Craig v. Bradley

26 Mich. 353, 1873 Mich. LEXIS 9
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 26 Mich. 353 (Craig v. Bradley) 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
Craig v. Bradley, 26 Mich. 353, 1873 Mich. LEXIS 9 (Mich. 1873).

Opinion

Graves, J.

The first task in examining this canse, is to ascertain as far as may be, the groundwork of the case as indicated by tbe bill, and get at the substance of tbe matter on which the complainants rest their claim for relief in a court of equity.

It is just as necessary for his success in chancery, that a complaining party should first state a definite and comprehensible case, and then prove it substantially as laid, as it is at law; and whenever doubts and uncertainties spring from indefinite or ambiguous statements in the hill, or from loose or incongruous proofs, they must generally be resolved adversely to tbe party to whose faulty or infirm proceedings they are owing; and if he bas a meritorious [355]*355cause of action, but is unable to prove it by a sufficient weight of evidence, the result is his misfortune, for which no relief is possible in civil tribunals. It is not easy in this instance to determine what exact view was taken by the pleader. In some of its parts the scheme of the bill is dubious and imprecise. Much, however, if not all of this, was probably owing to the refractory nature of the materials, and their vague and desultory character.

It may be confessed that a careful study of the record leads to the belief that complainants have been hardly and unfairly dealt by, but this will not avail to warrant the court in decreeing, unless it appears that a determinate case for equitable cognizance is set up, and that the same case is substantially established by a preponderance of evidence.

Without recapitulating the bill, an attempt must be made to gather from it the essential and ultimate ground upon which the complainants now seek judicial intervention. But before doing this, a proper understanding of the matter, necessitates a general reference to certain preliminary business events which the bill details.

Prior to the 19th of September, 1857, the defendants, Lott Frost and Charles Bradley, composed the firm-of Frost & Bradley, and this firm held the legal title to two large steam saw mills, one at what is now called Bay City, and the other at St. Charles, on the Saginaw river. The firm also held the legal title to extensive tracts of pine lands not far distant, and owned three lake vessels, a large quantity of pine logs and lumber, a quantity of mei’chandise for traffic in connection with lumbering operations, and teams and implements for lumbering and manufacturing lumber. At the same time they held a short lease of a lumber yard at Chicago, and held some other personal property. For some time before and up to the time just [356]*356mentioned, they had been, and were, extensively engaged in ♦maufacturing and selling lumber, and much of the business had been, and was being, conducted by the aid of defendants, Nathan B., Henry M., and Frederick E. Bradley, brothers of Charles; they being engaged respectively at distinct points, and being peculiarly conversant and familiar with the business and its requirements thereat.

All the real estate so held by the firm, as well as the vessels, was heavily incumbered, and the firm was otherwise deeply indebted, and, as the bill claims, insolvent. Two of the vessels were subject to large mortgages given to C. & A. Ives of Detroit. The complainants were direct creditors of the firm to a limited amount, and were likewise liable on their account as sureties, in different forms, in the sum of between twenty and thirty thousand dollars, as-the bill states, for which there was no security, and in the further sum, as the bill also states, of about eleven thousand dollars in favor of C. & A. Ives, who held liens on the vessels as primary security.

Under these circumstances, which are related more at large in the bill, the firm, on the 19th of September, 1857, made, in writing, the following assignment to complainants:

“Whereas, the firm of Craig & Bro. are liable, by way of endorsement and otherwise, for the undersigned, Frost & Bradley, for over the sum of ten thousand dollars, and said Frost & Bradley are desirous of paying and securing said Craig & Brother'; now, therefore, in consideration of said liability, we, the said Frost & Bradley, have, and hereby do sell, assign, transfer and set over to said Craig & Bro., all the following described property, situated at Lower Saginaw or Bay City, viz.: all the lumber we have at said place, supposed to be from three hundred thousand to four hundred thousand feet, being partly in raft and partly on the dock; all the logs we have at said place, sup[357]*357posed to be about a million feet; all the shingles, supposed to be from two hundred thousand to three hundred thousand ; all the lath, supposed to be about the same amount; the entire stock of goods in our store at that place, supposed to be fifteen hundred . dollars in value; two yoke of oxen; one two-horse wagon; one one-horse wagon; one horse, and one sail boat.
“Also, all the property hereinafter described situated at St. Charles, or on the way from St. Charles to said Lower Saginaw, to wit: all our lumber, supposed to be from two hundred thousand to three hundred thousand feet; all our lath, supposed to be one hundred and fifty thousand; all our shingles, supposed to be over one hundred and fifty thousand; all our logs, supposed to be from one million to two million feet; the entire stock of goods in store at St. Charles; two yoke of oxen; three horses; one lumber wagon; five tons of hay; one field of corn; one field of potatoes, and oats in the same field.
“ Said Craig & Bro. are authorized and clothed with full power to take possession of said property and to sell the same forthwith, and convert the same into money, and apply the proceeds to pay the debts for which they are liable as aforesaid, and to pay over the surplus to the undersigned.
' “ An inventory of said property is to be forthwith taken. Witness our hand, September 19, 1857, at Detroit.
(Signed) “Frost & Bradley.”

To this assignment, a schedule, or inventory, of the property, and its assumed value, was attached, which showed a total valuation of twenty-four thousand one hundred and eighty-nine dollars and fifty cents.

The bill states, that although the property at the time was estimated at about twenty-four thousand dollars, it was not, in its then condition, convertible into cash at that sum,’and yet, that it comprehended all the effects of the [358]*358firm, which were then, available to pay the demands for which complainants were liable, except the use of the mills and vessels during such time a3 the owners of liens upon them should not foreclose, and except also the unexpired lease of the Chicago yard and the fixtures; and that the mills, yard and lease could be only turned to account, in paying up the indebtedness for which complainants were liable, by being used in connection with the vessels and assigned property. It is then stated that shortly after the assignment it was agreed between complainants of the one part, and Charles Bradley, who represented Frost ,& Bradley, of the other part, that the business theretofore conducted by Frost & Bradley, should be continued under complainants, in all respects, the same as it had been carried on before the assignment; that complainants, in addition

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Bluebook (online)
26 Mich. 353, 1873 Mich. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-bradley-mich-1873.