In Re Emery's Estate

298 N.W. 321, 297 Mich. 663
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1941
DocketDocket No. 127, Calendar No. 41,183.
StatusPublished

This text of 298 N.W. 321 (In Re Emery's Estate) 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
In Re Emery's Estate, 298 N.W. 321, 297 Mich. 663 (Mich. 1941).

Opinions

North, J.

Harold J. Bowman filed a claim against the estate of Joel P. Gr. Emery in the amount of $1,008.80. Prom allowance of the claim in full by the commissioners on claims, the administrator appealed to the circuit court where the cause was tried without a jury and judgment rendered for the plaintiff in the amount of $508.80. The case is here on appeal by the administrator,

*665 On August 9, 1933, Emery executed in favor of Bowman an instrument termed by the parties an “option for purchase of land” for a recited consideration of one dollar. By the terms of the option, Emery gave Bowman the right to purchase a certain quarter section of land therein described, at any time within five years of the date thereof, for $1,000, and Emery agreed, on written request of Bowman, to “execute and deliver to him, or to any person or persons as he # # * shall direct in writing, a good and sufficient warranty deed and abstract * * # of the * # * land.”

On the same date, August 9,1933, Emery executed a warranty deed of the same premises to Byron J. Beebe, his nephew, who is defendant in this suit as administrator of Emery’s estate. This deed referred to the above-mentioned option and was expressly subject to it, but it appears this deed was never delivered, nor was it recorded in the life time of the grantor. In November, 1935, Bowman and his wife entered into a written agreement for the sale of said lands to the Federal resettlement administration at a price of seven dollars per acre, a total price of $1,120 for the quarter section. This agreement was approved by the regional attorney for the government in December, 1935, and is marked received by the government on March 26, 1936.

The government required certain curative data in addition to the abstracts which they had received from Bowman in March, 1936, and so informed him by letter on October 1, 1936, requesting also the execution of a deed to the premises from Emery to Bowman and wife. Subsequently, on or about November 13, 1936, Howard N. Gordon, an employee of the resettlement administration, with *666 whom Bowman had conducted his negotiations for the sale of the land to the government, prepared a quitclaim deed running from Emery to Bowman and wife and went to the home of Emery in order to have the deed executed. Emery refused to sign, giving as his reason therefor that he had not received his money. Soon after this Gordon went back to Bowman and told him of his inability to get the deed. The record is not clear as to just what happened thereafter. However, it would seem that the parties arrived at an understanding that Bowman’s agreement with the government should be cancelled, and that Emery should execute a similar contract directly with the government in Bowman’s stead. The above is indicated by the fact that in an instrument dated December 11, 1936, Emery executed an agreement with the resettlement administration which was in all respects like the one Bowman had executed in 1935; and in an instrument dated December 15, 1936, Bowman cancelled his 1935 agreement with the government. However, it appears that Bowman’s cancellation was not signed by him until after February 10, 1937, when he received a letter from Emery asking him to attend to some matter in connection with the option, although it is not clear from the letter just what matter Emery is referring to.

Emery died March 25, 1937, and the following December plaintiff, Bowman, presented the instant claim against the estate of Emery for $1,000 and $8.80 expense incurred, claiming that $1,000 had been paid by him to Emery pursuant to the terms of the 1933 option agreement. Attached to the claim was a receipt which plaintiff claims was signed by Emery some time between November 1, and *667 November 10, 1936, at which time the parties, plaintiff asserts, “arranged a settlement of the moneys that had been paid and the amount that Bowman was to receive as evidence by the receipt.” This receipt (Exhibit 12) was made out on a letterhead or billhead of the Herald Publishing’ Company of Roscommon, Michigan, which evidently had been used in billing a charge for publication of a probate notice in 1933 in the estate of Joel F. G. Emery’s father, and the balance of the receipt in substance and form is substantially as follows:

“Aug. 10 Publication probate notice $4.80 three issues.
Nov. 1st, 1933 Cash, $500.00
June 2nd, 1934 Cash. $500.00
Oct. 5th, 1936. Trip to Grayling on option 4.00.
[Balance in hand writing]
Received of PI. J. Bowman.
The above amt to be applied on contract
Signed Joel Emery”

Plaintiff does not claim a written agreement to repay the sum in controversy, but asserts that the $1,000, noted on the above-mentioned receipt as made up of two $500 cash items, represents the .total of various payments which he had previously made from time to time, and that such payments are summarized in the receipt. He further asserts that at the time Emery signed the receipt, it was an acknowledgment of the amount due Bowman, there being an implied promise to repay the plaintiff this amount in consideration of his cancellation of his agreement with the government and his surrender of the original 1933 option under which he claims to have paid the money. It appears that this option was surrendered or given back to Emery *668 some time before his death as it was found among the effects of decedent by the administrator and turned over to the probate judge. And a carbon copy of this option was turned over to the administrator by Bowman shortly after Emery’s funeral.

The defendent estate by its administrator disputes the validity of the receipt, claiming that the signature is not that .of decedent; and defendant also claims that there was no agreement to repay any money, that no money was ever paid to Emery pursuant to the option, and that Bowman lost all his rights when he cancelled his agreement with the government.

As an indication that no such moneys as described in the receipt had been paid to Emery, defendant introduced testimony as to bank accounts and receipt books of Emery, pointing out that there is no record among Emery’s papers of the receipt of such moneys. It is also urged that the validity of the receipt is impugned by the testimony of Gordon, because testimony in behalf of plaintiff indicates that the receipt was signed before November 10th, but Gordon testified that on November 13, 1936, when he asked decedent to execute a deed of the property to Bowman, Emery refused to execute the deed because he had not received his money.

A disinterested witness, Ben Kepler, testified that he was present at the time the receipt was prepared, and that he saw Emery sign it.

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Bluebook (online)
298 N.W. 321, 297 Mich. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-emerys-estate-mich-1941.