Bojarski v. Milus

198 N.W. 182, 226 Mich. 475, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 558
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1924
DocketDocket No. 61.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 N.W. 182 (Bojarski v. Milus) 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
Bojarski v. Milus, 198 N.W. 182, 226 Mich. 475, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 558 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Defendant, William Milus, owned a farm located near Whitmore lake in Washtenaw *476 county, Michigan, containing 110 acres more or less, which in 1921 he listed for sale with a real estate agent in Detroit named De Grandchamp. The agent found plaintiffs as prospective purchasers, took them to see the property and meet defendant, resulting in an agreement for sale of said farm to plaintiffs on a basis price of $17,000, to be paid by their conveying to defendant a house and lot located at River Rouge near Detroit at a valuation of $8,000 and transferring to him an automobile appraised at $1,000, making the so-called down payment a total of $9,000, the balance of $8,000 to be paid at the rate of $100 per month for the first three months and thereafter $300 every three months with interest at the rate of 6 per cent.

The necessary papers were thereupon executed including a land contract dated July 21, 1921, from defendant to plaintiffs for his Whitmore lake farm, drawn on what is known as a Union Trust Company form providing for his furnishing plaintiffs “a Union Trust Company abstract, guaranty or certificate of title,” and should execute and deliver to them a good and sufficient warranty deed of the premises “free and clear of and from all incumbrances,” etc., upon their completing the deferred payments provided for. On the same date and occasion the parties signed an agreement on a partially filled out form in which the following appears:

“The said party of' the first part covenants and agrees to and with the parties of the second part who are making an exchange of a farm in Washtenaw county for house and' lot on the northeast corner of Henry and Richter streets, River Rouge, Mich., by which each party are to furnish abstracts to each other free and clear of all incumbrances excepting an $8,000.00 balance on farm. * * * (Unfilled blanks.)

“And for the true and faithful performance of all and every of the covenants and agreements above mentioned the parties to these presents bind them *477 selves, unto each, other, in the penal sum of two thousand ($2,000.00) dollars, as fixed and settled damages to be paid by the failing party.”

It is not questioned but that each party furnished an abstract to the other, but at just what time is not clearly shown.

It appears that a Mr. Jacobs who was defendant’s grantor of the Whitmore lake farm and held a clear title to it had visions that it possessed subterranean wealth, and in the warranty deed he gave defendant expressly excepted and reserved to himself and wife all mineral and oil rights therein, of which defendant made no mention to the plaintiffs during their negotiations but sought to except from his contract for sale of the land by a reserving clause similar to that in his deed from Jacobs. Plaintiffs at first signed the contract with the reservation inserted, being deceived as they claim by the contract having been read to them with the reservation omitted. ■ They discovered the reservation shortly after the papers were executed, and immediately made complaint, refusing to go on with the deal unless it was corrected. The contracting parties then met at the office of defendant’s agent and that clause was stricken out of the contract by agreement of all concerned. Upon the hearing in the lower court much testimony was devoted to that subject with emphatic contradictory allegations and denials. The trial court found the facts to be as plaintiffs claimed, and so adjudicated. Counsel for defendant in their brief in this court emphasize upon the facts so found by the court that it stands undisputed plaintiffs knew when they accepted the contract that there was an outstanding mineral and oil reservation held by one Jacobs, and it was beyond defendant’s power to give a clear title except by securing from Jacobs a conveyance of the rights he had reserved. It also stands undisputed that when defendant gave *478 them the contract he bound himself to do that very thing to the same extent they obligated themselves to pay the balance for the place, and subsequent events show that when he found it advisable to do so he was able to secure such a conveyance from Jacobs.

After the contract was entered into, on July 21,1921, plaintiffs transferred and surrendered to defendant their River Rouge real estate and automobile as agreed, took possession of the Whitmore lake farm and some personal property which went with it, thereafter occupying and using the same as their own. They made their payments under the contract and, with defendant’s written consent, negotiated a sale of their interest in the farm to a couple of men named Bartz, and their wives, by an agreement dated January 10, 1922. When the Bartzes discovered the outstanding Jacobs reservation they declined to go on with the deal until that cloud was removed. They visited defendant with Bojarski and tried to induce him to clear up the title, without success. He then denied any liability in that connection and insisted, as he did at the hearing of this case, that his contract to sell the land contained the same mineral and oil reservation as his deed from Jacobs, denied that it had ever been stricken out with his knowledge or consent and contended that if it had been stricken out in plaintiff’s copy he knew nothing of it. He admitted, however, that he went with Bojarski to see Jacobs about it, to whom Bojarski made some kind of an offer which was refused. The Bartzes had then taken possession of the farm, but finding defendant refused to clear up his title rescinded their tentative contract and returned possession to plaintiffs, who in the meantime were urging defendant to adjust the matter, and offered to pay, the January payment before it was due if he would do so.

On February 23, 1922, defendant served notice of forfeiture on plaintiffs for default in payment and *479 commenced summary proceedings before a circuit court commissioner to oust them. On March 13, 1922, plaintiffs filed their bill asking for an injunction, rescission and cancellation of their contract with defendant, and an accounting. The trial court after hearing the case upon proofs taken in open court filed an opinion, and granted a decree on January 17, 1923, setting aside the contract between the parties of July 21, 1921, ordering plaintiffs to vacate the farm within 40 days, requiring defendant to repay them the $9,000 they had paid him upon it and making the same a lien upon the land, but providing that if within 30 days after date of the decree he should tender a good and sufficient warranty deed to the River Rouge property to plaintiffs, and pay them $1,000 to cover the automobile he had received, the lien should be discharged; also making provision under certain contingencies for sale of some live stock and other personal property on the place, as in case of perishable property, the proceeds to be deposited with the clerk of the court; and for an accounting between the parties before a circuit court commissioner relative to interest, rents, profits, etc., received by or due to the respective parties in connection with the several properties involved.

On February 24, 1923, defendant moved the court to set aside the decree and grant a rehearing, setting up that he had sold the River Rouge property before this controversy arose, and various other stated reasons why the parties could not be placed

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 N.W. 182, 226 Mich. 475, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bojarski-v-milus-mich-1924.