Chmielewski v. Nau

36 N.W.2d 727, 324 Mich. 375, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 442
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1949
DocketDocket No. 54, Calendar No. 44,305.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 N.W.2d 727 (Chmielewski v. Nau) 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
Chmielewski v. Nau, 36 N.W.2d 727, 324 Mich. 375, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 442 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

*377 Reid, J.

Plaintiff filed his bill of complaint in this case for rescission, on the ground of alleged fraud, of a purchase by him from the defendants of a going grocery business.

This being a chancery case, we try the case de novo.

Defendants Walter Nau and Velma Nau in October, 1946, equipped and from that time on operated a grocery and meat market at 20505 Grand River avenue in Detroit, Michigan. On September 8,1947, they sold the grocery and meat market to plaintiff for $21,000 plus the value of the stock at inventory at the time of sale, receiving $10,000 down, with the balance to be on time. The agreed value of the stock of merchandise was $5,264.49.

Defendants had first listed their grocery and meat market business for sale in July, 1947, with Robert Anderson, a duly licensed real estate broker, reciting in the listing agreement, “Income $4000 a wk.” Defendant Walter Nau, hereinafter referred to as defendant, claims he recomputed the sales total and informed Anderson that the store did $3,500 a week business. Defendant directed Mr. Anderson to drop the figure from $4,000 to $3,500 and stated to Mr. Anderson absolutely that the store was doing at least that much business. At defendant’s request, Anderson put an advertisement in the Detroit News, Sunday, August 10, 1947, reading in part, “Grocery, Meat — $3,500 weekly.”

Plaintiff testified that in response to the ad which recited the $3,500 weekly sales, plaintiff went to see Anderson, who introduced plaintiff to defendant. Plaintiff testified as follows respecting a conversation he said he had with defendant in the back of the store in the presence of Anderson:

“I said, ‘How much business do you do in this store here a week?’ and he said, ‘$3,500 right now, *378 and we made as high as $5,000.’ And I said, ‘Could you prove it with books, in case I want to see the books?’ And he says, ‘Yes, we got the records to prove it.’ This took place in August, 1947.”

In consequence of plaintiff’s looking the business over, and the representations made to plaintiff by defendant, a contract of sale, exhibit No. 2, was entered into, dated August 26, 1947, for the purchase of the grocery-meat-beer-wine business of defendants, known as “Sno-White Food Market,” for the price hereinbefore recited, the agreement containing the following among other things:

“It is further agreed that second party [plaintiff] shall have the right to a week’s trial of above business from September 2, 1947 to September 8, 1947, and if the business does not average $3,500, then deposit above mentioned to be returned to second party. Party of second part has been accepted by the landlord of above mentioned premises. * * *
“It is hereby understood that all the terms, conditions, and representations in the listing contract executed and signed by the said parties of the first part prior to this agreement is [are] hereby made a part of this agreement for sale and purchase and binding on the said parties of the first part.”

The testimony showed that following the signing of this agreement, plaintiff was in and about the store during the entire trial week to take readings from the .cash register, and saw what kind of business was being done. There was testimony that the store did $3,700 worth of business during the trial week, and though plaintiff desires to draw an inference that some possibly underhanded work was carried out by defendants resulting in an incorrect and exaggerated report of the total at $3,700, yet there is no definite testimony that the total amount of business for the trial week was in fact any less than the $3,700 testified to by defendant. After the trial *379 week, and after having examined into the actual status of the business but without opportunity to examine the books showing actual amount of previous business, plaintiff closed the deal upon the terms set forth in exhibit No. 2 above referred to. Upon the conclusion of the deal, plaintiff took over the operation of the grocery and meat market, received in the business very much less than $3,000 a week, and now seeks to rescind on the ground of fraud.

The sales tax record of the defendants shows that there was not an average weekly gross income of $3,500 during any month that defendants operated the store, and that the average gross weekly receipts during the defendants’ operation was $2,899.

Defendant does not deny that he overstated the income of the business. Defendant, however, claims that plaintiff did not accept defendant’s statement for the amount of business, but looked into the whole matter himself, examined the books of the company, insisted upon the one-week trial, saw for himself the results of the one-week trial, and that plaintiff relied upon his own observation and not the false statements of defendant to prove that the business was profitable and that it was desirable for plaintiff to close the deal on the terms on which he did close it.

The trial court found that the clause in the agreement for sale and purchase, exhibit No. 2, which specified that unless the store took in $3,500 during the “trial week,” at which plaintiff himself was to be present, negatived all idea and claim that plaintiff relied upon the representations of the defendant, in which finding we cannot concur. Such finding overlooks entirely the second clause above quoted from the contract, in which clause it is recited that the representations in the listing contract are made a part of the agreement. The representations are *380 just as much a part of the agreement as the clause pertaining to the trial week.

There was a dispute in the testimony over the identity of the listing agreement. The witness, agent Anderson, who acted as sales agent for defendants Nau, testified that there never was any listing agreement other than the original agreement produced on the trial, marked exhibit 1-A and 1-B. As above noted, that part of the listing agreement which is marked exhibit 1-B contains the statement among other things, “Income $4000 a wk.” Mr. Anderson testified that defendant asked him to destroy the original listing agreement and substitute another listing agreement therefor, which Anderson refused to do. Defendant testified:

“I sent that second listing agreement to him some time in July. That- second listing agreement recited that our business was doing $3,500 a week business.”

We find exhibit 1-A and 1-B to be the listing agreement referred to in the sales agreement.

We construe the sales agreement to be an absolute warranty on the part of defendants Nau that the business should show $3,500 during the trial week and that defendants Nau undertook and bound themselves not only to permit to plaintiff the benefit of a trial week, but also made the representations in the listing agreement a part of the agreement in question with a verbal modification agreed to by the parties that the average income was $3,500 instead of the $4,000 recited in the listing agreement, exhibit 1-A and 1-B. The words “average $3,500” could scarcely refer to the trial week only. There would be no weekly “average” for just one week.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 N.W.2d 727, 324 Mich. 375, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chmielewski-v-nau-mich-1949.