Campbell v. Campbell

301 N.W.2d 896, 102 Mich. App. 462, 1980 Mich. App. LEXIS 3148
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1980
DocketDocket No. 48025
StatusPublished

This text of 301 N.W.2d 896 (Campbell v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Campbell, 301 N.W.2d 896, 102 Mich. App. 462, 1980 Mich. App. LEXIS 3148 (Mich. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Beasley, J.

Defendants appeal as of right from judgments awarded plaintiff quieting title in her to real property consisting of 30 acres in Sandstone Township, Jackson County, Michigan.

In 1956, plaintiff, Kerttu S. Campbell, and defendant, Robert H. Campbell, then husband and wife, purchased the subject real property, giving a purchase money mortgage in the sum of $2,600 to his parents, A. J. Campbell and defendant, Maritena Campbell. The mortgage bore interest at the rate of five percent per annum and was payable in annual payments of $250 or more.

On January 17, 1968, plaintiff started a divorce case against defendant, Robert, which culminated in a divorce judgment on January 28, 1972.

No payments were made on the mortgage until February 13, 1968, when defendant Robert asserts he paid his mother, defendant Maritena, $5 toward the interest on the obligation, which payment was for the purpose of stopping the statute of limita[464]*464tions from expiring.1 It is not disputed that plaintiff did not know of this $5 payment until after June 24, 1976, when she started the within proceedings. Defendant Robert also claimed to have paid $55 to defendant Maritena on October 31, 1972, to apply on the principal.

The divorce judgment afforded defendant Robert an option to purchase the subject real property for $18,000, less "any amount due and any lien attaching to the property by way of mortgage”. Defendant appealed the divorce judgment on other grounds, and this Court extended the time within which defendant Robert could exercise the option to purchase the subject real property. Within the extended period of time, defendant Robert tendered to plaintiff the sum of $13,938.19, that being the sum alleged by defendant Robert to be necessary to exercise the option under the divorce judgment.

The net figure used by defendant Robert in tendering payment under the option was arrived at by taking the $18,000 figure provided in the divorce judgment and deducting the mortgage debt allegedly due defendant Maritena, with appropriate interest computations applicable.2 Plaintiff rejected the tender as being in an insufficient amount.

In connection with the amount necessary to exercise the option, the major item of difference between the parties was whether or not to deduct the amount of the mortgage from the amount that defendant Robert was required to pay to exercise the option. Subsequently, on June 18, 1976, plaintiff commenced this action under MCL 600.2932; [465]*465MSA 27A.2932, to quiet title to the subject real property and to obtain an adjudication that the mortgage was null and void as to her.

On October 26, 1977, the trial court filed an opinion, finding that defendant Robert had not made a proper, valid tender under the terms of the divorce judgment and, thus, granting summary judgment to plaintiff against defendant Robert. The trial court held that in order for the tender to be valid the entire net amount owed must be tendered and that this was not done.

On September 17, 1979, the trial court filed a further written opinion, granting plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment against defendant Maritena, saying that the $5 payment by defendant Robert to defendant Maritena did not stop the statute of limitations from continuing to fun on the possible claim against plaintiff, and that, therefore, plaintiff’s obligation to defendant Maritena under the mortgage was discharged by expiration of the statute of limitations, and the mortgage was null and void as to plaintiff.

On appeal, defendants raise two issues.

First, defendants assert that the $5 payment on the mortgage by defendant Robert to defendant Maritena in 1968 stopped the statute of limitations from running with respect to defendant Maritena’s right to foreclose the mortgage against plaintiff. Defendants contend that the sole purpose of the joint obligor statute3 was to prevent payment by one of two or more joint obligors reviving the statute of limitations as to other joint obligors who did not acquiesce in such payment. Defendants say that if defendant Robert’s $5 interest payment had been made after expiration of the statute of limitations, then the joint obligor statute would prevent [466]*466the payment by defendant Robert from having the effect of reviving the statute of limitations, i.e., reviving defendant Maritena’s right to foreclose her mortgage against plaintiff.

We disagree. Section 5803,4 5which provides the 15-year statute of limitations for foreclosure of mortgages, and § 5825,® which is the joint obligor statute, are both in Chapter 58 entitled "Limitation of Actions of the Revised Judicature Act”. Therefore, the joint obligor statute is applicable in the present case under subsection 5825(3), which provides:

"If there are 2 or more joint obligors, or joint executors or joint administrators of any obligor, no one of them shall lose the benefit of the provisions of this chapter so as to be chargeable merely because of any payment made by any of the others.”

The predecessor statutes of §§ 5803 and 5825 have been interpreted in situations not unlike the one faced here.

In Curtiss v Perry,6 plaintiff sought to foreclose an 1876 mortgage against the defendants who were husband and wife. Although the mortgage originally covered three small parcels of land owned by defendant husband and an 80-acre piece owned by defendant wife, at the time of foreclosure, only the 80-acre parcel owned by the wife had not been released from the mortgage. The mortgage became due three years after its date. Defendants claimed that the mortgage was paid, or that if not paid in full, it was barred by the statute of limitations. It was conceded that the mortgage was barred by the statute of limitations unless a [467]*467certain endorsement on the mortgage indicating a payment of $5 by the husband in 1889, 13 years after the 1876 mortgage, served to stop running of the statute.

The Court said that one joint contractor cannot, by an individual payment, bind another joint contractor so as to prevent the statute of limitations from running in his favor. A joint, maker of a note does not lose the benefit of the statute of limitations by payments made by another joint maker. The fact that the payer was the husband does not change the situation. There was nothing in the record to show that the payment was made by or with the knowledge or consent of the wife. Consequently, the Supreme Court affirmed a decree that dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint.

In Brown v Hayes,7 the plaintiff sought to foreclose an 1879 mortgage against the defendants who were husband and wife. A statute of limitations defense was available to defendants unless a payment was made and that fact endorsed on the mortgage. The trial court found that an endorsed 1894 payment had been made by defendant husband, but without sufficient evidence to show that it was made by authority of defendant wife. The trial court then, relying on Curtiss, supra, held that the payment did not stop the running and expiring of the statute of limitations against defendant wife.

The Supreme Court reversed, saying:

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Related

Hupp Farm Corp. v. Neef
292 N.W. 689 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1940)
Guardian Depositors Corp. v. Wagner
283 N.W. 29 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1938)
Bergman v. Dykhouse
25 N.W.2d 210 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1946)
LeBaron Homes, Inc. v. Pontiac Housing Fund, Inc.
29 N.W.2d 704 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1947)
Curtiss v. Perry
85 N.W. 1131 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1901)
Brown v. Hayes
109 N.W. 845 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
301 N.W.2d 896, 102 Mich. App. 462, 1980 Mich. App. LEXIS 3148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-campbell-michctapp-1980.