Lannen v. Teller

200 N.W. 166, 228 Mich. 243, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 778
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1924
DocketDocket No. 52.
StatusPublished

This text of 200 N.W. 166 (Lannen v. Teller) 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
Lannen v. Teller, 200 N.W. 166, 228 Mich. 243, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 778 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Steere, J.

At the time this case was tried plaintiff Lawrence Lannen was 64 years of age and living on his farm in the township of Cohoctah, Livingston county, and had been for many years engaged in farm *245 ing, occasionally dealing in stock and buying sheep for feeding. Plaintiff Roy M. Lannen, son of Lawrence, was 35 years of age at the time of the trial and a married man. He had been engaged in other pursuits for a time but lived on the farm with his father since 1912, associated with him in the same calling. Defendant, John Teller, was also an elderly man and a farmer living in the same neighborhood and on the same road as plaintiffs. Their farms were on opposite sides of the road and their buildings within 100 rods of each other. The elder Lannen and Teller had known each other over 40 years. The latter’s second wife, Maggie, whom he married in 1899, was a sister of the elder Lannen’s wife. She died in 1911, leaving one child by Teller, a daughter named Orabelle Teller. Plaintiffs and defendant and their families were on friendly terms for many years, closely associated together in neighborly relations with mutual confidence and freedom both socially and in business matters. Of the long intimacy between Lawrence Lannen and Teller, Roy Lannen testified, and it is not disputed:

“Father and John have been very intimate in all of their business relations as far back as I can remember. They owned approximately half of their tools together. In order to tell how many years they owned their tools that way you will have to ask some one older than I am. They both bought land from time to time so that they had about the same number of acres, changed work back and forth and used these tools in common and (n) either of them ever kept any account of days’ work for what the other did. If either of them had anything in or about their barns that the other needed they felt free to help themselves. When one went to the other’s house they were not in the habit of knocking before they went in, and they pretty nearly lived as one family except in separate houses. They were like two brothers, and if either of them had any difficulty the other was the first to go there.”

*246 During the many years of such continued intimacy the parties from time to time had unquestioned business matters between them of various kinds and magnitude, which were at the time so recognized by both, as well as other transactions in which as they occurred the line between mutual accommodations or gratuitous assistance and business transactions as generally understood was apparently not always well defined.

Defendant married again not very long after the death of his second wife, Maggie, the only sister of Mrs. Lawrence Lannen. . Maggie’s only daughter, Orabelle, lived with her father until about 18 years of age and then by mutual consent of all parties in interest became a member of Lawrence Lannen’s household, making her home there until about the time she was married in 1921. Her aunt, Mrs. Lawrence Lannen, in describing the situation, testified that she came there about January 1, 1914, and remained until May, 1921; had no other home during those years, and “treated me as a mother;” that she “liked her,” was proud of her accomplishments and “tried to make a nice girl out of her.” Roy testified that “she practically lived in the family as a daughter would live in any family.”

In 1920, Teller held an auction of his personal property and left his farm. Some farm tools and machinery which they owned together were disposed of at that sale as they had agreed should be done. Lawrence Lannen testified that when they made the arrangement to include their jointly owned implements in the sale Teller agreed they would have a settlement after it was over, whicíi did not, however, eventuate because, as Lawrence briefly describes the end of their long continued David and Jonathan relation: “A few days after that I asked him for a settlement — he told me to go to h — 1.” Lawrence *247 preferred to go to law and after it was conclusively shown that Teller stood steadfast in his attitude towards a settlement this action in assumpsit was begun by plaintiffs, on February 28, 1922, to recover the balance claimed due from defendant in their dealings through the many years of their intimacy. A bill of particulars was furnished on demand which covers 10 full pages of the printed record and includes an item of $2,212.50 for board, lodging and maintenance of Teller’s daughter, Orabelle, at his request.

Defendant pleaded the general issue with special notice of four defenses, including the statute of limitations and a counterclaim of set-off and recoupment covering between 7 and 8 pages of the printed record, beginning with a claim of $500 for caring for, nursing, sitting up nights with and taking Lawrence to a hospital when he was sick, both physically and mentally, and caring for his business affairs during that time, followed by a claim of $2,500 for the services of his minor daughter, Orabelle, while she lived and worked in Lawrence’s home, and a liberal list of other items amounting to over $5,000 more directly relating to their business dealings ^s claimed. The case was tried by jury in the Livingston county circuit court resulting in a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor for $1,438.95.

Lawrence and Roy Lannen formed their copartnership in 1912, filing the proper credentials with the county clerk as required by law. The partnership took over Lawrence’s business and continued up to the time of the trial of this case. In that connection Lawrence Lannen testified:

“John Teller and I were in the habit of settling out by his barn, quite often we figured on the side of his barn. We had various settlements after the date of this note but that was not included because it slipped my mind. Roy came home and took hold of the business in April, 1912. I don’t think John and I *248 had any settlements after that date. Roy looked after the financial end of it after that time more than I did. * * * Roy commenced and did the business. He and John seemed to do the dealing, buying cattle together, bulls and such as that.”

Seemingly in harmony with the title of this case the items in plaintiffs’ bill of particulars fall into three classes or sets of claims, one of Lawrence Lannen personally, one of Roy Lannen as an individual and the other of Lawrence Lannen & Son as a copartnership. Before entering upon the trial defendant’s counsel interposed a preliminary objection on the ground that plaintiffs had combined three' distinct causes of action apparently to evade the statute of limitations, but after some discussion consented that the controversy between the parties as indicated by the pleadings might “all be threshed out in this one proceeding” and a general verdict taken, it being understood that the defense of the statute of limitations as to any of the items was not waived.

After the jury had been drawn and before any' testimony was taken counsel for each side made an opening statement to the jury. Defendant’s counsel announced he would state defendant’s claim at that stage of the proceedings, “in view of the rather involved proofs,” and that the jury might have clearly in mind defendant’s position while listening to the examination of plaintiffs’ witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
200 N.W. 166, 228 Mich. 243, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lannen-v-teller-mich-1924.