Donnelly v. Lyons

139 N.W. 246, 173 Mich. 515, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 560
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1913
DocketDocket No. 53
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 139 N.W. 246 (Donnelly v. Lyons) 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
Donnelly v. Lyons, 139 N.W. 246, 173 Mich. 515, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 560 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Kuhn, J.

The complainant was the owner of 26 lots in the village of Royal Oak, in the county of Oakland. On or about January 10, 1910, she entered into four contracts for the sale of the lots with the defendant Samuel J. Lyons. The agreed price was $40 per lot, $1,040, and she received the sum of $2 down, which is the only payment she has ever received. The terms of payment were $5 or more every three months, so that the first payment was due April 10, 1910. There were certain clauses in the land contracts against the assignment thereof without the consent of the vendor, which complainant struck out, at the request of the defendant Lyons, because he claimed he could handle and sell the lots better. The contracts were drawn on the customary printed blanks, and complainant filled in the forms at the dictation of Lyons. On March 22, 1910, Lyons assigned the contracts to the defendant Merton L. Rice, and on August 16,1910, Lyons gave Rice a quitclaim deed of the lots in controversy, which was recorded in the register of deeds’ office on August 20, 1910. The contracts were recorded on August 22, 1910. Immediately after his purchase of the lots, Rice put up three signs thereon on which were the words, “ For sale or exchange, Merton L. Rice, 805 Majestic Building, Detroit,” and claims that he called at complainant’s house several times with the money for the purpose of making the payments called for by the contracts and did not find her at home. When the time of the first payment arrived, the complainant did not hear from Lyons or from any one. Being under the impression and belief that nothing more was necessary to terminate her prior contracts with Lyons, on and before July 6, 1910, she sold the lots to other parties on contract and subsequently executed deeds under the contracts for some of the lots. On bringing down the abstracts of title, she claims that she first learned of the recording of the Lyons contracts with assignments and quitclaim deed to defendant Rice. In November, 1910, complainant, on learning of the claims of Rice, prepared and served on Lyons and Rice a notice to terminate [517]*517the contract. On November 25, 1910, four days after service of this notice, the defendant Rice tendered a certified check to the complainant and her attorney for the amount he claimed to he due under the contracts, which tender was refused. Complainant thereupon filed her bill of complaint to quiet title against the four land contracts and the quitclaim deed and asks for relief on two grounds:

(1) Because, from her understanding of the transaction, she had given only an option for the sale of the lots, and, through the misrepresentation, fraud, and deception of defendant Lyons, was led to believe and to be assured that she had given only an option, which expired by its own limitations and terms, when, in fact, she had given a land contract, which it was necessary for her to terminate by affirmative action on her part.

(2) Because upon default in the performance of the contracts she had, through a proper notice, terminated the contracts and was entitled to have the title quieted as against the record of them.

The defendants Samuel J. Lyons and Bessie C. Lyons filed a disclaimer, and the defendant Rice answered and also filed a cross-bill, asking for the specific performance of the contracts made by the complainant with defendant Lyons and assigned to him. The trial court gave the complainant the relief prayed for, and defendants have appealed from the decree entered.

Counsel for complainant says that, although the first ground for relief was not urged strongly in the court below, it is not without force. A careful examination of the record does not disclose sufficient proof of any fraud or deception practiced by Lyons in the execution of the contracts in controversy. Complainant was a woman of some business experience. She had had the same form of contracts in her house and had executed the same kind of instrument to other people before and after the transaction with Lyons. Under the testimony offered, she would not be entitled to relief by reason of the first ground above set forth. Fraud is not lightly to be [518]*518presumed, and it is the duty of those alleging it to prove it. Peaslee v. Collier, 83 Mich. 549 (47 N. W. 353); Clinton v. Rice, 79 Mich. 354 (44 N. W. 790); Gumberg v. Treusch, 103 Mich. 543 (61 N. W. 872); Zucker v. Karpeles, 88 Mich. 413 (50 N. W. 373); Bly v. Brady, 113 Mich. 176 (71 N. W. 521); Raymond v. McKenna, 147 Mich. 35 (110 N. W. 121).

The first question that confronts us in considering the second ground for relief is: Was the complainant in a position to declare a forfeiture of the contract at the time it was done ?

The contracts in question contained a clause or provision as follows:

“And if said party of the second part shall fail to perform this contract, or any part of the same, said party of the first part shall, immediately after such failure, have a right to declare the same void, and retain whatever may have been paid hereon, and all improvements that may have been made on said premises, and may consider and treat the said party of the second part as a tenant holding over without permission, and may take immediate .possession of the premises and remove the party of the second part therefrom.”

It has been held, and it is the rule in this State, that mere default in payments will not of itself annul or make void the contract under such provisions, but that the vendor must give a notice that he has elected and does declare the contract void because of such default. Converse v. Blumrich, 14 Mich. 109 (90 Am. Dec. 230); Miner v. Dickey, 140 Mich. 518 (103 N. W. 855); Murphy v. McIntyre, 152 Mich. 591 (116 N. W. 197); Nelson v. Smith, 161 Mich. 363 (126 N. W. 447).

It is urged that, as complainant had contracted to sell all the lots in controversy, and had executed deeds to 11 of them, she was in no position to declare a forfeiture, and in support of this contention the case of Getty v. Peters, 82 Mich. 661 (46 N. W. 1036, 10 L. R. A. 465), is cited. An examination of that case shows that the trial court found that the defendant, the vendee in the con[519]*519tracts, had been ready at all times to perform said contract on her part, and this court, on examination of the record, sustained this finding.

In the instant case, can it be said that Lyons or his assignee, Eice, after default in making payments, was ready at all times to carry out the terms of the contract ? While the trial court has made no findings of fact, a careful examination of this record does not lead us to such a conclusion. It is true that defendant Eice claimed, on his direct testimony, that on one occasion he went to complainant’s house prepared to make a payment on the contract, but would not say for sure that he had the money with him, and, at a later session of the court, on cross-examination, claimed to have made several efforts for payment with the same result. It does not seem reasonable, however, that if he had made a bona fide effort to carry out the contracts he could not have done so. He did not have any difficulty in making a tender both to her and her attorney after notice of forfeiture. As we do not find from the record that such a genuine effort to pay was ever made before the forfeiture was declared, the facts do not come within the ruling of Getty v. Peters, supra.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 N.W. 246, 173 Mich. 515, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnelly-v-lyons-mich-1913.