Colgrove v. Solomon

34 Mich. 494, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 205
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 34 Mich. 494 (Colgrove v. Solomon) 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
Colgrove v. Solomon, 34 Mich. 494, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 205 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Graves, J:

Mrs. Colgrove brought her action for money had and received, to recover a sum she had paid Mr. Solomon as purchase money on a land trade which had been rescinded, and he was allowed to succeed before the jury under a defense grounded upon a subsequent agreement, and things done in connection with it, to repay her partly in cash and partly in land.

She now asks a review of the proceedings. A reference to the main circumstances is necessary. She agreed to buy of Solomon eighty acres of land for two thousand five hundred dollars, and on March 3, 1873, he deeded to her. She gave back certain securities and paid one thousand five hundred dollars in cash. She soon found cause to be dissatisfied with the title, and by mutual consent the trade was canceled. She reconveyed, but Solomon did not restore the money. He claimed that he could not then command it, and proposed to secure by mortgage the refunding of it. This proposal fell through. He then suggested as an expedient, to pay four hundred dollars in cash and the residue of eleven hundred dollars in a piece of land owned by one Mrs. Alanson. The parties were at Dr. Harrison’s, and the negotiation and bargaining were entirely oral. The doctor seems to have been a trusted acquaintance of Mr. [498]*498Solomon and a friendly adviser of Mrs. Colgrove. Both parties seem to have looked somewhat to him to aid in bringing about an adjustment, and Mrs. Colgrove sought his help and advice more or less in the matter. His intervention appears to have been merely casual, and in the spirit of friendly accommodation only. He had no written power from either side.

The Alanson parcel was burdened with two mortgages, one belonging to Solomon, and one for five hundred dollars owned by a third party, and Solomon desired that possession of the land should be detained until the first of October following. The property itself was valued at sixteen hundred dollars subject to such detention, and at eleven hundred dollars subject both to such detention and the mortgage for five hundred dollars. It was therefore considered that the land burdened with this last mortgage, and with the right of possession in another until October, was equivalent to eleven hundred dollars. In this state of things it was orally agreed that Solomon' should pay Mrs. Colgrove four hundred dollars in cash, and cause the Alansons to deed to her the parcel in question, subject to the mortgage for five hundred dollars, and with a reservation of possession until October.

Solomon paid the four hundred dollars' in cash, and acknowledged satisfaction on the record of his mortgage on the Alanson property, and in a short time he forwarded to Doctor Harrison a deed made by the Alansons. This deed was attested by only one witness, and contained a reservation of possession until October, and a further one of all crops growing at the date of the deed and also of all crops produced before October. The doctor objected to the deed on the ground that it had but one witness,' and pointed out some trifling inaccuracies besides, but said nothing about the reservation of the crops. He returned the deed and advised the making of a new one. This instrument was therefore not accepted by any body. Mrs. Colgrove presently decided that she would not carry out the verbal agreement and would [499]*499not take the Alanson land. She so wrote to Dr. Harrison. Following this, a second deed from the Alansons to Mrs. Colgrove was sent by Solomon to Dr. Harrison. This instrument contained the same reservation in regard to crops as the first. Doctor Harrison sent it to Mrs. Colgrove and she refused to accept it, and handed it to her attorney. The proof is clear and uncontradicted that she did not and would not accept it. If the court erred in permitting the defense tendered by Solomon to prevail, it is then evident that Mrs. Colgrove was entitled to recover the money remaining back. Indeed, this is not disputed.

We think that the main rulings of the circuit judge proceeded on mistaken views of the law applicable to the case, and were plainly erroneous and misleading. We shall not take up separately the various propositions stated and refused. We may observe, however, that, among other matters, he authorized the jury to imply from the evidence that Doctor Harrison was Mrs. Colgrove’s lawful agent to convert without writing her verbal and invalid bargain into one valid and obligatory; and further, that he gave the jury to understand that in view of the bargain and her situation in relation to it, she would be bound by it unless there appeared a state of facts amounting to a rescission of it. Now, it is entirely clear that since her bargain was an oral one it was not binding upon her at all. And it is equally clear that the acts and sayings of Doctor Harrison were not superior in force to her own verbal proceedings. He had no written power and entered into no writing. If in any proper sense he was her representative to make or validate any contract, he was no more able without writing than she was in person to bring her into binding contract relations as vendee.

The rulings in respect to rescission were wholly inappropriate. The ground of Mrs. Colgrove’s objection or answer to the defense was not that she had rescinded or attempted to rescind any contract for the Alanson land.

Her position was, that she had never entered into any [500]*500valid contract relations with Mr. Solomon for the purchase of that property. She insisted that her verbal bargain never became a contract, and that there was nothing to rescind, and in this she was correct. — Scott v. Bush, 26 Mich., 418; S. C., 29 Mich., 523.

In support of the defense, it was ruled below, and is now urged, that the payment of the four hundred dollars by Solomon, and the discharge of his mortgage, were acts of part performance to preclude the setting up the statute of frauds in a court of equity, and that the same doctrine is legitimate in the equitable action for money had and received in a court of law. Whether the doctrine alluded to is or is not proper in such a case, is a point not material. The facts mentioned are not within it. The payment of the four hundred dollars was only payment of so much of an honest debt already existing and already due.

In paying it, Solomon did nothing more than he was strictly bound both by law and equity to do independently of his oral agreement, and he cannot be heard to say, in any forum, that such payment will operate as a fraud upon him in case his verbal agreement to pay the rest of his debt in land is avoided under the statute of frauds.

His discharge of record of his own mortgage on the Alanson land was not a fact of part performance at all. The land was considered worth eleven hundred dollars if received subject to the other mortgage of five hundred dollars and subject to detention of possession until October, and it was agreed to be conveyed in that shape, and as equivalent to eleven hundred dollars of the debt he owed Mrs. Colgrove. In what manner he should proceed to get the title in the condition in which he agreed it should pass to her, was a matter of perfect indifference on her part. It was something resting entirely with him, and important only to him. It was not an element of her bargain. He might collect his mortgage, or exchange it for other security, or remove it in any special way. The removal of it was an act preparatory to steps in the execution of his bargain. It was a measure he found it [501]

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Bluebook (online)
34 Mich. 494, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colgrove-v-solomon-mich-1876.