Dayton v. Estate of Dakin

61 N.W. 349, 103 Mich. 65, 1894 Mich. LEXIS 1108
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 349 (Dayton v. Estate of Dakin) 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
Dayton v. Estate of Dakin, 61 N.W. 349, 103 Mich. 65, 1894 Mich. LEXIS 1108 (Mich. 1894).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

In August, 1888, the claimant owned a farm, which he had previously bought subject to a mortgage held by one Dakin, since deceased, and which was in August, 1888, in process of foreclosure in chancery, the sale being advertised for September 15. At this time, i. e., August, 1888, the claimant owned an undivided half of the crops upon the premises; the other half being owned by one Palmer, who put them in upon shares. The land was bought by Dakin upon the sale, and he thereafter sold Dayton’s share of the crop, including some corn which is claimed to have been cut and shocked before the sale. After Dakin’s death the claimant filed a claim against the estate, which was disallowed; and an appeal was taken to the circuit court, where he recovered a verdict for $326.70, from which the administrators appealed. The claim which appears to have been relied upon in the circuit court was that the portion of the crop that was severed before September 15 belonged to the claimant, and, further, that an agreement was made, under which Dakin was allowed to enter and take possession for certain purposes on September 1, in consideration of a promise to allow the claimant to take his share of the growing crops.

The -first question to be noticed arises over an amendment to the claim permitted by the circuit judge. The return of the commissioners showed the names of claimants, the amount claimed, and the amounts allowed. Opposite claimant’s name, under the word “ Claimed,” was placed the sum of $432.56, followed in the column for Amount Disallowed ” by the same sum. The printed [69]*69record (and presumably the original) contains an exemplification of the record of two claims, one of wbicb is for •1432.56, over the certificate of the probate court. They have no place in the record, unless they are parts of the proceeding, although there is nothing upon them to show that they were filed separately in the circuit court; but "they appear under the same certificate of the probate .judge, as a part of the exemplification, and we think that they should be so considered.

It is further contended that the amendment enlarged the claim as heard by the commissioners. If it did, the amendment is improper, under repeated decisions, of which the case of Patrick v. Howard, 47 Mich. 40, cited by counsel, only need be mentioned. We may profitably •eliminate one of the claims mentioned, as the commissioners appear not to have passed upon it. The other'was as follows:

“Estate of John B. Dakin, Deceased, in account with George M. Dayton, Dr.

To 900 bushels of corn, one-half grown on 47 acres,

25 cents per bushel..............................$225 00

To 20 bushels potatoes at 35 cents per bushel_____ 7 00

To 17-J barrels of apples at $2 per barrel.......... 35 00

To interest for three years........................ 48 06

$315 06

To one-half of the corn fodder grown on the 47 acres above named, at $5 per acre, and interest at the legal rate upon the item of $117.50 for three years......................................$117 50

$432 56”

The claim, as amended, was as follows:

“Now comes said claimant, and by leave of court, first ■obtained, amends his claim so that the same shall read as follows: •

To 1,000 bushels of corn grown in several parcels, aggregating about 47 acres, in the year and cropping season of A. D. 1888, upon the [70]*70farm then occupied by one George Palmer, described as all of the south-west quarter1 of section No. 24, and the north-west quarter of the north-west quarter of section 25, except five acres off from the south-west corner, and also the north 46 acres of east half of south-west quarter of section 25, all in town 4 north, of range 2 east,

Ingham county, Michigan, at 35 cts. per bushel.- $350 00

To 20 bushels of potatoes grown on said farm during said season, at .35 per bushel............ 7 00

To 17£ barrels of apples grown on said farm during said season, at $2.00 per barrel............. 35 00'

To one-half of the cornstalks and fodder from which said corn above mentioned was husked and gathered, at $5.00 per acre; that is, one-half of $235..................................... 117 50

Total principal................................$509 50

To interest on said total at 7 per cent, per annum since September 15, 1888 (from September 16, 1888, to March 16, 1893)........................ 160 50

Total principal and interest................... $670 00”

If these claims are to be measured by dollars and cents-only, it must be conceded that the amendment enlarged the amount of the original claim. The 900 bushels of corn was increased to 1,000, and its value from $225 to $350. To this also was added the sum of $160.50 for interest from the date of the conversion. The claim was stated in various ways, in addition, viz.: A claim was made for the money received by Dakin upon a sale of claimant’s half of the property, and for interest thereon. He charged for rental of the farm from September 1 to September 16 the crops alleged to have been promised to claimant, and interest. He made a claim for the rental value of the farm for a year, from September 1, 1888, to September 1, 1889, with interest. Our attention is not called to anything in the evidence or charge tending to show that the last three forms of stating claimant’s demand were considered by the jury, or cut any figure upon the trial. [71]*71They may, therefore, be disregarded, as, at most, they were error without injury.

Turning our attention1 to the first amended claim, we' may pass the interest question with the remark that the: claimant would have been entitled to interest upon his/ claim, if allowed, though it had not been specifically mentioned in the claim, upon the principle that interest may be allowed on money illegally withheld, or property converted, without proof of special damage. Edwards v. Sanborn, 6 Mich. 348; McCreery v. Green, 38 Id. 172; Davis v. Strobridge, 44 Id. 157; McGuire v. Galligan, 53 Id. 453; Ripley v. Davis, 15 Id. 75; Northrup v. McGill, 27 Id. 234, 238; Burk v. Webb, 32 Id. 173; Winchester v. Craig, 33 Id. 205; Allen v. Kinyon, 41 Id. 281; Symes v. Oliver, 13 Id. 9; Chapman v. Dease, 39 Id. 333. It is the common practice, in actions for breach of contract, to allow interest without a special averment. Whether it be said that Dakin was liable for an unlawful conversion or for breach of contract, the same is true.

This brings us to the corn. In the original claim the amount was mentioned at 900 bushels; in the amended account, at 1,000 bushels. In the former, however, it was alleged to be one-half of the product of 47 acres of land. Doubtless this would have justified an allowance of one-half of the corn grown upon the 47 acres, which is all that was claimed upon the trial, as the evidence and charge disclose. It can therefore be truly said that in this respect the identical claims were tried on both occasions, and that all that was tried upon the amended claim might have been allowed by the commissioners under the claim as first filed.

The next question of importance is the proof of the alleged contract. Dakin was dead, and the claimant under the statutory disability.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 349, 103 Mich. 65, 1894 Mich. LEXIS 1108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-estate-of-dakin-mich-1894.