Flood v. Welsh

55 N.W.2d 104, 334 Mich. 583, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 428
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1952
DocketDocket 8, Calendar 45,376
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 N.W.2d 104 (Flood v. Welsh) 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
Flood v. Welsh, 55 N.W.2d 104, 334 Mich. 583, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 428 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

Carr, J.

Plaintiff brought suit in circuit court for an accounting and to obtain further incidental equitable relief based on the claim that defendant *585 had been guilty of fraudulent misrepresentations to her prejudice. The case resulted from business transactions between the parties which began early in the year 1927, or perhaps prior thereto, and continued for several years. Plaintiff was at .the time a widow, and was the owner of real estate and of personal property which she had received from the estate of her husband.

Shortly prior to the associations referred to, defendant counseled plaintiff with reference to an investment from which she realized a profit of approximately $31,000. It is her claim that as a result of this transaction she acquired confidence in defendant’s business ability and in his honesty and integrity. In any event, the parties entered into a series of joint ventures toward which plaintiff contributed money from time to time, such transactions being handled by defendant. It is plaintiff’s' claim that they agreed to share equally in the profits resulting from their operations.

Neither party kept a complete and accurate record of the different ventures that were undertaken. On the trial of the case a ledger was introduced in evidence, in which, as the testimony relating thereto indicates, each party made entries during a period of several months beginning March 11, 1927. Many of such entries, however, are not in satisfactory form, and it may well be doubted if the exhibit can be regarded as an accurate account of the dealings of the parties even during the limited period of time covered by it.

While some of the investments made by defendant apparently proved profitable, it is conceded that in 1929 heavy losses were sustained because of expenditures made and indebtedness incurred in the drilling of oil wells. The ventures in this field were unfortunate, and as a result defendant became insolvent. Apparently motivated by a desire to protect *586 plaintiff as far as possible, defendant and Ms wife, on April 29, 1929, executed a written instrument reciting that defendant had borrowed from and was indebted to the plaintiff for large sums of money, and that it was the desire of the parties to secure the repayment thereof. Reference was made to an assignment attached to the agreement which the parties executed, by the terms of which defendant and his wife undertook to convey to plaintiff defendant’s interest in all oil and gas leases, wells, products, drilling equipment, and all personal property used in connection with his oil and gas drilling operations within the State, which he then owned. The assignment was accepted by the plaintiff presumably for the purpose for which it was' executed, that is, to protect her in the repayment of the money that she had advanced to defendant.

On August 1, 1929, defendant gave plaintiff his note," payable on demand, in the sum of $15,000, and on October 15th following 2 notes, in like form, for $10,000 each were executed and delivered. The parties are not in accord as to the aggregate of the amounts advanced by plaintiff to defendant, the former claiming that during their business associations she gave to defendant approximately $65,000, while defendant insists that at the time of the agreement made on April 29, 1929, the aggregate of advances was $35,000, the total of the 3 notes mentioned. In March, 1932, defendant .executed and delivered to plaintiff 2 notes in the sums of $2,000 and $1,138.42 respectively. The precise nature of this transaction is not explained in the record. The same situation obtains with reference to other dealings between the parties of which, apparently, no record was kept and with reference to which their memories have failed.

During the period beginning August 5, 1929, and ending April 1, 1938, plaintiff received a total of *587 $8,886.37 from the Hart Petroleum Company, in which, defendant was financially interested. It was his claim on the trial of the case in circuit court that such payments were in fact made on his obligation to her to enable her to meet her expenses and those of her son. • No other satisfactory explanation is suggested in the proofs. In 1942, defendant paid plaintiff the further sum of $2,000, the receipt of which is admitted. Subsequent to 1932 defendant’s financial situation improved as a result of certain transactions into which he entered, including investments in oil fields that turned out profitably and a contract with the Michigan highway department.

On the 7th of April, 1944, following negotiations between the parties, defendant executed and delivered to plaintiff the following obligation:

“Hart,. Michigan. April 7, 1944.
“After date I promise to pay to the order of Nina N. Flood $40,000 payable at the rate of $3,000 or more per year at the rate of no percent interest. '
“This note is in full payment of any and all moneys due Nina N. Flood by myself and is to supersede any and all other notes & agreements previously executed.
“The shares of stock now held by Nina N. Floód in Hart Petroleum Company and Oceana Oil Producers,1 Inc. to be held as collateral security until payment of this note, and upon payment of this note said shares are to be returned and issued to myself, my heirs or assigns without consideration by Nina N. Flood, her heirs or assigns.
“(s) C. A. Welsh
C. A. Welsh
“App'roved and accepted: April 7, 1944.
(s) Nina N. Flood
Nina N. Flood”

Payments on the foregoing obligation were made from time to time by defendant, in the total sum.of *588 $35,000. The final checks were delivered on December 15,1949, the record indicating that 3 of them were postdated. However, they were cashed by plaintiff, the last payment being received by her shortly before the present suit was instituted. It is the claim of the defendant that the balance of the obligation was paid by his acquiring from the Plart Petroleum Company an obligation owing to it by plaintiff, in the aggregate amount of $6,034.13, which he applied against the debt owing by him to plaintiff. He claims, in consequence, and the trial court so found, that he had actually paid to her, or for her use and benefit, sums of money, in excess of the obligation of April 7, 1944.

. After listening to the proofs of the parties, the trial judge concluded that as a result of the execution and delivery of the security assignment and the 3 notes totalling $35,000 the relationship between the parties thenceforth became that of debtor and creditor, that the aggregate of the amounts turned over to defendant by plaintiff up to that time did not exceed the amount of the notes, that under the proofs the note given on April 7, 1944, for $40,000 was not less than the amount owing to plaintiff by defendant at that time, that plaintiff was bound by her acceptance of such undertaking, and that defendant’s obligation thereunder had been fully paid and satisfied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 N.W.2d 104, 334 Mich. 583, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flood-v-welsh-mich-1952.