Cook v. Sadler

183 N.W. 82, 214 Mich. 582, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 701
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1921
DocketDocket No. 43
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 183 N.W. 82 (Cook v. Sadler) 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
Cook v. Sadler, 183 N.W. 82, 214 Mich. 582, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 701 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Bird, J.

Henry and Phila M. Sadler were husband and wife. They were farmers and resided in the township of Wyoming, Kent county. They owned and lived upon the west half of the southeast quarter of section 32. They had two children, Edwin- and Franklin Sadler. Edwin Sadler remained at home and worked the farm on shares. He was given to understand by his parents that the west 40 would be given to him. In 1882 he was married and afterwards built, with some help from his parents, a house on the west 40. On [584]*584the 17th day of April, 1901, in pursuance of their promises to Edwin, the father and mother made a deed of the west half to Edwin and a deed of the east half to Franklin, and placed both deeds in the hands of Mr. Albert Burnham, a neighbor, with instructions to deliver them to Edwin and Franklin when they were both dead. After this Edwin made improvements upon the farm, aggregating about $1,000. In 1908, Edwin died, leaving a widow and one daughter. Not long after Edwin’s decease Henry requested Marie Sadler, the widow, to go to Mr. Burn-ham and get the deed to Edwin. She did so, and Henry destroyed it, and then he and Phila M. made a deed of the west 40 direct to Marie Sadler, and placed the same in the hands of Emma Brown, a neighbor, with instructions to deliver it to Marie when both he and Phila M. had passed on.

A year or so following this Marie married a Mr. Besard and went to Canada to live. After she was gone Henry sent for the deed to Marie and destroyed it and afterwards made a deed of the west 40 to his son Franklin. This is the deed in controversy. The parties are now all dead. Phila M., the mother, died in 1912. Franklin, the son, died in 1914, and Henry, the father, died in 1915.

This contest is between the heirs of Edwin, who are plaintiffs herein, and the heirs of Franklin, who are the defendants. The plaintiffs ask in their bill that the deed from Henry and Phila M. to Franklin in June, 1910, be set aside, and that plaintiffs, as heirs at law of Edwin, be declared to be the owners thereof in fee. It is. their theory that the deed from Henry and Phila M. was made and placed in escrow and passed a present interest to Edwin, and that the subsequent destruction of the deed by Henry was without law or authority. Defendants meet this by insisting that the circumstances attending the making [585]*585and deposit of the deed with Mr. Burnham indicate that it was not his intention to place the deed beyond his control, and it is further insisted that the deed was testamentary in character and that Henry and Phila M. had lawful authority to revoke or recall it. Upon the hearing the chancellor was persuaded that the theory of plaintiffs was the right one and that Henry had no legal right to destroy the deed to Edwin after placing it in escrow. The decree gave title of the west 40 to plaintiffs, and, in addition, gave them $500 as the rental value of the 40 acres during the time defendants have been in possession of it. Defendants say this was the wrong conclusion and have appealed therefrom to this court.

The questions which appear to demand our attention are:

(1) Did Henry and Phila M. have the legal right to recall their deed to Edwin?

(2) Was the deed testamentary in character?

1. Mr. Burnham, with whom the deeds were deposited, was still living and present at the hearing. He testified as follows as to the facts and circumstances surrounding the deposit:

“I live in the township of Byron, Kent county, Michigan; I am most seventy-three years old; I knew Phila Sadler and her husband, Henry Sadler, in their lifetime; I remember their coming to my place and leaving some deeds with me, but do not know when it was, but it was about fourteen or fifteen years ago; that one of the deeds ran to Franklin Sadler and the other to Edwin Sadler; that they were both alike except as to descriptions. Henry Sadler and Phila Sadler both talked to me and said that they had some deeds there and they wanted me to keep them until they were both gone, and then deliver one to Franklin and the other to Edwin; that they remained with me 14 or 15 years; I gave one to Maria Besard and the other I gave to Hiram Minderhout; that I gave the one to Maria Besard' 3 years ago or better, and after [586]*586her husband died; that I gave one to Minderhout about two years ago, after Phila and Henry Sadler had both died.”

On the question of depositing deeds in escrow it is observed by Gates on Michigan Real Property, § 547, that:

“When a deed which has been duly executed has been put into the hands of a third person to be, by him, delivered to the grantee at a future time or upon the performance of certain conditions or the happening of some event, it is said to be delivered ‘in escrow’ and the deed will not be effective unless the condition be performed' or the event happens, and the Michigan courts have consistently held that where a grantor makes a deed to another and deposits the deed with a third party, to be held by such third party until the grantor’s death and to be delivered to the grantee named in the deed, the grantor reserving no dominion or control over the deed during his lifetime, a valid delivery is thereby made and an immediate estate is vested in the grantee, subject to a life estate in the grantor.”

The circumstances detailed by Mr. Burnham are not such as to definitely determine the question one way or the other,- but wevare persuaded that his testimony, considered in connection with the other testimony in the case, indicates that when Henry and Phila M. left the deeds with him they fully intended to pass a present interest to Edwin Sadler of the premises in question. It will be noted that when the deed was deposited no conditions were attached to it reserving any right whatever in the grantors to control or recall it, and, indeed, they made no effort to control it as long as Edwin was alive. They appeared to be content with it until after he died, and after he died they were content to have it remain in Edwin’s family while the widow remained on the farm. It was only after she remarried and left the farm that Henry deeded the premises to his son Franklin.

[587]*587The conditions as they existed when the deposit was made were that Henry and Phila M. were getting old; they had this property; they had these two boys, and their natural wish was to divide it between them. They did dispose of it, retaining the part they wanted, namely, a life use of it to themselves, and from that time on until after Edwin’s death no change was made or attempted. When Henry sent for the deed to Edwin it is a significant fact that he did not disturb the deed given to Franklin at the same time, and he never attempted to revoke that one, and it is quite evident to us he would not have disturbed the deed givep to Edwin if Edwin had outlived him.

Much is said by defendants’ counsel of the fact that Henry sent for the deed and destroyed it after Edwin’s death. It is argued from this that he kept control of the deed. We do not place much importance on this fact. Henry undoubtedly changed his mind after the death of Edwin, but this would give him no right to disturb the deed if his intent was, when deposited, to pass a vested interest to Edwin. Laymen do not generally understand the rules of law surrounding the placing of deeds in escrow. Many of them think they have a right to revoke the deed if they afterwards change their mind. Another fact lends some help in reaching this conclusion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 N.W. 82, 214 Mich. 582, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-sadler-mich-1921.