Guntzviller v. Gitre

162 N.W. 290, 195 Mich. 695, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 737
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1917
DocketDocket No. 66
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 162 N.W. 290 (Guntzviller v. Gitre) 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
Guntzviller v. Gitre, 162 N.W. 290, 195 Mich. 695, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 737 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

This bill was filed February 24, 1913, and its material allegations are substantially as follows: That Catherine Williams, Mary Ann Williams, Mary Williams, and Maribarb Williams were sisters. They came to this country, and a short time after their arrival purchased 25 acres of land of one Henry Rummley; that they were grandaunts of plaintiff; that upon the birth of plaintiff these grandaunts importuned his parents to permit them to adopt him, but his father declined to permit his son to go by another name, when they proposed to take plaintiff, raise him, and that he should have their property at [697]*697their death; that this proposition was. accepted, and that it was agreed that plaintiff should be taken by these grandaunts, who were maiden ladies, as soon as he was able to be taken; that he was so taken by them upon their farm, and was raised by them; that Catherine died, leaving her property to the surviving sisters; that Mary Ann did the same; that Mary died leaving her property to Maribarb; that Maribarb had endeavored to carry out the agreement so made with reference to plaintiff by deeding to him, on May 7, 1907, the southerly 13 acres of the farm, in consideration of $200 to be paid for church services for her sister, which plaintiff alleges was paid; that on the 24th of January, 1908, the balance of the land was deeded to him upon condition that he pay $150 each to Maggie Guntzviller, plaintiff’s, mother, Josephine McHugh, Phinea Flanagan, Mary Cronin, and Joseph Gitre, which condition he accepted, and has offered to pay each of the defendants the $150 but they have refused to accept the same, and threaten to litigate with plaintiff. He also alleges that until he was married he received no salary or compensation, except spending monpy; that after his. marriage he still did all the farm work and cared for his aunts, obeyed their orders, buried them, and paid for their burial and their other debts; that defendants, together with plaintiff’s, mother, constitute all the heirs at law of Maribarb, and that .defendant Joseph Gitre has had himself appointed administrator of Maribarb’s estate, and threatens to set aside the deeds to plaintiff on the grounds of mental incapacity. He alleges that he is entitled to specific performance of the agreement under which he claims Maribarb and her sisters got 20 years of his life work. The prayer of the bill is for a decree requiring defendants to quitclaim their interest in the land in question and for general relief.

The defendants by their answer deny all the mate[698]*698rial facts alleged in the bill of complaint, claim the benefit of a cross-bill, and pray for affirmative relief. This pleading is not questioned, so it becomes unnecessary to set forth the allegations in it with the particularity with which we have detailed the allegations of plaintiff’s bill which is questioned, and it will be sufficient to say that they allege that Maribarb had been feeble-minded from childhood, was' mentally incompetent to, and did no,t, transact any business; was not mentally competent to execute the deeds in question, and that if she executed them, they were procured by fraud, duress, and undue influence; that in addition to the land in question plaintiff procured from Mari-barb $2,000 in cash by means of fraud, duress, and undue influence and when she was mentally incompetent to transact business; that.defendant Joseph Gitre has been duly appointed administrator of her estate. They make Eda Guntzviller, wife of plaintiff, party to the suit, and pray for the cancellation of the two deeds and an accounting to the administrator for the money. Plaintiff and his wife, Eda, answer this pleading by denying all the material allegations, and they set up that Eda has furnished about $2,000, most of which has gone into improvement of the property in question. Upon application to the court an order was entered, permitting Joseph Gitre to also appear in his representative capacity as administrator of the estate of Maribarb.

In the record the grandaunts are called Wilhelm, and the one named in the bill as Mary Ann appears as Mariann. We shall refer to them hereafter as the record discloses their names to be.

We shall first discuss the legal objections raised to the bill and the admissibility of evidence. The defendants first urge that the bill cannot be maintained because there is a fatal variance between plaintiff’s case as set forth in his bill and the testimony adduced upon [699]*699the trial; that the .plaintiff has failed to establish the existence of the contract between the aunts and plaintiff’s parents. They urge that the bill is one for the specific performance of such contract, that plaintiff’s title cannot be quieted unless he establishes such contract and his right to its specific performance. It has been held by this court that surplusage will not render a bill multifarious; that a bill is not multifarious if in stating a case for equitable relief it contains allegations with reference to other matters insufficient to entitle complainant to relief with reference thereto. Wheeler v. Manufacturing Co., 162 Mich. 204 (127 N. W. 332). So we hold here that allegations in a bill which are not supported by proof do not prevent relief if there are allegations supported by proof which are sufficient grounds for equitable relief. We think the allegations of the execution of the deeds by Maribarb Wilhelm to plaintiff with the conditions therein contained, the offer to perform these conditions on the part of plaintiff, defendants’ refusal to accept the money, their assertion of the mental incompetency of Maribarb, and threats to litigate with plaintiff state a sufficient case for equitable relief. In addition to that, defendants, by that part of their answer which claims the benefit of a cross-bill, put squarely in issue the question of the validity of the deeds. Schmidt v. Gaukler, 156 Mich. 243 (120 N. W. 746). This objection of defendants is untenable.

To establish the contract with the Wilhelm sisters set forth in the bill, the plaintiff produced as a witness his mother, Margaret Gitre Guntzviller. The defendants insisted in the court below, and do here, that her testimony as to facts equally within the knowledge of the deceased was incompetent under the provisions of 3 Comp. Laws, § 10212, as amended by Act No. 30, Pub. Acts 1903 (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 12553). They insist that the question is controlled by the case [700]*700of Albring v. Ward, 137 Mich. 352 (100 N. W. 609). With this contention, we agree. In that case the complainant produced as a witness her father, John Bennett, to testify that he made an arrangement with deceased, to the effect that if he (Bennett) would relinquish to deceased all claim to the custody, care, and control of his daughter and all his rights, as. her father, the said deceased would make her his heir at law, and that at his death she should inherit a share of the property as if she were his. natural child. This court said, speaking through Mr. Justice Grant:

_ “But this testimony of the father is inadmissible under Act No. 30, Pub. Acts. 1903, which provides that no person ‘who shall have acted as an agent in the making or continuing of a contract with any person who may have died, shall be a competent witness in any suit involving such contract/ If any contract was made, it was made by Mr. Bennett on behalf of his daughter. A more appropriate case for the application of the law cannot well be imagined.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.W. 290, 195 Mich. 695, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guntzviller-v-gitre-mich-1917.