Central Holding Co. v. Bushman

213 N.W. 120, 238 Mich. 261, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 640
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1927
DocketDocket Nos. 28, 29.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 120 (Central Holding Co. v. Bushman) 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
Central Holding Co. v. Bushman, 213 N.W. 120, 238 Mich. 261, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 640 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Clark, J.

Two causes in equity were consolidated and heard together. The first challenges three mortgages as usurious and seeks appropriate relief. Plaintiffs Harold R. Finn and his wife, Geraldine Finn, were the mortgagors. After the indebtedness had been determined and properly evidenced and the mortgages given to secure the same, and after they had been recorded, the Finns conveyed the premises by warranty deed to Central Holding Company, a Michigan corporation. The consideration recited in the deed is one dollar and other valuable considerations. The deed excepts “mortgages of record,” but it does not say that the grantee assumed or agreed to pay the *265 mortgage debt. The corporation is joined with the Finns as a plaintiff. The defendants are the Grange Life Insurance Company, mortgagee in a first mortgage to secure indebtedness in the sum of $260,000. Michigan Finance Corporation, second mortgagee, indebtedness $110,000. Franklin E. Bushman and others, third mortgagees, indebtedness, $100,500. There are other defendants to whom it is unnecessary to refer. Preparatory to giving the deed Harold Finn caused the plaintiff corporation to be organized with a capital stock of $1,000,000, and he became president thereof.

The Finns’ equity of redemption was valued at the sum of $845,000 taken and accepted as “actual existing intrinsic value and stock was issued for that amount,” Finn receiving a large 'block of stock and Mrs. Finn a smaller amount. We quote from a brief:

“The Central Holding Company, in setting up its capital account in connection with the transfer in question, showed that it acquired the property including land and apartment building at a figure of around $835,000 and in that connection assumed the mortgages against the property and some accounts payable and issued the stock in question for the balance in the sum of $345,000. The opening entry of the books of the Central Holding Company exemplifies the transaction as one in which the mortgages were assumed by the corporation. On or about June 18, 1923, the Central Holding Company applied to the Michigan securities commission for the validation of its capital stock for sale to the public. $655,000 par value of this stock was approved by the commission on June 18, 1923. Upon the application and in granting the license, the securities commission accepted as a fact that there was in the property an actual value of $345,000 over and above the incumbrances on the property. The inquiry of the commission was as to whether or not the equity over and above the mortgages was $345,000.”

It is established by the record that the plaintiff corporation as grantee took subject to the mortgages *266 and that the full amount of the same was deducted from the purchase price.

The first mortgage to the Grange Life Insurance Company was a construction loan. This is true in a limited sense of the third mortgage. Franklin E. Bushman was custodian of the funds which he disbursed as the work progressed. At the time of the deed to plaintiff corporation, the building was not completed and a part of the funds provided remained in Bushman’s hands, and at that time the amounts deducted from the face of these mortgages and retained by Bushman and others as bonus, commission, compensation and charges had been fully determined and settled by contracts with the Finns, and had been paid or appropriated. The amount then remaining to be paid on construction was then fixed and determined to the knowledge of the plaintiffs. Later Bushman, so far as we need be concerned here, disbursed the fund so remaining in construction agreeable to the contract.

The second mortgage was not a construction loan. It was given to provide funds to take up a mortgage on the lots on which the building was to be erected and in which lots the Finns had a comparatively small interest, and to satisfy a certain existing obligation of Finn. At the time of the hearing the second and third mortgages had been foreclosed by advertisement under the statute and sheriff’s deeds upon the sales had been made and recorded. At the time of the hearing the first mortgage was being foreclosed in like manner. The bill was dismissed. Plaintiffs have appealed.

Plaintiff corporation, grantee of the mortgagors, may not here raise the question of usury. It took subject to the mortgages. The amount thereof was deducted from the purchase price, and in effect appropriated by the vendors, the Finns, for the payment of the mortgage debt. The question of usury is personal to the mortgagors. The rule is stated in 39 Cyc. p. 1068:

*267 “But when it is manifest that the intention of the parties was that only the vendor’s equity of redemption should pass to the purchaser, and the purchase-price had been reduced by the amount of the usurious lien, the transaction is equivalent to an appropriation by the vendor of a portion of the purchase-money for the payment of the usurious debt, and therefore a waiver of the defense of usury which estops third persons claiming under him to question the validity of the debt. * * * Nevertheless it must appear that a deduction has been made from the purchase price on account of the mortgage debt, in order to bring the case within the rules stated. It is not sufficient to show merely that the sale was made subject to the mortgage. It is not necessary that the intention to take subject to • the incumbrance shall be expressly declared iii the deed or contract. It is sufficient if all of the circumstances of the transaction which may be shown by parol imply such an intent.”

We quote syllabus of Gray v. Lumber Co., 128 Mich. 427 (54 L. R. A. 731) :

“A purchaser of mortgaged premises cannot object to the mortgage on the ground that usurious interest was exacted from his grantor, since the defense of usury is a personal one.”

And from Lee v. Stiger, 30 N. J. Eq. 610, 611, cited in a note to 39 Cyc. supra:

“The reason of the rule is obvious. The statute against usury is designed to give protection to the borrower against the greed of the lender, and not to afford any mere adventurer who may happen to slip into the seat of the borrower, a right to speculate on a violation of law which has done 'him no harm, and causes him no loss. When the borrower sells his interest in the land he has pledged for the payment of a usurious debt, subject to that debt, he recognizes the validity of the debt, and waives the benefit of the statute. After the party aggrieved has forgiven an injury, it would not be consonant with either justice or reason to allow a stranger to set it up for his own personal advantage. The defendant has no right to display the wrongs of another as a means of relieving *268 her property from a burden it was understood it should bear at the- time she acquired it.”

And see Sellers v. Botsford, 11 Mich. 59; Barney v. Tontine Surety Co., 131 Mich. 192 ; Solomon v. Alpena Cedar Co., 194 Mich. 267; Farmers & Mechanics’ Bank v. Kimmel, 1 Mich. 84; 27 R. C. L. p.

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Bluebook (online)
213 N.W. 120, 238 Mich. 261, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-holding-co-v-bushman-mich-1927.