Jacobs v. Schmidt

203 N.W. 845, 231 Mich. 200, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 609
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 845 (Jacobs v. Schmidt) 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
Jacobs v. Schmidt, 203 N.W. 845, 231 Mich. 200, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 609 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

There are a large number of defendants in this case, but most of them are nominal and the real controversy is between plaintiff and Dorothy Waters Fitzgerald, Charles L. Bertch and Cora M. Bertch, who will be hereafter referred to as defendants. These parties together with Hazel McGregor, plaintiff’s secretary, own all the stock of Associated Merchants Company, defendants owning 1,500 shares, plaintiff 950 shares and Hazel McGregor 50 shares. The company has a lease for a period of years of an apartment house owned by plaintiff and for some time has so successfully conducted it under the management of Mrs. Fitzgerald as to return very substantial dividends. In considering the claims of parties, it Will be necessary later to go more fully into detail, but for the present it will suffice to state that the plaintiff and defendants entered into an agreement which recited that defendants were willing to sell and plaintiff was willing to buy defendants’ stock in the company but were unable to agree upon the price to be paid; and agreeing that plaintiff would buy and defendants would sell such stock, the price to be fixed by one man chosen by plaintiff, one by defendants, and the third to be chosen by the two or in the event they were unable to agree upon a man, one was to *203 be chosen by the presiding judge of the Wayne circuit court. Plaintiff selected John Harold Schmidt, defendants Walter V. Brandon, and at Mr. Schmidt’s suggestion, Claude M. Harmon was selected as the third. Before they had arrived at a final result this bill was filed seeking to set aside the agreement and for other relief and an injunction was issued restraining Messrs. Schmidt, Brandon and Harmon from further proceeding with their duties.

In considering the questions involved we shall take them up in what we deem their logical order rather than their degree of importance. This necessitates first considering the character of the agreement. It was not executed in conformity with 3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 13646 et seq., and plaintiff insists that it is an agreement for a common-law arbitration while defendants insist that it is an agreement for an appraisal.

“The settlement of controversies by arbitration is an ancient practice at common law. In its broad sense it is a substitution, by consent of parties, of another tribunal for the tribunals provided by the ordinary processes of law; a domestic tribunal, as con-tradistinguished from a regularly organized court proceeding according to the course of the common law, depending upon the voluntary act of the parties disputant in the selection of judges of their own choice. Its object is the final disposition, in a speedy and inexpensive way, of the matters involved, so that they may not become the subject of future litigation between the parties.” 5 C. J. p. 16.
“Appraisal or Appraisement. A valuation of, or an estimation of the value of, property; the valuation of goods and chattels or real estate by two persons of suitable qualifications, fair, impartial, and disinterested, having knowledge of the property to be appraised, and with intelligence to ascertain its value after inspection and inquiry on the subject.” 4 C. J. p. 1408.

This court has recognized the difference between *204 an arbitration and an appraisal. Noble v. Grandin, 125 Mich. 383. In the instant case the sole function to be performed by the three men selected was the fixing of the value of the stock; they were not to adjust disputed claims between the parties. The contract provided for an appraisal, not an arbitration, and could not be set aside or revoked at the will of the plaintiff. Noble v. Grandin, supra.

Plaintiff claims that his signature to the agreement was procured by fraud and that he did not intelligently enter into it. He claims that defendants’ attorney prepared it and represented to him that it would have no binding effect and that if he would sign it matters would be settled up without proceeding under it. This is emphatically denied by defendants’ attorney. We deem it but proper to say at this point that plaintiff’s sworn bill filed in this case contained so many charges that are unsupported by proof that we feel constrained to scrutinize plaintiff’s testimony with an unusual degree of care. We are satisfied by the convincing proof and the circumstances surrounding the transaction which are overwhelmingly with defendants that no fraud was perpetrated on plaintiff in procuring the contract and that it was entered into advisedly by him. Beyond any doubt the facts surrounding the making of this contract are these: There was disagreement between the parties; plaintiff’s son is an attorney and we are satisfied notwithstanding claims to the contrary that he represented his father through this entire transaction; he had several conferences with defendants’ attorney and finally they sat down together and jointly dictated the agreement. After it was finished plaintiff was not prepared to sign it; he had besides his son another attorney employed, a man of high standing and unquestioned ability; he submitted the contract to him and retained it in his possession for upwards of ten days when he finally signed it; to effectuate the agree *205 ment defendants were required to deposit their stock in escrow with the Union Trust Company and plaintiff was required to deposit his certified check for $1,000 with the Trust Company; this he did. Plaintiff is a man of large affairs whose business is “re-discounting mortgages and notes on contracts,” and it is unbelievable that he did not know what he was signing or that any fraud was perpetrated to procure his signature.

The plaintiff selected Mr. Schmidt as one of the appraisers. He had been a tenant of plaintiff for a couple of years, and was engaged in the real estate business. Defendants’ selection was Mr. Brandon. He is president of the Bankers Trust Company. It does not appear that he had any acquaintance with defendants before his selection and was named at the suggestion of their attorney. Mr. Schmidt suggested Mr. Harmon with whom he had been acquainted for a number of years and with whom he had had business relations for the third member. Mr. Harmon had been president of the Detroit Real Estate Board and was at the time chairman of its appraisers committee. He had had a wide experience in real estate matters. He was and had been for some time a member of the board of directors of the Bankers Trust Company, consisting of eighteen members. Two members of the firm of attorneys employed by defendants were directors of the Trust Company, and the attorney having active charge of the case had a few shares of its stock! They were not attorneys for the Trust Company. It is the claim of plaintiff that he did not know that Brandon and Harmon were on the board of directors together when they were selected although he learned of that fact soon after. Mr. Schmidt also claims he did not know of this fact, and it was claimed by plaintiff that Harmon for this reason was disqualified from acting as an appraiser. It developed on the hearing that Mrs. Bertch *206 had a loan at the Bankers Trust Company secured by a mortgage. The amount of it does not appear, nor is it claimed that the security was not ample or that either Brandon or Harmon had anything to do with making it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 845, 231 Mich. 200, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-schmidt-mich-1925.