Horner v. Nerlinger

7 N.W.2d 281, 304 Mich. 225, 1943 Mich. LEXIS 438
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1943
DocketDocket No. 80, Calendar No. 42,145.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 7 N.W.2d 281 (Horner v. Nerlinger) 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
Horner v. Nerlinger, 7 N.W.2d 281, 304 Mich. 225, 1943 Mich. LEXIS 438 (Mich. 1943).

Opinion

Starr,, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment for defendant Nerlinger rendered by the trial court sitting without a jury.

*227 On November 14, 1924, plaintiff was adjudged mentally incompetent by tbe probate court for Wayne county, and tbe Union Trust Company was appointed his guardian. Such guardianship continued until August 12, 1929, when plaintiff’s disability was removed and the guardianship terminated by order of the probate court. In July, 1925, while plaintiff was under such disability and guardianship, defendant Nerlinger sold him, on land contract, two lots owned by Nerlinger at a price of $1,500, payable $150 down and the balance in monthly instalments of $15 or more with interest. The land contract described the lots as numbers “72 and 73 of the Seven Mile drive subdivision.” Defendant Franck (also referred to as Frank), a real-estate salesman acting as Nerlinger’s agent, showed such lots to .plaintiff and made the sale. Nerlinger did not see or talk with plaintiff prior to the sale. Defendant Franck had knowledge of plaintiff’s disability and guardianship when he made the sale to him.

Such lot purchase and land contract were not authorized by the probate court. Defendant Franck was informed by plaintiff’s guardian that it “would have nothing to do with the purchase of any real estate.” Plaintiff made payments on the land contract until some time in 1931, at which time he had paid a total of about $1,300 in principal and interest on the contract purchase price.

In October, 1931, plaintiff began a chancery action against defendants alleging, in substance,-that, while under guardianship in 1925, he was induced to purchase such lots by the fraud and misrepresentations of defendants; that defendant Franck as agent for defendant Nerlinger “intentionally, wilfully, and maliciously for the sole purpose of defrauding and cheating” plaintiff showed him cer *228 tain lots other and different from the lots described in the land contract; that defendant Franck showed him lots located “about two blocks off the Seven Mile road” and that the lots described in the land-contract are located “between % and % of a mile” from such road. Plaintiff alleged further that he first learned of defendants’ fraud and misrepresentation in 1931; and that he then tendered the land contract back to defendant Nerlinger and demanded refund and repayment of all sums he had paid on the land contract. In his bill of complaint plaintiff ‘asked that the land contract be rescinded and decreed null and void; that defendants be decreed to account for and repay to him all moneys paid on the contract; and “that an execution issue against the goods, chattels, lands, and tenements” of defendants.

Defendants Nerlinger and Franck both answered denying plaintiff’s charges of fraud and misrepresentation and also denying that- plaintiff had tendered back the land contract and demanded refund of payments. In his answer defendant Franck admitted that he knew plaintiff was under guardianship when the sale was made and the land contract executed. Such chancery case was tried in February, 1932. The court in its opinion stated, in part:

“The testimony is undisputed that .at the time the contract was made, the plaintiff in this case, who purchased the property, was under guardianship. That being true, no legal contract could be entered into by him, nor an investment of this kind of his funds could be made, without an order from the probate court, procured by the guardian, and made by them on his behalf. * * * i
“Mr. Nerlinger, the defendant in this case, claims to have held the property, and that is undisputed, by contract interest at the time the sale was made, *229 and Franck made the sale of the property, and lie must be held to be agent of Nerlinger. * *
“The testimony to me is very convincing that at time this contract was made, the plaintiff had no clear tinderstanding of what he was purchasing. I am also convinced that subsequent, and at the time of and after his guardian was discharged, that he did not acquire, and has not yet acquired a thorough understanding of the property as shown to him, that he was purchasing. I am inclined, and am forced to hold in this case, that ratification has not been made.
‘ ‘ The testimony is clear and undisputed that Mr. Franck, at the time the sale was made, had full knowledge of the facts'that he was dealing with a man who had been charged with disability, and was unable to contract for himself, and I think his acts were very unbecoming and such as should be censured in his dealings with this guardian.
“A decree may be entered in this case in keeping with those remarks, in favor of the plaintiff, and charging both defendants in this case with the amounts of the payments which the plaintiff has made upon this property. * * *
“Now then the decree may provide that the contract may be cancelled and rescission had, and that the defendants have 90 days in which to comply with .the decree of this court. I have stated all that I will state in relation to that decree.”

In pursuance of such opinion the court entered decree February 20, 1932, rescinding and canceling the land contract and ordering defendants, “individually and jointly,” to pay plaintiff the sum of $1,675.74 within 90 days. The decree provided further that, if defendants defaulted, in such payment, an execution issue against their “goods, chattels, lands and tenements.”

The record shows that on December 13, 1935, plaintiff and defendant Nerlinger entered into a written stipulation whereby Nerlinger paid plaintiff *230 $150 and agreed to pay the “further sum of $50 on the 13th day of March, 1936, and a like amount quarterly thereafter until said (chancery) decree-, taxed costs and interest have been fully paid and satisfied.” It appears that Nerlinger made no further payments under such stipulation.

In May, 1939, plaintiff began the present law action against defendants Nerlinger and Franck, claiming that the sum of $2,150 and interest was due and owing to him under the above-mentioned chancery decree obtained against defendants in February, 1932, and that such chancery decree was “based upon fraud and misrepresentation.” Default judgment in the present law action was later entered against defendant Franck for $2,275.41, and he has not appealed. On August 2, 1939, defendant Nerlinger answered admitting the entry of the chancery decree in February, 1932, but denying that such decree, as to himself, was based upon fraud and misrepresentation. In his answer, Nerlinger alleged that he had filed petition in bankruptcy and had been duly adjudged a bankrupt on October 7, 1937; that in such bankruptcy proceedings he had scheduled his indebtedness to plaintiff under the chancery decree against himself and defendant Franck; and that his discharge in bankruptcy, when granted, would bar and discharge plaintiff’s claim against him.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.W.2d 281, 304 Mich. 225, 1943 Mich. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horner-v-nerlinger-mich-1943.