Brown v. Ring

43 N.W. 770, 77 Mich. 159, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 723
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 N.W. 770 (Brown v. Ring) 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
Brown v. Ring, 43 N.W. 770, 77 Mich. 159, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 723 (Mich. 1889).

Opinions

Long, J.

~We take the statement from the brief of complainants* counsel as to the claim made under their bill.

The complainants, on February 9, 1887, by two contracts, agreed to sell to Charles E. Ring 2,000,000 feet of white pine shingle logs, to be delivered by them in the limits of the Tittabawassee boom, for $7 per thousand feet, payable, on one contract, $2>000 in 90 days, $1,500 in 4 months, $1,500 in 6 months, in notes of Mr. Ring, and the balance (of $5,500 more or less) in 90 days from delivery of logs in boom limits, by Ring’s notes, if the complainants so desired. Payments under this second contract were to be $500 .down, $1,000 in 4 months, $500 in 6 [162]*162months, in Ring’s notes, and balance ($1,500, more or less) in 90 days from delivery of the logs in the boom limits, by Ring’s notes, if complainants so desired. A scale of the logs was to be made by D. C. Kendall, who was to decide when the logs were delivered in the boom limits.

Both the contracts contain the following provision, viz.:

“It is further agreed that, in case said second party desires to renew any of above notes, first parties agree to indorse such renewals, should they be presented for payment, until the shingles manufactured from the logs herein bargained for are sold.
“It is expressly understood that the title to said logs, and the shingles manufactured therefrom, shall remain in the first parties until all the notes given in payment by second party to first parties are paid; also agreed that the discount on all notes shall be paid by second party.”

Both contracts provided that, in case the winter should make it impossible to get in the full quantity of logs, then the first parties only sell and deliver such an amount as they shall have at the breaking up of hauling; and, in case the mill operated by second party should blow up or burn up, he should take only so many of the logs as he should manufacture up to that date, and the notes in excess of the amount manufactured to be paid back by the first parties.

The complainants filed their bill setting out these contracts, and state that they put in about 1,700,000 feet of the logs, for which Ring delivered to them his notes, except such notes as were to be executed after the delivery of the logs in the boom limits, — the quantity of logs delivered from the boom to Ring, and which were manufactured by him into shingles, being 1,052,590 feet by the scale; that there has been paid on them only $1,110; and that there is now due and unpaid $0,618.

[163]*163It is further claimed by the bill that Eing manufactured the logs into shingles at the mill operated by him .at Saginaw, piled the shingles on his dock, and, without the. knowledge or assent of the complainants, sold to parties unknown to them large quantities of the shingles; that with the assent of Wells, Stone & Co., who, for a time, held said contracts and notes as a security by assignment from the complainants, said Eing sold to O. & E. Ten Eyck and to Wells, Stone & Co. a small portion of said shingles, the proceeds of which were applied on said purchase price of said logs, being the said sum of §1,140; and that Eing sold all the balance of the shingles to the defendants Elliott O. Eastman, Sidney L. Eastman, and Ered Hempy, who claim to own them, by said purchase, free from any claim or title of the complainants, and assert their intention to remove them. There are about 1,000,000 of those shingles now on the ■docks.

The bill avers that Eing is entirely irresponsible; that he represented to complainants, from time to time, that he had no opportunity to make sale of the shingles, and that they were ignorant of any sales made; that Eing has sold without their knowledge, intending to cheat and defraud them; that some of the shingles have been removed beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and those remaining on the dock are exposed to loss by fire, and are so exposed that they cannot be insured, and they are also exposed to clandestine removal. v

The bill prays for an injunction against defendants to prevent the removal and disposition of the shingles, - and for the appointment of a receiver to take care of them pending suit.

The bill asserts that, upon the facts, the complainants have an equitable lien upon the shingles, and seeks to [164]*164•foreclose the lien by a sale of the shingles under the decree of the court.

A preliminary injunction was issued, forbidding the removal or disposition of the shingles by the defendants.

The defendant Eing filed an answer not sworn to.

The defendants Eastman, Eastman, and Hempy filed an answer sworn to by Elliott O. Eastman, and say they bought 1,4:00,000 shingles, and paid full value for them at the time of the purchase; that they are T)ona fide purchasers for value; that they shipped of said shingles, during last fall, in all about 909,000 in weekly shipments, and the shingles so bought were the last of the shingles from complainants’ said logs; aver, on information and belief, that complainants knew that Eing was making sales of the shingles to different parties named; and deny that complainants have any interest in the shingles; and also deny, on information and belief, the equities of the bill; and claim the benefit of a demurrer.

Hpon the filing of these answers, the defendants entered a motion for the dissolution of the injunction, basing-the application upon the answer filed; no affidavits being filed on the motion. This motion came on to be heard, together with complainants’ motion for the appointment of a receiver, before his honor, Judge Gage, of the Saginaw circuit, who, on April 22, 1889, denied the motion for dissolution of the injunction, and appointed Mr. Farnum C. Stone as receiver, directing, in such order, that said receiver take possession of said shingles, and hold and dispose of the same only under the direction of the court. From this order the defendants Eastman, Eastman, and Hempy appeal to this Court.

It is insisted by counsel for complainants that this order is not appealable; that it does not in any manner dispose of, or pass upon, or prejudge the merits of the case; that it does not take the propérty from the appel[165]*165lants’ possession, and is in no sense a final order. Counsel cite many cases in support of this proposition; but we do not think the case, upon the facts stated, comes within the principles stated in those cases. Here the defendants claim to be the bona fide purchasers of these shingles, and to have paid for them their full value, and "to have shipped a large part in weekly shipments. As between Ring and themselves,' they are entitled to have possession and control of them. They have taken possession and shipped a part; and, as to the balance (the 500,-000 in controversy here), they have taken such possession as is ordinarily taken of such property. By the terms of the injunction they are prohibited from removing them or disposing of them, and by the appointment of the receiver their rights and interests are interfered with, and their rights to ship them so far prejudiced. The order is appealable, under all well-settled rules. An order appointing a receiver is appe.alable when it takes from a party a possession to which he is entitled of right. Taylor v. Sweet, 40 Mich. 739.

The facts stated in the bill do not bring the case under any general head of equity jurisdiction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 N.W. 770, 77 Mich. 159, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-ring-mich-1889.