Kelly v. Kelly

19 N.W. 580, 54 Mich. 30, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 514
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 19 N.W. 580 (Kelly v. Kelly) 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
Kelly v. Kelly, 19 N.W. 580, 54 Mich. 30, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 514 (Mich. 1884).

Opinion

Champlin, J.

The bill of complaint states that on the 31st day of December, 1877, and for a long time prior thereto, defendant was the owner of three several parcels of land, particularly described in the bill, of the aggregate •value of three thousand dollars; that he was deeply involved financially, and the lands incumbered by mortgages, one of two hundred dollars, one of three, and one of live hundred ■dollars, all held by Luther James of Ann Arbor, Michigan, which covered two of the parcels of land, and the other parcel was subject to a mortgage of one hundred dollars, held .and owned by a Mrs. Smith. One parcel of the land has a dwelling thereon, and is situated in the city of Ann Arbor, .and the other parcels lie just outside the corporate limits of the city. That he was owing unsecured debts, as follows: To Gilbert E. Johnson, $1000; Mr. Antler, $115; Ann Arbor Savings Bank, $50; and to complainant, $100. That he was somewhat advanced in years and broken m health, [32]*32and was unable to pay these debts. “That on the 31st day of December, 1877, as aforesaid, the said defendant made an oral agreement with your orator, wherein and whereby it was agreed, understood and contracted that your orator should assume and pay off all the then existing indebtedness, of whatsoever name or nature, which was, or then might be, existing and outstanding against the defendant, including the incumbrances upon the aforesaid lands, and that, in consideration therefor, the aforesaid lands should then become, and thereafter be, the property of your orator. And it was agreed and understood that whatever was necessary to be done in the way of legal transfers to effect the arrangement would be done at the seasonable time.”

The bill then alleges: “ That in consideration of the assumption and payment of said indebtedness by your orator, the said lands should become, and did then and there become, the absolute property of your orator, with the right and power either to sell and convey said lands, and therefrom liquidate the aforesaid indebtedness, or to retain said lands as his own, and pay the said indebtedness, or to make such other or different disposition of said lands as to your orator might seem proper; provided your orator assumed and paid all of the aforesaid debts and incumbrances.”

He then states that he at once entered upon the performance of his contract obligations, and then and there assumed the payment of the indebtedness to Gilbert E. Johnson “by executing his own note, signed by the defendant, and delivering the same to said Johnson,” which he paid on August 21, 1880, amounting, with interest thereon, to $1189; that in the month of October, 1877, prior to said agreement, he paid, at defendant’s request, interest upon the James mortgage, amounting to $110, and in October, 1878, he paid to Luther James interest amounting to $120. In May, 1879, he paid upon the James mortgage $300, and in March, 1880, he paid the balance due to Luther James of $371.8G, and thereupon the five hundred dollar mortgage was discharged; that in November, 1879, he paid the principal and interest due on the Smith mortgage, amounting to $118.50, and [33]*33caused the same to be discharged; that in the summer of 1879 he paid to Mrs. Antler the amount of defendant’s note held by her, of $115, and another note to the Ann Arbor Savings Bank, of $50; that he has fully performed his part of the agreement, and liquidated the entire indebtedness against defendant, except the payment of the mortgages, amounting to five hundred dollars, held by Luther James; that he is ready and anxious to pay said mortgages, and would have done so long before, had he not felt apprehensive of the conduct of the defendant, “lest he should be jeopardized in the security in the sums of money already advanced, and any sum thereafter advanced.”

It is stated in the bill that defendant continued to reside on these lands until about the first of January, 1879, when he came to live with complainant at Farwell, Clare county, Michigan, and so continued to live at Farwell until about May 1, 1880; that in February, 1879, defendant’s wife died at Farwell.

The complainant proceeds to state the conduct of the defendant which caused him to feel apprehension lest he might be jeoparded in his security, as follows: “That defendant, some four months since, intermarried with a young woman of some twenty-three years of age, and from the time of such marriage has lived apart from your orator; that since his marriage he has manifested a different spirit toward your orator, and has sought to repudiate the agreement made between them as hereinbefore set forth; that your orator, becoming alarmed lest his moneys as aforesaid advanced might be endangered or lost, and discovering a disposition on the part of the defendant to ignore said agreement, your orator asked and urged the said defendant to complete the arrangement and understanding so as aforesaid entered into between them, and to that end to execute a deed of conveyance of said lands to your orator in pursuance of such contract and understanding, but the said defendant has and does utterly refuse so to do; that your orator, finding that the defendant was unwilling to convey the said premises to yout orator, urged him to deliver to your orator a mortgage upon the [34]*34lands as security for the money so advanced by your orator to the defendant as hereinbefore set forth, or in some other manner to secure your orator the said sums of money so advanced, but the said defendant refused soto do, or to make any arrangement whatever with j’our orator for repayment, security or conveyance, and on the other hand occupies a hostile attitude toward your orator.”

The relief prayed for is, 1st. That defendant be required and compelled to make, execute, and deliver to complainant a good and sufficient deed of conveyance of said lands; .or 2d. That complainant’s title and estate therein may be adjudged and decreed to be perfect and complete as of the 31st day of December, A. D. 1877; or 3d. That he be compelled to deliver to your orator ample and satisfactory security for the prompt repayment of the said sums of money as aforesaid advanced; or 4th. That complainant be decreed to have an equitable mortgage upon the said premises for the moneys advanced, and a sale thereof for the sums to be decreed; and a prayer for general relief.

Defendant answered under oath, denying the agreement set up in the bill, and giving a family history at length. Proofs were taken, and the court below entered a decree which is entirely silent as to the existence of the agreement set forth in the bill, but asserts that, it appearing to the satisfaction of the court that complainant has advanced and paid, at the request of defendant, $931.32, upon three certain mortgages named in the bill, covering the two parcels first described therein, and the further sum of $118.50 on the second parcel; and that complainant is justly and equitably entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagees for all payments by him made upon said mortgages, and to a lien upon said lands for the payments so advanced; and decreeing that the respective sums be just, legal and valid liens upon the lands which had been incumbered by the mortgages paid, and that in default of payment by defendant by a certain day therein named, the lands be sold by- a circuit court commissioner, and the moneys applied to payment of complainant, and the surplus, if any, be brought into court to abide its further [35]*35order.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.W. 580, 54 Mich. 30, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-kelly-mich-1884.