Churchill v. Howe

152 N.W. 989, 186 Mich. 107, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 665
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1915
DocketDocket No. 65
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 152 N.W. 989 (Churchill v. Howe) 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
Churchill v. Howe, 152 N.W. 989, 186 Mich. 107, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 665 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Steere, J.

The subject-matter of the present contention was before this court on an appeal of a chancery suit entitled Churchill v. Howe, reported in 180 Mich. 150 (146 N. W. 623), wherein plaintiff sought to impress with a trust certain real estate, owned by defendant and his wife as tenants by entireties, on the ground that money borrowed by defendant from the Churchill & Webber Bank and invested in other land, which was exchanged for that upon which a lien was asserted, had been fraudulently invested and sequestered from reach of execution. In that suit a demurrer to complainant’s bill was sustained, for the reason that under the facts stated in said bill defendants were not shown to have committed any fraud nor violated any trust at the time the money was borrowed and the land in question purchased; although the view was expressed that defendant’s subsequent conduct in relation to the matter was dishonest and fraudulent. Plaintiff thereafter commenced this action at law, filing a declaration in a plea of trespass upon the case, containing three counts, to which de[109]*109fendant also demurred. His demurrer having been overruled, he now brings the proceedings to this court for review on a writ of certiorari under Act No. 310, Pub. Acts 1905.

The story of defendant's alleged dishonesty is substantially the same in both the bill of complaint in the chancery suit and the declaration in this action at law. In brief, it is charged that he left with the Churchill & Webber Bank, of which plaintiff is the surviving partner, a deed, in escrow for delivery to the grantee named therein on payment to the bank of a stated amount, and induced it to advance to him thereon $750, to be refunded out of the money it was authorized to collect on delivery of the escrow deed, after which he proceeded to himself surreptitiously and fraudulently collect from the grantee and appropriate the money due upon the escrow deed, wrongfully, and with intent to defraud, converting the same to his own use.

Defendant’s grounds of demurrer are, in brief, that the first count of plaintiff’s declaration states a cause of action, if any, arising ex delicto, and the second and third counts state a cause of action, if any, arising ex contractu, while causes .of action sounding in tort and on contract cannot be joined in one declaration. Of the three counts, the first is the ordinary, short form of a count in trover; the other two state in substance, with some variations in phraseology and more at length than need be given here, that defendant sold certain real estate to one Jackson, who, after making part payment thereon, refused to pay the whole of the purchase price until certain defects in the title were remedied, and defendant thereupon solicited plaintiff’s bank to assist him by a loan of $750 to be repaid from a balance of $1,123.25 coming from Jackson, which he authorized the bank to collect, delivering to it in escrow a deed of the land sold to Jack[110]*110son, to be delivered to him on payment to the bank of that sum; that the $750 was advanced to defendant in pursuance of and reliance upon an understanding and agreement that the bank should collect said unpaid balance due upon the deed delivered to it in escrow and retain therefrom the amount it had advanced to defendant; but that:

“Thereupon the said defendant cunningly, wickedly, and maliciously, and with the intent and purpose to defraud said Churchill & Webber of said $750, and intending to cheat said Churchill & Webber out of said sum so advanced to him, began urging the said John W. Jackson to pay the balance of the moneys remaining unpaid directly to him, the said defendant, and that in response to such urgings so made by said defendant, the said John W. Jackson did, on, to wit, February 2, 1909, send his check to the said defendant for the sum of $900, and that said defendant did, on, to wit, the 5th day of February, 1909, obtain the cash upon said check, well knowing that $750 thereof belonged to and was the absolute property of the said Churchill & Webber; * * * and that by reason of the. premises the said defendant has cunningly, craftily, wickedly, and maliciously, and with the intent to injure said Churchill & Webber, cheated and defrauded the said Churchill & Webber and this plaintiff, of said sum of $750, less the sum of $133.45, which •said Churchill & Webber afterwards succeeded in obtaining from said John W. Jackson upon said escrow deed; * * * and that the said defendant fraudulently, and with the intent and purpose to cheat and- defraud said Churchill & Webber, induced said Jackson to pay such sum of $900 directly to said defendant ; and that said conduct on the part of said defendant did cheat and defraud said Churchill & Webber out of said net sum of $616.65, and the interest thereon,” etc.

The chief difference between the second and third counts is that the latter omits details of the manner in which defendant obtained the money from Jackson, and charges that:

[111]*111“On, to'wit, the 5th day of February, 1909, the said defendant came into possession of the sum of $900, which sum of $900 the said John W. Jackson paid directly to said defendant, and that the said defendant accepted and received said money from the said John W. Jackson, well knowing that $750 thereof was the absolute property of said Churchill & Webber, and that it was his duty to at once deliver said sum of. $750 so advanced to him back to said Churchill & Webber out of said receipts of $900, but that the' said defendant, notwithstanding his duty in that regard, fraudulently, and with the intent and purpose to defraud said Churchill & Webber out of the same, wrongfully embezzled the same, and converted the same to his own use, * * * by reason of his conduct in the premises has wilfully, knowingly, wrongfully, deceitfully, unlawfully, cunningly, and .craftily cheated and defrauded said Churchill & Webber and this plaintiff out of said sum, together with the interest thereon.”

That the first count sounds in tort and is a good count under a plea of trespass upon the case, standing alone, cannot be questioned; but it is urged that the other counts are confessedly a bill of particulars of the first, in effect, and clearly state nothing beyond contractual obligations for which only an action in assumpsit will lie.

It is urged for defendant that the facts stated show, undisputed, that all rights granted and obligations assumed between these parties grew out of their contract relations, and if the allegations as to their contract were stricken out no ground of action would remain; the distinguishing feature of a tort being that it consists in the violation of a right given or neglect of a duty imposed by law, and not by contract. This, broadly stated, is the general rule for determining the line of demarcation in clearly defined cases. There are, however, numerous instances where both the elements of tort and contract are involved. In Burdick on the Law of Torts (page 18) it is said:

[112]*112“Between the classes, of which the two preceding cases are representatives, is a numerous and extensive class, where the plaintiff is entitled to sue either in contract or in tort, because the defendant’s act is an unlawful interference with the right of plaintiff which is created by agreement between them, and also with a'right which is created by law.”

And to the same effect Cooley on Torts (3d Ed.), vol. 1, p. 156. See, also, Church v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 N.W. 989, 186 Mich. 107, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-v-howe-mich-1915.