Day v. Lacchia

437 N.W.2d 400, 175 Mich. App. 363
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1989
DocketDocket 103852
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 437 N.W.2d 400 (Day v. Lacchia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Lacchia, 437 N.W.2d 400, 175 Mich. App. 363 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

S. B. Miller, J.

Plaintiffs, Arthur and Joyce Day, appeal as of right from a judgment entered in favor of defendants, Joseph and Shirley Lacchia, and Glenn Wilbur. Plaintiffs had filed a complaint which alleged that defendants had unlawfully dispossessed them of real property. We affirm.

The property in question was first sold by a land contract in 1967. The holders of legal title, Gilbert and Mabel Van Peenen, entered into a contract to sell the property to Allan and Sue Ann Cooper, husband and wife, for $13,300. Following their divorce, Allan Cooper quitclaimed his interest in the property to Sue Ann Cooper. Sue Ann Cooper remarried and under her new name, Sue Ann Cooper Ferguson, assigned her purchaser’s interest in the land contract to Barry Day, a married man.

Barry Day’s father, Arthur Day, then contacted the Lacchias to see if they would be interested in holding a land contract on the property if a land contract buyer could be found. The Lacchias expressed an interest in the property and a closing was conducted. The end result of the transactions was that the Lacchias assumed the balance due on the Van Peenen-Cooper contract in return for a seller’s interest in a land contract selling the property to Arthur and Joyce Day for the principal amount of $14,500 payable with zero dollars *367 down and the balance payable at the rate of $130 per month including interest at the rate of nine percent per annum. The contract provided that the entire amount due under the contract was to be paid by May 10, 1985, and further provided that the Days, as purchasers, were to make necessary repairs to the exterior trim on the house by September, 1978.

The Days painted and made some minor repairs and then began renting out the property. The property, which was not in the best condition when it belonged to the Coopers, deteriorated further while occupied by the Days’ tenants. A building inspector from the City of Lansing inspected the property on March 22, 1979, and notified Arthur Day of thirty separate substandard conditions. The substandard conditions ranged from wiring to broken windows.

Sometime in the fall of 1979, Dolores McKinney began renting the house. In December, 1979, Arthur and Joyce Day sold the property on land contract to Dolores McKinney for $26,500. The Days, as sellers, were contractually responsible for making numerous repairs. In 1980, the Days filed a complaint to recover possession of the premises in district court. While the suit was pending, Dolores McKinney moved out and began renting the property to a succession of tenants. The last tenant moved out sometime around November, 1982. In May, 1983, a judgment was entered declaring that Ms. McKinney owed $4,189 on the McKinney-Day land contract through the April, 1983, payment and allowing her until August 9, 1983, to cure the breach or forfeit her rights under the contract. The judgment further provided that if Ms. McKinney redeemed the property, the Days were to repair the upstairs plumbing and the roof over the back porch in accordance with the land *368 contract. Ms. McKinney was unable to redeem the property within the ninety-day period.

In the meantime the property stood vacant. Despite violation notices from the City of Lansing Department of Building Safety, Mr. Day did not make the needed repairs, maintaining he was not entitled to possession of the property.

The Days failed to make their land contract payments due on April 10, May 10 and June 10, and had not paid taxes and insurance on the property as required by the terms of the land contract. On July 8, 1983, the Lacchias sent notice to the Days citing their failure to make these payments and the property’s condition of disrepair as constituting a default under the contract. The notice warned the Days that if they did not cure the default within fifteen days their contract rights would be forfeited. When the Days failed to make the past-due payments, Joseph Lacchia went onto the property on July 28, 1983, changed the locks and posted a sign indicating that he had retaken possession.

In the early part of July, 1983, defendant Glenn M. Wilbur was introduced to Mr. Lacchia as someone interested in purchasing the property. On August 2, 1983, the Lacchias and Wilbur executed a buy-sell agreement contingent on the clarification of the Days’ interest in the property. On October 5, 1983, the Lacchias and Wilbur executed a land contract. Wilbur purchased the property for $13,500. Paragraph 3(k) of the contract read as follows:

This land contract is a second land contract and is subject to the terms of a first land contract dated November 30, 1967 by and between Gilbert Van Peenen and Mabel Van Peenen, husband and wife, as Seller, and Allan L. Cooper and Sue Anne *369 Cooper, husband and wife, as Purchaser, which contract was signed by Purchaser on April 21, 1978 to Bary [sic] Day, a married man, and by him on May 10, 1978 to Joseph F. Lacchia and Shirley E. Lacchia, husband and wife, Seller herein. The interest of Seller herein was previously sold by land contract on May 10, 1978 to Arthur Day and Joyce Day, husband and wife. Said Purchaser subsequently sold their interest on land contract to Dolores McKinney. The Day/McKinney contract has been forfeited by judicial decree in Ingham County Circuit Court File No. 80-25254-CH. The Lacchia/Day contract has been forfeited by Notice of Forfeiture served on July 8, 1983. Seller herein agrees to indemnify Purchaser against any claim of right, color or title by either Arthur and Joyce Day and/or Dolores McKinney arising from said contracts.

Pursuant to an escrow agreement dated August 5, 1983, the closing documents and funds were held in escrow until August 12, 1983, to allow time to resolve the matter of the Days’ interest in the property. Wilbur testified that the August 12 date was selected because it allowed Mr. Day a few days within which to redeem the property. Likewise, Joseph Lacchia testified that they waited until August 12 to give Mr. Day one last chance to produce the money owing on the Lacchia-Day land contract. The Lacchias and Wilbur further agreed that the Lacchias would pay the legal costs associated with defending against the Days’ interest in the property.

On August 13, 1983, a neighbor observed Mr. Day on the property and alerted Wilbur. When Wilbur arrived he found Mr. Day taking the window out of the front storm door to gain entry to the house. He informed Mr. Day that he had purchased the property and asked him to leave. Mr. Day then left the property peacefully.

*370 Starting in September, 1983, and continuing until October, 1984, Glenn Wilbur cleaned, repaired, and extensively refurbished the house.

Wilbur moved into the house in October, 1984. He estimated that he had invested a total of 1,777 hours of labor and materials valued at $7,588 in refurbishing the house. He estimated that half of the labor and materials were spent on repairs and bringing the house into compliance with building codes, and the other half was spent upgrading the house. He valued his labor at $10 per hour.

At trial, Arthur Day testified that after being told on August 13, 1983, that Wilbur had purchased the property he sought legal assistance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
437 N.W.2d 400, 175 Mich. App. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-lacchia-michctapp-1989.