Lamoreaux v. Eggleston

137 N.W. 77, 171 Mich. 201, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 617
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1912
DocketDocket No. 101
StatusPublished

This text of 137 N.W. 77 (Lamoreaux v. Eggleston) 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
Lamoreaux v. Eggleston, 137 N.W. 77, 171 Mich. 201, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 617 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

The bill of complaint was filed September 28, 1908, was answered by defendant, and a replication to the answer was filed November 24, 1908. An amended answer asking for affirmative relief was filed October 21, 1909. The record does not make very clear what was therereafter done beyond this, that an injunction was granted, and was later, and on October 12, 1908, modified upon the motion of defendant to dissolve it.

At a session of the court held September 22, 1911, the cause came on for hearing in open court as in a suit at law, and thereupon counsel for complainant moved the court for a continuance. In support of the motion, the certificate and affidavit of a physician and the affidavit of one of the solicitors for complainant were presented. The court inquired if the complainant could be ready to proceed at the next term, and was answered that no one could tell whether he would or would not be prepared, but that it was the opinion of his counsel that he was mentally incompetent. From the colloquy which followed it appears that certain facts were accepted by court and counsel as true. The court stated, among other things, that the showing as to complainant's condition was sufficient to support the conclusion that he was not [203]*203fit to come into court, but that the cause had gone over from term to term on complainant’s showing of a similar condition, and there was nothing to indicate an improved condition in the future. Upon the suggestion of complainant’s counsel that a guardian for complainant should be appointed, the court offered to make the appointment if a suitable person was named as guardian. Counsel declined to suggest the name of any person. Thereupon the cause proceeded. Counsel for complainant stated they had nothing to offer. Defendant produced testimony. A decree was entered dismissing the bill, and granting relief under the answer and cross-bill. The amount decreed to be due defendant from complainant was $79.12. Defendant was awarded costs. Complainant has appealed, and urges here that in proceeding to a hearing the court abused discretion, that time should have been allowed for the selection and appointment of a guardian, and that upon the merits the decree is not warranted by the pleadings and proofs.

There is no merit in the contention that a further continuance should have been ordered. It appears that complainant was competent to begin the suit. His infirmity came upon him on or before October 21, 1909, when he was suffering from paralysis, and after which time his condition became gradually worse. Assuming that he was wholly incompetent to do business, or to testify as a witness, and that he would never be in better health, the conclusion is that, in so far as his case depended upon his own testimony, it must inevitably fail. In so far as it depended upon the testimony of others, no good reason was given for not presenting the available testimony, with or without the intervention of a guardian. The defendant should not have been obliged, for an indefinite additional period, to hold himself in readiness to try an issue tendered by the complainant.

The litigation arose out of relations created by an oral agreement, stated in the bill as follows:

[204]*204“Thesaid defendant should put in all the crops on said farm for the season of 1908; that defendant should have the use of one team of horses, the use of two cows, the use of the barn excepting such space as was reserved for the use of your orator, and the use of all the agricultural implements and tools in and upon said farm, and that he should also have the use of the house, excepting such rooms as were reserved to your orator; that said defendant should perform and pay for (if necessary) any and all the manual labor in sowing, cultivating, and harvesting the said crops, and to furnish one-half of the seed that was to be used for cropping the said land for the said season, and that the other half of said seed was to be furnished by your orator; that for and in consideration of the said work and labor of the said defendant in and upon the said farm, the said defendant and your orator were each to have one-half of all the crops raised on said farm during the said season, excepting the oat and hay crop, which your orator charges was to be divided as follows: One-third of said oat and hay crop to belong to said defendant, and two-thirds of said oat and hay crop to belong to your orator, that said defendant was to care for, keep, and provide at his own expense the necessary food for the said team and cows, and that the fruit raised on said farm was to be equally divided between said defendant and your orator, that your orator at the time of the making of said agreement was the owner of some bees and chickens on said farm premises, which were not covered by said agreement, but remained the exclusive property of your orator during the life of said agreement.”

Defendant entered into possession of the land and cropped it for the year 1908. The bill prays, among other things:

“ (5) That said defendant fully set forth a true and just account of all his acts and doings in respect to said agreement, and that an account may be taken under the direction of this honorable court of all and every of the said seed, materials, cash, and labor furnished by your orator at the request of the defendant.
“(c) That the several sums of money so found to be due to your orator by or from the said defendant, if any, be declared a lien upon the said standing corn and potatoes, and that the said corn and potatoes may be sold under the direction and order of this court, to satisfy the said [205]*205lien, rendering the surplus, if any, to the said defendant.
(d) That the said agreement may be dissolved by the said court.
“(e) That the writ of injunction may be issued out of and under the seal of this honorable court, directed to the said defendant, and restraining him from in any way selling or disposing of the said corn and potatoes, and from interfering with and molesting the said complainant in the use and enjoyment of his said premises as hereinbefore set forth, and particularly from threatening and committing any injury or violence to the person of said complainant.”

The modified injunction required defendant—

“To absolutely and entirely desist and refrain from selling, disposing, or using the share belonging to said complainant of the corn and potatoes raised and grown on the premises described in said bill of complaint during the year 1908, said share to be determined and said crop divided from time to time as the same shall be harvested, and from plowing and preparing said land and putting in crops for the season of 1909, and from interfering with or molesting the said complainant in the use of his said premises, and particularly from threatening to and committing any injury or violence to the person of said complainant until the further order of this court in the premises.”

In his answer, defendant stated the agreement of the parties as follows:

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Related

Wyatt v. Sweet
12 N.W. 692 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 N.W. 77, 171 Mich. 201, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamoreaux-v-eggleston-mich-1912.