Hanold v. Kays

31 N.W. 420, 64 Mich. 439, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 716
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 420 (Hanold v. Kays) 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
Hanold v. Kays, 31 N.W. 420, 64 Mich. 439, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 716 (Mich. 1887).

Opinion

Morse, X

This is a suit in equity to rectify a mistake made in the drafting of a mortgage as to the description of the premises, and to foreclose the same upon the land in-' tended to be conveyed therein.

The facts as to the inception of the mortgage are undisputed.

The defendant George W. Owen, on the twenty-third day of June, 1883, borrowed $600 of the complainant. He and his wife gave their note for said sum, payable in one year, with interest at 8 per cent., and secured the same by a real estate mortgage executed and delivered the same day.

The land was known as the Lensenmayer forty,” and the parties went to one O. G. George, a conveyancer, and requested him to draft a mortgage for $600 from the Owens to Hanold upon the Lensenmayer forty.

They did not give him the description of the land, but he obtained the same from a map in his possession.

He made a mistake, describing the premises as located on section 11, when they were in fact on section 17.

Neither complainant nor defendants knew of this mistake for a long time, and the mortgage was recorded as drawn.

Kays is made a defendant because of a warranty deed of the land in question, executed and delivered to him by the Owens, September 2, 1884.

Complainant claims—

1. That Kays, at the time of taking his deed, had notice of the mortgage to complainant, and that the real intent of the parties to the same was that the mortgage should be a lien upon the Lensenmayer forty.
2. That the only consideration for the said conveyance to Kays was an antecedent liability from said George W. Owen to said Kays, which was only contingent in its nature.

Kays defended on the ground that he purchased the [441]*441premises for a valuable consideration, and without notice of the rights of complainant in the same. Owen and wife did not defend. The court below adjudged that Kays was not a bona fide purchaser for value, and granted the relief asked by complainant.

We find the facts in relation to Kays’ deed to be as follows:

The defendant G-eorge W. Owen was a country merchant, engaged in business for many years at Keelersville, in the county of Van Burén. Kays was a farmer living in the neighborhood, and trading more or less at Owen’s store. He was also an indorser or surety upon three or four notes of Owen to different parties. At or about the time of the making of this deed, Owen had been sued in the circuit court for (¡he county of Van Burén by a creditor, and a judgment of over $1,300 rendered against him on the first day of September, 1884. The next morning early he came to the house of Kays, and said to him that he could not put off the collection of this judgment; and, as Kays and one John Bosevelt had always accommodated him, he wanted to fix up their matters at once. He asked Kays to pay two notes, one to Bock and one to Hill, upon which notes Kays was holden as surety, and he would turn him out property to pay him for so doing; said he did not wish to turn out his homestead, but would pay him in any other property he had. Kays asked him what he had, to which Owen replied that he had some village property, a saw-mill, lumber and logs, and his timbered lot (the Lensenmayer forty).

He asked Kays to go at once to Decatur, and “fix the business right up.” Kays preferred to go to Paw Paw, and thereupon they drove to the residence of John Bosevelt, who hitched up his double team and went with them to Paw Paw. Bosevelt was also surety upon notes for Owen, and upon arriving at Paw Paw he and Kays sought out O. N. Hilton, an attorney at law, and at that time judge of probate, and' [442]*442told him that they had a matter to fir up with Owen, and wished to complete it that day. Owen soon came into the office, and the matter was arranged. Kays told Owen that he did not wish to take the mill, lumber, and logs, as that was out of his line of business, but he would take the Lensenmayer forty. According to the testimony of Judge Hilton, who is corroborated by Kays and Rosevelt, Kaye asked Owen if the title was all right. Rosevelt then said: “The title is all right, for I have looked it up myself.”

Hilton then asked Owen if any execution had been levied upon it, knowing of the judgment taken the day before. Owen said he thought it was all right, but finally, upon Hilton’s advice, Hilton and Kays went into the clerk’s and register’s offices, and found the title clear of record.

When they came back, Owen said:

“Now I will tell you what I would like to have you do. I would like to have you arrange this so that if I can pay for it in a year I can have the land back.”

Mr. Kays replied:

“I had just as soon do that as not. All I want is my money, and I will sign a paper agreeing to deed it back to you at the end of that time on your paying me back $1,000.”

Judge Hilton then drew an article, which Kays signed, providing that, upon payment by Owen to Kays of $1,000 within a year from the date, the premises described as having been deeded by Owen to Kays, of the same date, should be deeded back to Owen. Hilton then stated to the parties that this instrument would convert the deed into a mortgage, and advised against the making of it. Kays then stated that he did not want a mortgage on the land, and the instrument was destroyed. A deed of the premises from Owen and wife to Kays was then drawn, and read over to Owen, who signed it.

The deed was taken to Owen’s house the same day, and there executed by the wife, in the presence of her husband, [443]*443Kays, and John and Charles Rosevelt/ The notes claimed ta form a consideration for this deed were afterwards paid by Kays. They amounted to about $1,000, and were so called and reckoned in the transaction. The land was worth from $800 to $1,200.

The burden of proof was upon the complainant to show that Kays had notice of his unrecorded lien upon the premises. We are not satisfied that Kays had any such notice. On the contrary, the preponderance of evidence is decidedly in favor of his claim that he had no notice, and received the deed in good faith.

The testimony of George W. Owen is relied upon to prove notice. Without going into detail as to our reasons, we are not inclined to put any reliance upon his evidence, as it is full of such flat contradictions of himself that the truth in it, if any, is not clearly discernible. He testifies that he informed Judge Hilton, in the presence of Kays, of the existence of the complainant’s mortgage, and that it ought to be mentioned in the deed, and that conveyance made subject to. it, and Hilton replied it would make no difference. This is denied by Kays, Rosevelt, and Judge Hilton, and is not reasonable. He had offered to turn out to Kays the mill property, which was unincumbered; but Kays preferred to take the land in question.

If the deed was to have been subject to this mortgage, the payment could not have amounted to over $300, and Kays would not have been likely to have put aside the mill property, worth the amount of his liability upon the Bock and Hill notes, and voluntarily accept this land, thus incumbered, in lieu thereof.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mitchell v. Powell
109 S.W.2d 155 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1937)
Ellis v. Nickle
101 S.W.2d 958 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1937)
Harris v. Evans
67 S.E. 880 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1910)
Hogan v. Detroit United Railway
103 N.W. 543 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1905)
Iowa Nat. Bank v. Sherman
97 N.W. 12 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1903)
Maynard v. Davis
86 N.W. 1051 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1901)
Schloss v. Feltus
36 L.R.A. 161 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 420, 64 Mich. 439, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanold-v-kays-mich-1887.