Blackford v. Olmstead

104 N.W. 47, 140 Mich. 583, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 611
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1905
DocketDocket No. 84
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 104 N.W. 47 (Blackford v. Olmstead) 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
Blackford v. Olmstead, 104 N.W. 47, 140 Mich. 583, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 611 (Mich. 1905).

Opinion

Montgomery, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the circuit judge, sitting in chancery, overruling a demurrer to complainant’s bill. The bill alleges, in substance, that Joel Evans was in his lifetime the owner of a farm in the township of Johnstown, Barry county, and that complainant had been employed by him from April, 1884, to July 1,1892, as a farm laborer, at the price of $20 a month for seven months in the year, and $12 a month for the remaining five months. The bill then alleges:

“That on or about the 1st day of July, 1892, the said Joel Evans and his wife, Deborah Evans, desired tó change the contract of employment with complainant, and then and there entered into a contract with complainant substantially as follows:
“That complainant was to work for the said Joel Evans and his wife so long as they should live, and to receive, as and for his compensation for work and labor so performed for them, the sum of $17 per month for seven months in the year, and $5 per month for the remaining five months in the year, and that if complainant Would continue in the employ of the said Joel Evans and his wife during their lifetime, that, as additional compensation for his work and labor, complainant was to have a warranty deed of the east half of the northwest quarter of section 35 in the township of Johnstown, Barry county, and State of Michigan. That this contract was made between said parties and agreed to, and that, in order to carry into effect said contract so made, the said Joel Evans and wife, in or about the month of July, 1892, went to the city of Battle Creek, Calhoun county, Mich., and caused to be made a warranty deed of said 80 acres of land last described to complainant. That said deed of conveyance was drafted by a justice of the peace of the city of Battle Creek, by the name of Briggs. That the consideration mentioned in said warranty deed was the sum of $4,000 and other valuable considerations. That said deed was fully executed by the said Joel Evans and wife, signed by them, and acknowledged before said Briggs, justice of the peace, and witnessed by two witnesses, as required by the recording [585]*585laws of the State, and that said deed was brought by the said Joel Evans and wife to their home in Johnstown, and delivered to complainant. That said deed was returned to the said Joel Evans and his wife, who promised and agreed with the complainant that said deed should be retained by them so long as they lived, and that upon the death of the said Joel Evans and his wife the. same should be immediately placed upon record, and that complainant should come into the full possession and ownership of said 80 acres of land. * * *
“That Deborah Evans, wife of said Joel Evans, died July 28, 1898, and that complainant continued in the employ of said Joel Evans, and in carrying on said contract, until the death of Joel Evens, on the 31st day of December, 1903.
“That said complainant has fully completed all the terms and requirements of said contract. * * *
‘ ‘ That after the death of Deborah Evans, and in December, 1901, one Sarah Thompson was employed as a domestic in the home of Joel Evans, upon a stipulated salary. That, by a systematic course of fraud and deceit and undue influence, she began to take advantage of Joel Evans, and to acquire so much of his property as was in her power so to do, and succeeded in procuring from the said Joel Evans a warranty deed of said 80 acres of land involved in this suit. That said deed was sent for record to the register’s office of Barry county, Mich., with the suspicious direction, ‘Don’t publish,’upon it. That said deed was secured by fraud and deceit and undue influence, and at a time when the said Joel Evans was mentally incompetent to execute a deed, and is void and of no effect as against the rights of complainant.
“That, at the time said deed was procured, (a) Joel Evans was mentally incompetent to execute the same; (b) that he was subject to the habitual use of intoxicating liquors; (c) that the same was procured by fraud and undue influence; (d) that Joel Evans was an ignorant man, unable to read or write, and that said Sarah Thompson, and those combining and confederating with her, took advantage of said Joel Evans, his inability to read and write, of his mental and physical condition and loss of mental capacity by reason of sickness and the excessive use of alcoholic stimulants, and procured from him the deed to Sarah Thompson.
“ That said Sarah Thompson entered into a conspiracy [586]*586with one Sands H. Lane, through the aid and assistance of Jesse Arthur, to procure from said Joel Evans the largest part of his property.
“ That the will and codicils mentioned and described in said bill of complaint express the wish and will of said Sarah Thompson and Sands H. Lane, aided and assisted by the said Jesse Arthur, and that said codicils in no way express the wish and desire of Joel Evans, and were not made and executed by him, but by those conspiring and confederating against him.
“That, the said Sarah Thompson, in order to cheat, wrong, and defraud complainant, destroyed the deed which the said Joel Evans and wife made to complainant of said 80 acres of land, in order that she might better be able to carry out her fraudulent purpose and design.”

The will referred to purported to dispose of all the property of Joel Evans, and treated the land in question here as a part of testator’s property. The will provided a legacy to complainant of $500. The first codicil contained an additional bequest of $500 to complainant. The second codicil provided that, in case complainant was dissatisfied and should bring suit against the estate, the expenses of such suit should be paid out of the $1,000 bequeathed to complainant.

The bill prays that the court decree specific performance of the contract between Joel and Deborah Evans and complainant; that the deed to complainant be re-established, and that title to the 80 acres in question be decreed to complainant; that the deed to Sarah Thompson be set aside; that the codicils to the last will of Joel Evans be set aside in so far as they conflict with the just claims of complainant. The bill also contains a general prayer for relief. The grounds of the demurrer were that under the facts stated the complainant has an adequate remedy at law; that the court has no jurisdiction to set aside the codicils; that the bill is multifarious.

The contention that the complainant should seek his remedy at law is based upon the claim that the bill is to be treated as a bill to quiet title, and as it fails to aver possession in complainant, or that defendants are not in [587]*587possession, it is fatally defective under the statute (1 Comp. Laws, § 448) as construed by this court in Seymour v. Rood, 121 Mich. 173, Chandler v. Graham, 123 Mich. 327, and Crosby v. Hutchinson, 126 Mich. 56.

If the complainant was compelled to rely upon the statute above cited as conferring jurisdiction, the objection urged would be insurmountable. But it bas been frequently held that tbis statute conferring jurisdiction upon courts of chancery in proceedings to quiet title was not intended to restrict tbe jurisdiction of tbe court of chancery in matters before cognizable by that court. King v. Carpenter, 37 Mich. 363; Jones v. Smith,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 N.W. 47, 140 Mich. 583, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackford-v-olmstead-mich-1905.