Farr v. Lachman

89 N.W. 688, 130 Mich. 40, 1902 Mich. LEXIS 735
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1902
DocketDocket No. 12
StatusPublished

This text of 89 N.W. 688 (Farr v. Lachman) 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
Farr v. Lachman, 89 N.W. 688, 130 Mich. 40, 1902 Mich. LEXIS 735 (Mich. 1902).

Opinion

Moore, J.

The record bears out the following statement of facts, taken from the brief of the petitioner for writ of assistance:

[41]*41On the 19th of August, A. D. 1899, a decree of foreclosure and sale was rendered by the circuit court for the county of Ottawa, in chancery, in the above-entitled cause. In pursuance thereof, said foreclosure sale was advertised by the commissioner in a notice signed by said commissioner, and countersigned by “Turner & ■ Turner, Solicitors,” and a sale of said premises was made by said commissioner on the 24th of July, 1900, to Gerald' Fitzgerald, for the sum of $1,500, as the highest bidder, and a commissioner’s deed given in pursuance thereof; and on July 24, 1900, said commissioner paid to Turner & Turner, solicitors for Adam Lachman and Henry Lachman, and who assumed to act as “complainant’s solicitors,” the sum of $52.34, taxed costs of suit, and $1,353.26, amount to be due, and took their receipts therefor, and filed his report of such sale with the register of the court. On the 25th day of July, 1900, the usual order of confirmation of said report and sale was entered by the register of said court, he being authorized so to do by George A. Farr, Esq., the complainant and solicitor of record therein. Notice of the entry of said order was served July 28, 1900, among others, upon said Turner & Turner, solicitors for Adam Lachman and Henry Lachman, two of the defendants in said suit, and the only appellants herein, and the same was received by said Turner & Turner on the 28th day of July, 1900; and no order of substitution of said Turner & Turner as solicitors for complainant in the place of said George A. Farr had then or has ever been entered herein.

That upon receipt of the same, and on July 31, 1900, said defendant and appellant Adam Lachman, by his solicitors, Turner & Turner, filed in said circuit court a petition setting up the rendition of said decree; the assignment of the same by said complainant, Farr, to said defendant Adam Lachman; the advertisement and sale of said premises by the commissioner “at the instigation of said Adam Lachman,” and the bidding off of the same to said Fitzgerald; the execution of said deed, and the fil[42]*42ing of the commissioner’s report of said sale; the notice of entry of order of confirmation, and the receipt of notice thereof; and praying, among other things, to set aside said sale, and that the same be not confirmed, or for the amendment of said decree nunc pro tunc to provide for an indorsement upon said commissioner’s deed for six months’ redemption from said sale; praying also to have said petition “stand as exceptions to the confirmation of said sale aforesaid; that the order sought to be entered confirming said sale was not authorized by the real complainant in this cause, the said Adam Lachman, or his solicitors;” and that said Turner & Turner ‘ ‘ be substituted as solicitors of record for the complainant in said cause and further praying “that a decree be entered providing for redemption according to the terms of Act No. 200, Pub. Acts 1899.”

Said petition was heard before the judge of said court, and Jerome Turner, Esq., one of the solicitors of said Adam and Henry Lachman, appellants, appeared, and “ in open court waived all objections to said sale and the prayer of said petition, except the prayer asking that said deed might be made and stand subject to six months’ redemption.” The prayer of said petition was denied. Afterwards an order to show cause why said petition should not be granted, and the order denying same be set aside, was issued by this court upon petition of said Adam Lachman, and answer was made thereto by said circuit judge, and the writ of mandamus prayed for was denied by this court, and said sale held to be absolute and without redemption. See Lachman v. Ottawa Circuit Judge, 125 Mich. 27 (83 N. W. 1025). It appeared before the circuit court upon the hearing of the said petition, and also in this court in said mandamus proceeding upon the face of said petition, that the foreclosure decree was assigned by George A. Earr on the 30th of August, 1899, to Adam Lachman, and that the sale had been made “at the instigation of said Adam Lachman” and his solicitors. This was the first time that the assignment of the decree had been brought to the notice of the court.

[43]*43On March 27, 1901, Gerald Fitzgerald, purchaser at said foreclosure sale, and his wife, conveyed the premises to the appellee, John H. Tatem. It appears, further, that September 17, 1900, a sheriff’s deed of the title of Henry Lachman was made to Grant E. Miller, which deed was based on a judgment in favor of Miller and against Lachman, rendered by the circuit court in said county of Ottawa. Miller deeded to the appellee-, J. H. Tatem. Due service of a certified copy of the order confirming said sale, and also of the circuit court commissioner’s deed to said Fitzgerald made upon said sale, was had upon said defendant Henry Lachman and one Andrew Lester, who were or claimed to be in possession of the premises, and personal demand for possession thereof made upon each of them, and each of them refused to comply therewith.

Upon the filing of applicant’s petition for a writ of assistance in the circuit court, and service of order to show cause issued thereon, the defendants and appellants, Henry Lachman and Adam Lachman, filed an answer and cross-petition thereto by Turner & Turner, their solicitors. In effect, said answer admitted all of the allegations of said petition, and the foregoing facts, except that it is therein claimed that the foreclosure sale of said premises made by said commissioner “was a mere sham, was not regular', and was void,” and that the order entered confirming the report and sale of said commissioner “was merely a sham, and not of any binding force whatever, and was entered without the authority of Adam Lachman or his solicitors,” and it “denies that said sale now stands in all respects confirmed and absolute for the reasons hereinafter set- forth. ” Said Henry Lachman further denied that his right, title, and interest to said premises, and his right of possession, were extinguished by said foreclosure sale and deed. The defendants joined to said answer a cross-petition setting up, in substance, that on April 29, 1897, said defendant Henry Lachman was the owner in fee of the said premises, and then executed a mortgage to said Farr thereon, to foreclose which said Farr filed a bill [44]

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Related

Wilber v. Goodrich
34 Mich. 84 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1876)
Bigelow v. Booth
39 Mich. 622 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1878)
Lachman v. Ottawa Circuit Judge
83 N.W. 1025 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
89 N.W. 688, 130 Mich. 40, 1902 Mich. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farr-v-lachman-mich-1902.