Fisk v. Powell

84 N.W.2d 736, 349 Mich. 604, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 371
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1957
DocketDocket 10, Calendar 46,695
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 84 N.W.2d 736 (Fisk v. Powell) 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
Fisk v. Powell, 84 N.W.2d 736, 349 Mich. 604, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 371 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This action relates to the purchase of a farm in Ottawa county. The plaintiffs, vendees, are daughter and son-in-law; the defendants, vendors, are mother and father. The actual sale of the property was made in 1949. In December, 1948, the defendant Powell had had drawn up the papers for the consummation of the transaction. They were executed on January 6, 1949. They consisted of a warranty deed from the defendants to the plaintiffs ; a mortgage from the plaintiffs to the defendants securing the sum of $11,000 and the assumption of a mortgage originally given by the defendants to the Central Bank, Grand Rapids, in the amount of $9,000; a “side agreement” which allowed the defendants to retain possession of the premises for 1 year, and according to the terms of which the plaintiffs agreed to pay “one-third of proceeds from the sale of all crops or produce from said farm, to apply on the principal balance of the $11,000 mortgage;” and finally, a promissory note in the amount of $11,-000, payable in 10 years.

Following the sale, the defendants remained in possession and occupancy of the farm buildings for several weeks, at the end of which time the house was almost totally destroyed by fire. Defendants then moved in with the children. As for the insurance moneys, the house had been insured for $1,500. *607 The insurance company paid total loss to the Central Bank, to be applied to the mortgage assumed by plaintiffs. Difficulties soon arose over the “one-third” payments allegedly due. From 4 planting and harvesting seasons the plaintiffs received $22,-683.90 in proceeds from the sale of Avheat and oats from the farm, which they had continued to work after the fire. (Following 1952, however, plaintiffs used the land for pasturage.) From these proceeds the plaintiffs have paid to or for the defendants relatively small sums: $1,500 in 1 payment; a note owing by the defendants for .$250; and taxes for the year 1948 of $130.50. They have, also, a receipt from the defendants for lumber sold by the defendants from the destroyed house in the amount of $250. For these sums the plaintiffs were given credit on the mortgage by the chancellor. During this same period the plaintiffs completely paid off the Central Bank mortgage of $9,000 and have paid interest on the $11,000 indebtedness to January, 1953. Defendant Powell’s answer asserts that “plaintiffs owe to the defendants Powell, on said purchase-money mortgage, a principal sum in excess of $9,000 plus interest.” In this connection we also note that in January, 1949, there was on record a mortgage given by the defendants to the First State Bank of Newaygo in the amount of $4,000. The bank is a party to this litigation. It was as a result of the claimed refusal on the part of defendants to do anything about having this mortgage; discharged that the plaintiffs refused to pay any further amount due on the principal mortgage. When.the plaintiffs ■refused so to pay, defendant Powell, on September 13, 1950, sued out a writ of attachment, which, however, was voluntarily discontinued on September 28, 1950, for reasons which are in controversy. The goods attached consisted of wheat in bins on the Ottawa county farm. This outline of facts will'be *608 expanded as necessary in connection with specific questions ruled upon.

In the action before us, then, we have daughter and son-in-law arrayed against father and mother with respect to facts even now, after trial and decree, hotly contested before this Court. The plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment, reformation of the deed and mortgage in 2 respects, an accounting between the parties, and, generally, “a determination of the status of the title to the farm” and the obligation of the plaintiffs. From a decree resolving the controversy the plaintiffs take a general appeal.

As noted, the plaintiffs seek first reformation of the instruments of purchase and sale in 2 respects. First, that the following words in the warranty deed be struck: “First parties reserve 1/2 of all oil and mineral rights.” This the chancellor resolved in favor of the plaintiffs and ordered it stricken from the deed. No question concerning it is raised on appeal. Secondly, plaintiffs alleged that the defendants Powell “fraudulently” inserted the following paragraph in the mortgage executed by the parties before it was recorded:

“It is especially agreed that 1/3 of all crops raised on said premises shall be paid on the note secured by this mortgage within 30 days from harvest date. Upon failure to do so the balance of said note shall become due and payable. Mortgagors agree to farm the land every year and to use good farming practice.”

The side agreement, one of the very few incidents in this case as to which there is not a square giving of the lie, was executed the same day between Ithe parties. It provides as follows:

“We further agree to pay to J. Hughes Powell and Esther V. Powell 1/3 of proceeds from the sale *609 of all crops or produce from said farm, to apply on the principal balance of the $11,000 mortgage.”

The defendant Powell testified that the papers were prepared by an attorney (now dead), who drafted all except the side agreement. (This the defendant himself had dictated to the secretary.) When the attorney saw the contents of the side agreement, we are told, he advised defendant Powell that the contested paragraph should be included in the mortgage in order to protect the defendants. The attorney, according to the defendant’s testimony, then, himself, on his own typewriter, inserted the now-contested clause in 2 of the copies of the mortgage. However, the defendant admits that “it (the mortgage) doesn’t rise the same language” as the side agreement, the principal difference being the words providing for the time for payment and acceleration in default thereof.

The plaintiffs testified that they had all copies of the mortgage in their possession for 3 or 4 days before their execution. They say they read them over but found no provision therein similar to that quoted above. They retained possession of -the papers until the day arrived for closing the transaction. At this time the defendants were given the documents and the parties left together for the office in Rockford where they were executed. No addi- ' tions were there made except the typewritten names of the witnesses. Plaintiffs testified that the documents were the same then as they had been at home.

Upon these facts the chancellor found that the mortgage as executed on January 6, 1949, did contain the contested clause. With this we can find no fault. In reviewing this record, as in other chancery appeals, we are bound, in the words of Mr. Justice Campbell long ago (Haines v. Haines, 35 Mich 138, 143) to “render such respect to the views of the in *610 ferior tribunal as not to disturb its orders without being satisfied of their requiring correction.” We are mindful, also, that the trial chancellor had the advantage of seeing and hearing the witnesses. Regarding the allegedly fraudulent insertion in the mortgage, the essential claim of the plaintiffs is that the defendants inserted the contested clause after execution.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.W.2d 736, 349 Mich. 604, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisk-v-powell-mich-1957.