Borkowski v. Kolodziejski

52 N.W.2d 348, 332 Mich. 589, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 600
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1952
DocketDocket 24, Calendar 45,099
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 52 N.W.2d 348 (Borkowski v. Kolodziejski) 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
Borkowski v. Kolodziejski, 52 N.W.2d 348, 332 Mich. 589, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 600 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

Reid, J.

Plaintiff filed the hill of complaint in this case for specific performance of a written agreement *591 to sell real estate. From a decree for plaintiff, defendant appeals.

Plaintiff has been for 11 years in the supermarket: grocery and meat business in Warren township,. Macomb county, on the east side of Yan Dyke avenue.. Plaintiff owns lots No 6, 7, 8 and 9 on Kroll-Yan. Dyke subdivision, his store being on lot No 8 and. a part of lot No 9. Lots No 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 are between his property and the corner of Fisher street. The agreement in question has to do with lots No-3, 4 and 5 on the north of and next adjacent to-plaintiff’s property. Plaintiff desired to buy lots-No 3, 4 and 5 for parking lot purposes to be used in. connection with his supermarket. There had been for some months a “For Sale” sign on the lots he desired to buy, with a telephone number on the sign.

On August 19, 1944, plaintiff called the telephone-number that was indicated on the sign. From the party responding, he obtained an address which proved to be the residence number of defendant, and plaintiff went to that address. Besides defendant there were then living at that house, defendant’s, mother, his half-brother Adam William Sumeracki,. and defendant’s 2 sisters, Mrs. Otylia Bebeau and Eleanor (afterwards Mrs. Eleanor Lesjak), all of whom were at home except Eleanor, when plaintiff arrived. Plaintiff made his errand known. There-was much discussion as to price. Defendant held out for $6,000 and plaintiff wanted to pay only $5,500;. but no discussion appears to have occurred over defendant’s willingness to sell, though the testimony is-conflicting as to what was said in the conversation. At last, defendant agreed to sell to plaintiff lots No-3, 4 and 5 for $5,750.

Defendant requested his sister Otylia to fill in by typewriting, the blank spaces of a printed form (which he seems to have had on hand) of offer to sell, and acceptance. She proceeded to prepare the; *592 agreement, though not qualified as a scrivener. Plaintiff signed the agreement, exhibit No 3,' a copy of which is .attached to the bill of complaint. Defendant also signed on a line in a rectangular space in the blank, called a “box,” designed for acceptance and acceptance signatures and the signatures of witnesses to the acceptance signatures. In this “box” were printed words of acceptance and also a clause requiring payment of a real estate dealer’s commission. Otylia crossed out the clause providing for payment of real estate dealer’s commission, evidently because no real estate dealer had been employed. In crossing out that clause, Otylia also crossed out words of acceptance, but left the words in capital letters at the top of the box,

“ACCEPTANCE
“To the Above Named Purchaser and Broker:” In the bottom of the box, below the lines indicating-crossing out drawn by Otylia, defendant signed his name with “L.S.” after it, and Otylia and defendant’s half-brother Adam Sumeracki signed as witnesses to the signature of defendant, who then gave the agreement with his name thus signed to it, to plaintiff and also gave plaintiff the abstract of title, which defendant had already caused to be brought up to August 12, 1944. Plaintiff gave to defendant the $250 specified in the agreement as the down payment. What seems to have been intended as a duplicate of the agreement was also drawn, but the numbers of the lots and other matters are left out, the same price however being- inserted, which intended duplicate was signed by plaintiff but not by the dedefendant, and was left with the defendant.
Plaintiff made practically immediate arrangements for filling in the lots which were low and sometimes covered with water, which filling was done during the ensuing week while plaintiff was absent in *593 Pennsylvania in attendance on Ms father’s funeral. The total cost of the filling was about $1,000.
About August 25, 1944, and after his return from the funeral, plaintiff was informed that defendant had repudiated the agreement and had deeded the lots in question to Adam William Sumeracld, defendant’s half-brother, who had witnessed the agreement, exhibit No 3, and further, found out that Sum-er acid had deeded the lots to Joseph Ochylsld, defendant’s uncle. Plaintiff claims both deeds were without consideration and with notice of plaintiff’s rights.
Plaintiff claims that thereupon he consulted with his attorney, and then learned for the first time that defendant owned only a half interest in the lots.
Defendant claims that he told plaintiff the same evening that the agreement was signed, that Ms sister Eleanor owned a half interest in the lots, but failed to give, though questioned on that subject, any plausible reason for his not waiting nor suggesting to plaintiff that he wait for Eleanor’s return. She was then living in the same house where the agreement was signed, was working at Cunningham’s, and would be through with her work at least by 11:30 p.m. Plaintiff and defendant were not through with the negotiations until 11:30 or close to midnight. Otylia testified, “There was no discussion about waiting for my sister to come home.”

Defendant admits that he agreed to sell for $5,750 as the full price after “quite a bit of discussion about price all evening long,” that he signed exhibit No 3, the agreement in question, and gave it to plaintiff and gave plaintiff the abstract. The name of Eleanor is not in the agreement as prepared by Otylia, but defendant’s name is mentioned as the agreed recipient of the down payment of $250. Judging defendant by his actions rather than by his testimony, we conclude that defendant acted in *594 ignorance or misrecoilection of his rights, or in ten-• tionally deceived plaintiff into thinking that he, defendant, was the sole owner of the lots.

Upon discovering that defendant had only a half' interest, plaintiff filed his bill of complaint for specific performance and offered to comply with the agreement as the court might find it necessary for him to do.

Defendant claims that crossing out the words in printing in the acceptance clause, left the writing-in such condition that there was no contract. Defendant testified that he signed the contract and gave it to plaintiff with his, defendant’s, signature on it. He does not pretend that he signed for any other purpose than to bind himself as a party to the agreement.

We must take the instrument as it is. See Stout v. Hallsted, 239 Mich 81, in which case we say at pages 82, 83:

“The form used was inappropriate to the transaction and the blanks in it were inaptly filled out. For example, the consideration and terms of payment are found where the description should be and the description of the property where the consideration should be. There are incongruous provisions in it. Some of the blanks are not filled out, making some of its provisions meaningless. * * * The parties are named and all of them signed it; the property is described, the price, the terms of payment, the time of performance are all definitely fixed.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.W.2d 348, 332 Mich. 589, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borkowski-v-kolodziejski-mich-1952.