Bourne v. Muskegon Circuit Judge

41 N.W.2d 515, 327 Mich. 175
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 1, 1950
DocketCalendar 44,561
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 41 N.W.2d 515 (Bourne v. Muskegon Circuit Judge) 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
Bourne v. Muskegon Circuit Judge, 41 N.W.2d 515, 327 Mich. 175 (Mich. 1950).

Opinions

Bittzel, J.

North J. Bourne, a director of the Hardy Estates, Inc., and executor of the estate owning all the stock in that corporation, petitioned this Court for a writ of prohibition to prohibit and re[179]*179strain the Honorable Joseph E. Sanford, Judge of the circuit court for the county of Muskegon, from taking any further action in certain proceedings brought for voluntary dissolution and receivership of the corporation, and from exercising any jurisdiction in that suit until further order of this Court. He further asked that a writ of mandamus issue directing Judge Sanford to enter an order vacating all his official actions in the proceedings and directing the return of the corporate books and papers. He also asked that the directors who had signed the dissolution petition and Henry L. Beers, the temporary receiver appointed, be restrained from prosecuting or taking any further action herein. On September 1, 1949, we issued an order deferring action in the dissolution proceedings until our further order, but without prejudice to petitioner’s filing motions in the circuit court for substitution as party plaintiff or for dismissal of said proceedings. We further ordered the temporary receiver to' refrain from taking any action until the further order of the court.

On September 13, 1949, we issued a further order after the filing of a supplemental petition, directing the circuit judge and Henry L. Beers to show cause why a peremptory writ of mandamus should not issue vacating all orders in the dissolution proceedings and directing return of all assets, books and papers belonging to the Hardy Estates, Inc., and we further restrained the circuit judge and Henry L. Beers, as temporary receiver, and the 4 parties who, as directors, signed the petition for dissolution, from taking any further action or in any manner prosecuting or attempting to prosecute any action or proceedings against the aforesaid Hardy Estates, Inc., or in regard to the property thereof or management [180]*180of its affairs or its dissolution until the further order of this Court.

Hardy Estates, Inc., is a Michigan corporation organized in 1939 with a capital stock of the nominal value of $1,000. The corporation owns the entire capital stock of $100,000 of the Hardy Development Company, which became the owner of real estate in Muskegon, Michigan, on which it had erected a store building’ at a cost of over $450,000 and leased it to Sears Roebuck & Company for a term of 25 years on a per cent, gross sales basis with a minimum income rental guarantee of $25,000 a year. The Hardy Estates, Inc., also holds all of the capital stock of another corporation known as the Muskegon Real Estate Corporation, which had owned a large department store in Muskegon until December, 1947, when it sold the business and leased its property to Herpolsheimer & Company for a long term of years on a rental of 3 per cent, on its gross sales business and also with a minimum guarantee.

Charles A. L. McIntosh, the owner of all of the capital stock of Hardy Estates, Inc., died on November 24, 1948. In his will he named as his executors Charles Lome Fisk McIntosh, his son, Richard H. Reed and North J. Bourne. The latter, as sole executor, is plaintiff and petitioner in the present proceedings. The will was admitted to probate by the probate court for the county of Wayne and letters testamentary were issued to the 3 executors nominated in the will. In addition to other provisions, the will creates a trust of the residue, principally consisting of the entire capital stock of the Hardy Estates, Inc., and all of which is bequeathed to the executors and trustees named. The trust provides for the payment of monthly sums to testator’s wife, Catherine F. McIntosh, and to each of his granddaughters, Catherine Lee Davis and Carol Anne Davis, and also to a grandson for a certain num[181]*181ber of years. At the end of this period, and subject to certain contingencies, the 2 granddaughters are to receive the corpus of the trust. It further provides that testator’s son Charles Lome Fisk McIntosh shall receive a sum equal to 20 per cent, of the annual net income of the trust estate, the income to be computed before payment of income, inheritance or Federal estate taxes, such sum also to be compensation for his services as one of the executors and trustees of the estate. It also provides for the payment of $100 per month to North J. Bourne.

Several specific provisions of the will are significant. One creates a “spendthrift trust” as to each cestui que trust. Another directs that the executors and trustees, Charles Lome Fisk McIntosh, North J. Bourne and Richard H. Reed and their successors, shall be members of the board of directors of the corporation comprising the Hardy interests. In nominating and appointing the executors and trustees, the will directs that they shall not give bond other than that absolutely provided by law, but it does not request that they be excused from giving more than a mere nominal bond. It further provides that:

“I hereby direct that my son, Charles Lome Fisk McIntosh, one of the executors and trustees, shall assume and take active charge of the management, control and care of said trust; no expenditures of funds to the beneficiaries, other than the specific amounts provided, shall be made without the unanimous approval and consent of all the trustees. In the event that my son Charles Lome Fisk McIntosh is incompetent or unable to carry on his duties as one of the executors or trustees, he shall be removed during the period of such incompetence and the remaining trustees shall appoint a successor to be approved by the probate court to act. during such period.”

[182]*182This clause indicates that the testator may have feared or anticipated some of the difficulties that thereafter arose. The will was admitted to probate and each of the 3 executors so nominated was appointed by the probate court for the county of Wayne on January 10, 1949, and filed a bond of $50,000 as directed by the probate court.

On June 16, 1949, a little more than 5 months following the appointment of the executors, the probate court entered an order requiring such executors to give an additional bond in the sum of $150,000 or be removed. While charges reflecting on the actions of Charles L. F. McIntosh, as executor, were made in the oral argument to this Court and the petition herein sets forth that in the probate proceedings Charles L. F. McIntosh and Richard H. Reed were charged with mismanagement of the estate and the illegal expenditure of its funds, there is no transcript of the record in the probate court showing the reasons for this order. We are, however, not unmindful of the fact that when the will of decedent expressly provided that the executors and trustees be not “required to give bond other than that absolutely required by law,” and when the probate judge found it necessary to order an additional bond of $150,000, or otherwise they would be removed, there must have been good reason for his action. Bourne filed such additional bond but Charles L. F. McIntosh and Richard H. Reed did not, and on July 26, 1949, an order was entered in the probate court removing McIntosh and Reed as executors and ordering them to render to the court their final account within 10 days after the service upon them of a copy of the order. The record shows no appeal from this order. It became res judicata.

Upon the removal of Charles L. F. McIntosh and Richard H.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.W.2d 515, 327 Mich. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bourne-v-muskegon-circuit-judge-mich-1950.