lands- and for decree for payment of the amount found to be due him.

In January, 1922, after the cause was at issue, the defendant Besser secured from the plaintiff a warranty deed of said lands for an expressed consideration of $20,000, and placed the same on record. Gustin thereupon by permission of the court filed an amended answer and cross-bill, in which Besser was made a party defendant and required by an order of the court *355 to answer. In it he prayed that Besser’s deed be canceled as a cloud on his title. Besser answered, and by cross-bill asked that the title be quieted in him. He also averred that Gustin had conveyed some of said lands to the Beaver Lake Club, a corporation, and asked that it be made a party defendant and its deed canceled. The club was made a party defendant and answered, denying that Besser was entitled to any relief as to it.

The trial court, by decree filed on August 18, 1924, ordered plaintiff to convey the lands to Gustin and granted a decree in his favor against plaintiff for an overpayment in the sum of $3,592.96. He canceled the Besser deed, but ordered Gustin to pay Besser $50, which he had paid to remove an apparent cloud', upon the title to one parcel of said land. The defendant Besser appeals.

1. Besser’s Title. It is insisted that Mr. Besser was a good-faith purchaser, without notice, actual or constructive, of the equitable claim of Mr. Gustin. The trial court in his opinion, after reviewing the proofs at some length, said:

“I am of the opinion that Mr. Besser, when he obtained his deed in January, 1922, had such notice and knowledge of the claims of Mr. Gustin, and his grantee and lessee, the Beaver Lake Club, as would apprise an ordinarily prudent and honest man that he ought to inquire further before purchasing the lands involved, as to the extent, nature and foundation of such claim. * * *

“He bought the lands in great haste for an inadequate consideration, and, in my judgment, was not a bona fide purchaser of the same.”

A careful consideration of the entire record satisfies us that he reached the right conclusion.

Mr. Besser had long been a resident of Alpena county. He had for many years dealt extensively in timber and timber lands in that and the adjoining counties, and was able to estimate the quantity of timber on land *356 and to fix its value and that of the land on which it was standing. He visited the lands in question, known as the Beaver Creek lands, with a view to their purchase in the year 1912 and again in 1917 and 1920. He testified, relative to his purchase, that he casually met Reibenack in a store in Alpena and asked him if his land in 29-5 was still for sale, and, on being informed that it was, asked the best price he would take for it; that Reibenack went to the back part of the store and returned, handing him a paper on which was written “$20,000;” that he said the price was ■too much and that Reibenack “finally got down to a '$6,000 basis and I was to pay the taxes;” that Reibenack furnished him a plat of the lands and he went to the office of an abstractor and requested him ;to look up the title; that a little later the same day he went back and was told that the title was in the plaintiff except as to a few descriptions, the title to which was somewhat doubtful; that he then saw Frederick Polzin about getting the money; that they went to Robert Polzin’s store, where he got $2,000 in currency and a check for $4,000; that Reibenack had the deed prepared and executed by himself as president and Frederick C. Burnett as secretary of plaintiff, and he paid him the $6,000; that when the deed was prepared there was talk about the revenue stamps which should be placed on it, and that Reibenack said there were some taxes and “Oh, well, make it $20,000,” and that the stamps required for that consideration were placed on it and paid for by Reibenack; that he then went to the county treasurer’s office and paid the taxes needed to entitle the deed to record ($1,320.91) and left it for record. All this occurred on the same day. An entry was made on the books of the plaintiff which stated that the purchase price was $20,000. The deed from Gustin to the Beaver Lake Club of a part of these lands was then on record. Reibenack *357 left Alpena the next day and had not been heard from at the time of the trial.

Mr. Burnett owned one share of stock in the plaintiff company, and acted as its secretary. He had kept its books for many years. He knew of Gustin’s offer to purchase for $16,000 and the company’s acceptance of it. He made out the account, a copy of which was attached to the bill of complaint, and signed and verified the bill filed as secretary and treasurer of the plaintiff. That the execution of the deed to Besser, if intended to cut off the rights of Gustin, was a gross fraud on the part of the officers of the company cannot be doubted. Burnett had no financial interest in the company. It is inconceivable that he would have executed this deed unless satisfied that Besser had full knowledge that the title of the company conveyed to him thereby was subject to the equitable claim of Gustin.

Beaver Lake is a fine body of water. Mr. Besser knew that several of the descriptions of the lands in question bordered on it. A dam was built at the outlet in the fall of 1920. Mr. Gustin was at that time one of the county road commissioners of the county, and at a meeting of the board of supervisors in May, 1921, the charge was made that work had been done on the dam by employees of the commissioners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 N.W. 300, 236 Mich. 351, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-cedar-lumber-co-v-gustin-mich-1926.