Graham v. Moffett

78 N.W. 132, 119 Mich. 303, 1899 Mich. LEXIS 780
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 78 N.W. 132 (Graham v. Moffett) 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
Graham v. Moffett, 78 N.W. 132, 119 Mich. 303, 1899 Mich. LEXIS 780 (Mich. 1899).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

On November 25, 1895, the parties to this suit made a contract in writing, by which the complainant agreed to sell a dwelling house and lot in Detroit to the Moffetts, husband and wife, and they promised to pay therefor $11,500, in manner following, viz.:

“Five hundred dollars in cash this day, 20 shares of Ingham County Savings Bank stock, and $5,500 cash, on or before November 30, 1895, and assume a mortgage of $3,500, the interest upon which is to be paid by said party of the first part, — paid to January 1, 1896.”

This writing was the culmination of negotiations which covered a period of a week or more, during which most of the alleged misrepresentations are said to have been made.

On the 30th day of the same month, according to the [305]*305testimony of Moffett, he asked Graham, who acted in the transaction on behalf of his wife, to take 5 shares more of the stock, as he was á little short of money; and it was finally agreed that the Grahams should take 11 shares more, and the deed was delivered, and the consideration, including 31 shares of the Ingham County Bank stock, was paid, and the Moffetts entered into possession of the property. Some 6 or 8 months later the bank went into the hands of a receiver, and the evidence shows that an assessment of 60 or 70 per cent, upon the stock will be required to meet its obligations.

The bill in this cause was filed in February, 1897, and alleges that Moffett fraudulently represented this stock to be worth par, thereby inducing Graham to accept it at its par value for a part of the purchase price, whereas it was in fact of no value; and the bill prays the enforcement of a vendor’s lien for the amount represented by such stock in the trade. The testimony of Graham shows that he offered to return the stock to Moffett, and demanded the property back, and that Moffett refused to accede to the demand. ' This bill appears to have been framed upon the theory that it was unnecessary to rescind the contract in toto, but that, the fraud being shown in relation to the stock, the vendor might treat the amount which it w%s understood to represent in the transaction as unpaid, and that the vendor’s lien could be foreclosed to collect it. Upon the same theory, we presume that it might be contended that an action of assumpsit would lie, under the rule that such an actionjnay be maintained for the unpaid price of real estate duly conveyed.

Lord Eldon, in defining the vendor’s lien, used the following language:

“Where the vendor conveys, without more, though the consideration is upon the face of the instrument expressed to be paid, and by a receipt indorsed upon the back, if it is the simple case of a conveyance, the money, or part of it, not being paid, as between the vendor and the vendee, and persons claiming as volunteers, upon tjie doctrine of this [306]*306court, which, when it is settled, has the effect of a contract, though perhaps no actual contract has taken place, a lien shall prevail; in the one case for the whole consideration, in the other for that part of the money which was not paid.” Mackreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. 329, 337.

There is nothing in this definition that justifies the inference that a vendor has a lien for damages resulting from a breach of a contract, and we know of no case where it has been expressly held that such is the law, unless it be cases hereinafter discussed. It merely secures the payment of the promised money or price. ,The agreed purchase price may be, in whole or in part, chattels; as an agreement to sell some land at an agreed price, for certain horses or bank stock, at a settled valuation. In case of such a contract, the vendor’s lien would secure the per-formance of the promise, which would be to deliver the horses or the stock, not to pay money in lieu thereof; especially where, as in this case, the evidence shows conclusively that the vendee refused to take the property upon a money consideration. He may have been guilty of fraud in inducing the vendor to agree to take the stock as part of the consideration, but that fact will not authorize a court to make a different contract for him. It can only award him damages for the fraud, or permit a rescission of the contract. Coit v. Fougera, 36 Barb. 195; Burns v. Taylor, 23 Ala. 255.

There is a class of cases, however, in which a vendor’s lien does exist, viz., where the contract obligates the vendee to pay a given sum for the land, and the vendor is afterwards induced, by fraud, to accept a chattel for the whole or a definitely-fixed portion of such purchase price. In such a case, the vendor may tender back the chattel, and enforce a lien for the amount represented by it. This is upon the theory that the pre-existing contract is binding. Its fraudulent modification being rescinded, the contract itself is left to stand, with its attendant right of lien in the vendor. The testimony is conclusive that this is not one of these cases as to the 20 shares; for not only [307]*307does the writing show it, but the testimony is all to the effect that Moffett would not agree to buy the premises unless the 20 shares of stock should be accepted in part payment.

It is now proposed to carry this doctrine a step further, and say that although the vendee never agreed to pay cash, and expressly refused to do so, yet inasmuch as he was guilty of fraud, thereby inducing the vendor to reconsider her determination to sell for cash only, and consent to an exchange for stock, that equity will, in addition to the legal remedy through an action for damages for the fraud, and the equitable one of rescission, recognize the vendor’s right to affirm the contract, and maintain a lien for the deficiency arising from the failure of the stock to equal its represented value, upon the theory that to that extent the consideration was not fully paid. This is a persuasive view to take of the case. It is an expeditious way to relieve the complainant, and it removes whatever danger there might be of a failure to collect a judgment for damages for the fraud, should one be recovered at law. But, on the other hand, it introduces inconsistencies and far-reaching changes in the law. It enlarges the vendor’s lien to include damages for a breach of contract as well as the unpaid price agreed upon. It introduces an element of uncertainty, by making it cover unliquidated claims, which have hitherto generally been excluded. It revolutionizes the doctrine of rescission, which requires a party to rescind a fraudulent contract in toto or affirm it as made. It allows the vendor to keep the chattel, and recover the damages in equity, — a thing hitherto almost unknown.

There is a temptation to do full and complete justice between parties, if possible, especially where fraud is apparent, that tends to the extension of rules [of law, which should only be made after careful consideration, for every innovation against the logic of the law is productive of confusion. In this case it would be gratifying if we could settle this matter here, instead of requiring the complain[308]*308ant to pursue her legal remedy; but an illogical extension of the law of vendor’s lien to cases involving unliquidated damages for fraud would be a heavy price to pay therefor. Certainty in the law is a growing necessity, and the broader the rules can be, consistent with general justice, the better.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 N.W. 132, 119 Mich. 303, 1899 Mich. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-moffett-mich-1899.