Cooper v. Smith

42 N.W. 815, 75 Mich. 247, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 1041
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 N.W. 815 (Cooper v. Smith) 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
Cooper v. Smith, 42 N.W. 815, 75 Mich. 247, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 1041 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Campbell, J.

This is a foreclosure suit appealed from Huron county. Some of the issues raised by the pleadings were tried by the jury, whose findings were adverse to complainants. The court below dismissed the bill, partly on the issues found adversely by the jury, and partly on a ground that the jury did not pass on. Complainants on the trial below made a preliminary objection that the finding of the jury would not be final, upon which no ruling was made by the circuit judge.

The court below ruled out more or less testimony, but chiefly against defendants’ objection, and none that was material for complainants on the issues which became important. The appeal was in the usual form. Several of the questions presented by the argument do not appear to have any bearing on the record presented to us, and on which we must act. But, so far as any jurisdictional or constitutional question is intended to refer to the validity or operation of the amendatory act of 1887, which is supposed to make serious changes in practice in chancery, we do not think any such matter is before us. We cannot find in the record any [249]*249written demand for a jury, based on the act of 1887. There are several important issues that were not submitted to the jury, and the decree while following the findings in part, disregarded them in part, and was based on a matter not laid before the jury at all. The case, therefore, is one on which special and partial issues were framed, which it was always proper to have laid before juries, and in which the court below had a right to follow the verdict if it saw fit.

' In the view we take of the case we find no occasion to treat it as affected one way or the other by the law of 1887. That statute is peculiar, and, if the case required it, would compel us to consider some important questions.1 But that necessity does not arise.

The question before us is whether the bill was improperly dismissed. If it was not, then the questions of practice are of no account.

The bill printed in the record — which we suppose is the amended bill — sets out this case: That defendant Samuel Smith, on or about the eleventh day of September, 1883, made and delivered to Henry Gibbard four promissory notes, the third of which was set out in words, and was for $500, payable to Henry Gibbard or bearer, on February 1, 1886, interest at seven per cent.

That Samuel Smith and Elizabeth, his wife, the two defendants, on the same day made a mortgage on an 80-acre tract, described in the bill (which was in the mortgage so described as only to cover half of it, and a correction of which is prayed for), to secure $2,150, of which this note was a part. The other notes are not described in the bill, and there is nothing to show what became of them.

The bill further avers that the note was sold and assigned to complainants December 1, 1885, for a valuable consideration paid to Gibbard, the receipt whereof he acknowledged; [250]*250and it was agreed he should immediately execute and deliver to complainants an assignment oí the mortgage, which he failed to do till October 19, 1886, when he executed, acknowledged, and delivered it,—

“And that your orators by such assignment and delivery of said mortgage became the owners thereof in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, before maturity.”

No question is raised specifically, except as affected by fraud in the transfer, against correcting the description in the mortgage. No other persons are mentioned as interested in the mortgage or lands.

This bill, as it stands, would be defective in not accounting for the other notes, which presumptively would belong to Gibbard or some assignee; but, as it appeared that these notes were paid and discharged, this defect, as one of pleading, may be disregarded. But upon the testimony these notes become important on other accounts.

The defendants set up by way of specific defense that all of the notes, including the one in suit, had been satisfied, and there was no admission in the answer or elsewhere of any rights in complainants, or any transfer to them. This becomes important in determining whether on the record as it stands complainants made out any case. It is to be borne in mind that this is not a suit at law on the note, but a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage, and, if complainants fail to make out a complete title to the mortgage as a valid security, the remedy on the note — which in a foreclosure suit is merely incidental, and in which defendant Elizabeth has no liability —could not have been sought in this court in equity.

There was proof tending to show — but which the jury did not believe — that the note was transferred to complainants on December 18, 1885, which was before its maturity. The jury found — as the court below also found, and as we think the evidence clearly shows — such facts as made it fraudulent in Gibbard to make any claim on the note. And beyond the [251]*251issues laid before the jury it was evidently found — and we think rightly found, as we should certainly find from the proofs — that this note should have been delivered up to defendant Smith, and, if so, it was a fraud in Gibbard to attempt to transfer it to complainants. And the record presents an inquiry whether, by what took place, complainants became entitled to set up any claim as bona fide holders of the mortgage, and to what extent. Upon this, as the fraud is beyond a doubt, the burden is on complainants.

Upon this point there is no testimony in the record but that of Gibbard, who cannot be a truthful witness if the other witnesses tell the truth; and we are inclined, as the court and jury below were, to believe the other witnesses.

This note, being payable to bearer, would pass by delivery, and complainants would not be obliged in an action at law, probably, to show their relations as partners. But when any right depends on their partnership, and there is nothing in the record to identify them with it, it is not very clear that they can make that out by mere presumption, — especially when it becomes necessary to find out whether these complainants, who are named in the bill, are the persons, if any, who became bona fide holders of this paper.

A receipt is produced purporting to 'be dated on December 18, 1885, which reads as follows:

Deceived of Henry Gibbard a note (collateral to his notes to us) on Samuel Smith, due February 1, 1886, for five hundred dollars, secured by real estate mortgage on 80 acres of land. O. & G. Cooper & Go.
“ Butler.”

On the nineteenth of October, 1886, Gibbard executed on the back of the original mortgage this assignment, — being more than eight months after the note in suit was due:

“I hereby assign this mortgage to O. & G. Cooper & Go., with full power to foreclose the same in my name or in their own, as to the note for five hundred dollars, due February 1, 1886, with seven per cent, interest from September 11, [252]*2521883, proceeds to be credited on my indebtedness to them. Witness my hand this nineteenth day of October, 1886.
“Henry Gibbard.”

The acknowledgment of this assignment is imperfect, but no question is made on its execution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.W. 815, 75 Mich. 247, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 1041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-smith-mich-1889.