Boden v. Renihan

300 N.W. 53, 299 Mich. 226, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 456
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1941
DocketDocket No. 72, Calendar No. 41,649.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 300 N.W. 53 (Boden v. Renihan) 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
Boden v. Renihan, 300 N.W. 53, 299 Mich. 226, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 456 (Mich. 1941).

Opinions

Boyles, J.

Plaintiff filed a bill in equity to compel an accounting of moneys claimed by plaintiff to have been entrusted to defendant for safekeeping and for investment. The transactiqns began in 1915 and continued until suit was started in 1939. Plaintiff is an elderly lady, a resident of Grand Bapids, who never married. The defendant (appellant) is a practicing attorney in Grand Bapids, admitted to the bar in 1893. Plaintiff had decree in the court below for $6,100.

The parties first became acquainted in 1912 in connection with a will prepared by defendant for plaintiff’s father who died in 1912. Plaintiff acted as executrix of his will and defendant was the attorney for the estate. Under her father’s will, plaintiff received a farm which she sold in 1915 for $8,000 cash. At the time of sale, the draft in payment was left with defendant overnight, and the next day plaintiff and defendant went to a bank, cashed the draft,, plaintiff used approximately $2,000 to pay off the balance due from her on a land contract, and the remaining $6,000 was left in the bank. The dispute arises mainly over the ultimate use or disposal of this $6,000, together with an additional $4,150 referred to later herein. Plaintiff claims, and defendant admits, the money was left with the bank, although there is a dispute as to how it was to be withdrawn. The parties agree, however, that there was a conversation at that time to the effect that defendant was to loan out this money for plaintiff and invest it in real-estate mortgages. In that regard, plaintiff testified:

*228 UA. And Mr. Renihan was to put that on real-estate mortgages; he concluded that would be the best thing.
“I never had seen Mr. Renihan until the morning my father died. Between the time my father died in 1912 and the time I closed up this Friend deal, I never had any_ other attorney. He took care of my father’s estate.
“I had some conversation with Mr. Renihan about handling the money at the bank that morning. I asked him if he would handle the money; he agreed to handle it on real-estate mortgages.
“Q. He was to handle it for you on real-estate mortgages ?
“A. Yes, well to the best of his — what he could get it out on, get the interest and everything.
“He was to invest it and I think I have given you all of the conversation. He said he would invest it.
“I don’t think I had any of the $6,000. I had the interest on it as the interest came in but I never handled any of the $6,000 myself. Mr. Renihan paid me some interest after that time.”

This occurred in 1915. There is some dispute as to the way the money was actually handled or withdrawn. In that regard, the plaintiff testified:

“Q. Then this last question, Miss Boden: The ' actual way that this $8,000 was taken out of the bank, whether it was by Mr. Renihan signing his own name or your name or some arrangement with the bank, so he could draw it out, do you know?
“A. I do not know how that was arranged; it was between him and Mr. Heft eran in some way; but of course, knowing as little as I did about those things, and I trusted to what they were doing, and Mr. Renihan drew the money evidently or got the money when they wanted to make loans and it was done in that way.
“Q. Are you perfectly sure that you, yourself, *229 did not draw that money out and loan it to the people directly?
“A. Oh, sure, I didn’t have anything to do with it.
“Q. And when you left that day you didn’t have any of the $8,000 with you?
“A. No, not a cent of it.
“Mr. Renihan and I discussed at the bank as to what was to be done with the balance of the money after paying up Miss Harmon’s mortgage. I asked him if he would handle the money, and he said ‘Yes,’ he would.
“Q. Handle it how?
“A. For loaning out on real estate.
“Q. And what did he say?
“A. He said ‘Yes, I will,’ or something of that nature, I don’t know that that is just the words or not. ’ ’

In 1919, plaintiff sold her house on a contract for $4,150; the money on this contract was collected from time to time when due, by Mr. Renihan. Plaintiff testified:

“In 1919 I sold my house on La Grave street to Mr. Crinzi. The amount was $4,150, on contract. The money was paid to Mr. Renihan’s office. I didn’t get any of that, only just the interest money that would come in. It was finally all paid up. I don’t think I got any of the $4,150. Mr. Renihan invested it as I understood it. I can’t tell what happened to that money. It was left with Mr. Renihan. He said he thought real-estate mortgages was good and I agreed with him and he handled that, put it out on real-estate mortgages or in good investments of some kind. The interest came right along then; I was to get the interest.”

Plaintiff thus claims that she left with defendant a total of $10,150 for handling and investment. It was her entire capital. From time to time thereafter, up to and including 1939, plaintiff occasionally *230 talked with Mr. Renihan about these investments. She did not know who borrowed the money; she never investigated or appraised the properties; the mortgages were never in her possession; and she had no information as to the investments except what she obtained from Mr. Renihan. On occasion, she was called to his office by Mr. Renihan to sign discharges of mortgages and testified that at no time was she given the principal of a mortgage, but that “it was turned right over to him to handle again;” that no part of the principal, $10,150, was ever paid to her. Plaintiff kept no books of account or record of moneys paid to her by Mr. Renihan. Her recollection of the details of the loans and the amounts received is hazy, and convinces us that the plaintiff relied entirely upon the. defendant as her attorney and counselor and trusted agent to handle her investments. She testified that the defendant made the loans as he thought best and all her collections and transactions were through his office. The records in the register of deeds’ office showed that between 1915 and 1922 plaintiff appeared as mortgagee in eight different mortgages approximating $10,000. These mortgages have all been discharged, and the record indicates there are now no mortgages of record in which plaintiff appears either as mortgagee or assignee. These mortgages and the discharges were all executed in Mr. Renihan’s office, with either the defendant or a member of his office staff as notary and witnesses. After being recorded in the register of deeds ’ office, they were delivered back to Mr. Renihan. Prom time to time plaintiff received payments from Mr. Renihan, explained by her as being “interest payments,” the amount of which she did not know.

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Bluebook (online)
300 N.W. 53, 299 Mich. 226, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boden-v-renihan-mich-1941.