Campau v. Van Dyke

15 Mich. 371, 1867 Mich. LEXIS 31
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 15 Mich. 371 (Campau v. Van Dyke) 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
Campau v. Van Dyke, 15 Mich. 371, 1867 Mich. LEXIS 31 (Mich. 1867).

Opinion

Christiancy J.

On the 7th day of July, 1853, Antoine Beaubien, an old, uneducated and weak minded Frenchman without children, being the owner of a large landed estate in and near Detroit, the management of which he was compelled to entrust to an agent, executed a deed of trust, convejdng the property to John T. Meldrum, then his confidential agent and manager of the property. This deed reserved to the grantor the possession of a small part of the property, and the income of most of it, during his life; but made full provision for the distribution of the property and its proceeds among several different persons, mostly his relatives, including his second wife, then living, and several of her children. The complainant who had been brought up in his family, and his sister, the wife of Meldrum, were second cousins of the grantor, and they were the principal beneficiaries under the deed. John T. Meldrum, however, was made a joint beneficiary with his wife.

On the 29th day of October, 1853, Beaubien, the grantor, having, for some reason, become dissatisfied with this arrangement of his property, filed his bill in chancery against Meldrum and the counsel who had drawn up and superintended the execution of the trust deed, alleging that he had been imposed upon, and fraudulently induced by them to execute the deed, under the belief, on his part, that the same was a last will and testament, and praying that it might be set aside.

[374]*374While this bill was pending, and after the answer of the defendants therein had been filed, on the 4th day of February, 1854, Beaubien sold and conveyed to James A. Van Dyke, by warranty deed, the lands previously conveyed by the trust deed to Meldrum. And on the 7th day of March, 1854, Beaubien’s bill was discontinued and the files withdrawn; and on the same day Van Dyke filed his bill in the Circuit Court for the county of Wayne in chancery against Meldrum, the trustee, and all the beneficiaries mentioned in the deed; setting forth his purchase of the property, alleging that said Beaubien had, notwithstanding the trust deed, remained in possession— that the trust deed was executed by Beaubien under the misapprehension that it was a will, he being unable to speak the English language and understanding it very imperfectly, uneducated, of weak mind and incapable of comprehending the legal effect of such an instrument; but making no charge of fraud against any one in the procurement of its execution — praying that the trust deed may be set aside and cancelled, and the trustee decreed to release and convey to complainant Van Dyke.

Several of the defendants in Van Dyke’s suit were minors, and, among others, the present complainant; and Jeremiah Yan Rensselaer, a solicitor of the court, was, on motion of Van Dyke, on the 21st day of March appointed guardian ad litem to the present complainant and the other infant defendants; the petition for that purpose being in the hand-writing of the present complainant. On the 23d day of March Yan Rensselaer filed an answer for all the infant defendants in the usual form, submitting their rights to the protection of the court. He also, on the same day, filed the answer for Meldrum and wife as their solicitor, admitting most of the allegations of the bill, neither admitting nor denying the allegation that the trust deed was executed by Beaubien under the belief that it was a will, but declaring his belief that Beaubien had executed it with [375]*375the full understanding that it was a deed of trust. Both Meldrum and his wife, however, declaring that they have no desire or wish to hold said property or the benefits conferred by said deed in opposition to the wishes of Beaubien; and declaring that they offer no resistance to the prayer of Van Dyke’s bill, aside from a simple narration of the facts set forth in the answer, and submit to such decree or order in the premises as the court may deem just and proper.

On the 18th day of April testimony on the part of Van Dyke purports to have been taken, Van Rensselaer, as solicitor and guardian, assenting: no replication having been then or afterwards filed. The witnesses were not cross-examined, and no testimony was taken on the part of the defendants. On the 20th of April, 1854, a decree was taken granting the relief prayed for, setting aside the deed of trust, and directing Meldrum to release and convey to Van Dyke. This decree was approved by the judge on the 24th of April, and directed to be entered.

Van Dyke, having previously taken possession under his deed from Beaubien, continued in possession, and proceeded to make sales of a considerable portion of the property, until his death, which happened on the 7th of May, 1855; having made a will, his executors and devisees have since continued in the possession and control of the property.

On the 11th day of December, 1854, about seven months and a half after the entry of the decree, the present complainant attained the age of majority. Complainant’s bill in the present case was filed on the 5th day of August, 1861, against Meldrum and the executors, devisees and heirs of Van Dyke. This bill sets up and insists upon the validity of the trust deed from Beaubien to Meldrum, and complainant’s rights under it, as one of the cestuis que trust — • alleges that the decree in the Van Dyke suit was obtained by a corrupt and fraudulent agreement between Van Dyke, and Meldrum, the trustee, by which the latter received [376]*376some twenty thousand dollars in property and otherwise, on the understanding and agreement that no real or effectual defense should be made by him, and that no real defense was made — that Yan Dyke controlled all the proceedings in the cause, as well on the part of defendants as his own — that Yan Rensselaer, who appeared as solicitor for Meldrum and wife and as guardian for the present complainant and other infant defendants, was employed and paid by Yan Dyke, to put in sham answers and defenses which were prepared by Yan Dyke himself' or under Ms direction; and that all the acts of Van Rensselaer, as such solicitor and guardian, were in the interest of Yan Dyke, collusive and fraudulent — that no real defense was made or intended to be made — that Van Dyke, for the purpose of securing an influence over complainant, about the same day that he procured Ms deed from Beaubien, employed complainant to come into his law office as a clerk — that complainant was ignorant of the nature of the trust deed and the benefits thereby provided for himself, and was by Yan Dyke induced to believe that he, Yan Dyke, was acting as a friend both to complainant and Beaubien, and to get the latter out of Ms trouble — that by these and like plausible statements Van Dyke induced complainant to sign a paper which he did not then know, but has since learned, was a petition on the part of complainant for the appointment of a guardian ad litem, that complainant, upon enquiries instituted at the time of Yan Dyke’s death, ascertained for the first time the existence of the decree and its effect, that, till then, he had no actual notice or knowledge of said decree or of the provision made for himself in the trust deed.

The bill prays that the decree may be set aside, as obtained by fraud and collusion, and declared void; that said trust deed may be established, the trusts revested, and Meldrum decreed to execute and carry them into effect, [377]*377that complainant be let into possession, and that an account may be taken of the sales, receipts, rents and profits, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Mich. 371, 1867 Mich. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campau-v-van-dyke-mich-1867.