Lee v. Stratford Arms Hotel Co.

211 N.W. 103, 236 Mich. 520, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 873
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1926
DocketDocket No. 110.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 211 N.W. 103 (Lee v. Stratford Arms Hotel Co.) 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
Lee v. Stratford Arms Hotel Co., 211 N.W. 103, 236 Mich. 520, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 873 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Wiest, J.

This case involves the validity of several contracts signed by plaintiff in and about the financing and construction of the Stratford Arms hotel in the city of Detroit. Plaintiff is 68 years of age, an attorney of 40 years’ standing, but since 1911 engaged in the real estate business in the city of Detroit. In March, 1928, he conceived the idea that an apartment hotel at the southeast corner of Park boulevard and Sproat street in the city of Detroit would prove a good investment, and figured the cost of an eight-story building at about $400,000. With this in mind he made an offer to Jennie H. Marwell, owner, to take a 99-year lease of the premises (125 by 60 feet) at the point mentioned and stated the probable cost of an eight-story hotel at about $400,000, and gave his estimate of returns on such an investment. April 2,1923, the owner gave plaintiff a 99-year lease of the premises, exacting therein monthly payments of ground rent, and agreeing to join in a first mortgage to raise money for construction purposes. Plaintiff had no, means of his own with which to build the hotel or materially aid in the necessary financing of the project and even had to borrow money to pay some installments of ground rent. The lease was of value if the scheme plaintiff had in mind worked out success *522 fully, otherwise, and without great expenditure, it was a serious liability. The inability of plaintiff to finance the project necessarily caused him to endeavor to induce others to become interested, and this led to the making of several contracts, now claimed by him to be void for fraud.

The first step, of course, was to have some plan of the contemplated building prepared, and to this end Louis Kamper, an architect, was employed under the standard form of contract. Plans were prepared by the architect. July 5, 1923, plaintiff entered into a construction contract with the Otto Misch Company, under which he agreed to pay'$290,000 for a seven-story building erected according to the plans, and specifications of the architect. Financial arrangements at that time had not been perfected' 'but a tentative method by mortgage bonds, from which $225,000 was to' be realized, was mentioned. There is a claim made by plaintiff of a previous contract between the same parties* for a lesser sum, and that plaintiff was induced, by representations made by Paul L. Kamper, son of Louis Kamper, to forego that contract. The evidence in support of such claim is too unsatisfactory to justify such a finding. October 31, 1923, plaintiff, by agreement with Howe, Snow & Bertles, Inc., arranged for the sale of bonds secured by trust mortgage covering the fee interest of Jennie H. Marwell and plaintiff’s leasehold interest in the sum of $250,000. In the agreement plaintiff declared his intention to form a corporation to which the lease would be assigned and it would carry out the agreement. October 15, 1923, plaintiff entered into a contract with the Lynch Construction Company, a New York corporation doing business in this State, for the construction of the building and the financing of the project beyond the avails from the above mentioned bonds. To this end a local corporation was to be created by and under the control of the contractor, *523 to which plaintiff would assign hisi lease, and the new corporation would enter into contract with the Lynch Company for the construction of the building on the basis of 10 per cent, of cqsts as a contractor’s fee. This is the so-called cost-plus contract. The contract also provided for a lease by the new corporation to plaintiff upon completion of the building. October 31, 1923, plaintiff entered into a supplemental agreement with the Lynch Construction Company, modifying the former agreement so that the Lynch Company should be paid the cost of construction of said apartment hotel, plus' financing charges, payment of arrears of taxes, assessed taxes during construction, one year’s interest on first mortgage, bond discount, arrears of rent, and rent for one year in advance from November 1, 1923, trustee’s fees, obligation of $550 to Henry J. Guthard, mortgage and stamp taxes, recording charges, Michigan securities commission fee, company attorney’s fees, and insurance, and, for its services in financing, the sum of $350,000, plus $35,000 for service under the previous contract, and fees of the architect were fixed at $21,000. November 3, 1923, articles were executed for the incorporation of the Stratford Arms Hotel Company with Paul L. Hamper, son of the architect, president and holder of nearly all the shares of stock. This corporation was organized in accordance with the previous agreement with plaintiff, and he knew it was to serve as the creature of the construction company. November 24, 1923, plaintiff and his wife assigned the Marwell lease to the Stratford Arms Hotel Company. December 1, 1923, the Stratford Arms Hotel Company, together with Jennie H. Marwell, executed a first mortgage to the Detroit Trust Company as trustee to secure bonds in the sum of $250,000, to be purchased by Howe, Snow & Bertles, Inc., at 90 per cent, of their face value. In the mortgage the *524 Stratford Arms Hotel Company agreed to erect on the mortgaged premises a modern seven-story apartment hotel, containing not less than 520,000 cubic feet and costing not less than $360,000. The trustee under the mortgage was to pay in part for the construction from the fund under the architect’s certificates. October 31, 1923, the Lynch Construction Company entered into an agreement with the Otto Misch Company, in which it was. recited that the Misch Company had agreed to ere'ct the hotel for Mr. Lee, and that at the request of the Misch Company the Lynch Company had, on October 15, 1923, entered into an agreement with Lee to finance the project beyond the avails from the proposed first mortgage. The Misch Company agreed to construct the hotel for the sum of $241,000, and to aid in the financing to execute its promissory notes to an amount not exceeding $40,000, to be paid by some form of financing after completion of the building. November 26, 1923, the Stratford Arms Hotel Company engaged the Lynch Construction Company to erect a seven-story, above basement, hotel building, to consist of 160 bed rooms, 6 sitting rooms, 84 bath rooms, with 5 stores, 1 restaurant and kitchen, the building to be 75 feet in height and furnished suitably for an apartment hotel at a guaranteed cost of $350,000, and a service fee of $35,000. The Hotel Company agreed to execute the trust mortgage for $250,000 to secure the bonds Howe, Snow & Bertles, Inc., had agreed to purchase. The Lynch Company agreed to advance the sums necessary to defray the cost in excess of the amount realized from sale of the mortgage bonds and advance 25 per cent, of the purchase price of the furniture and furnishings, pay taxes due and accruing during construction, interest for the first year on first mortgage bonds, arrears of ground rent, not exceeding $15,000 and ground rent for one year, fees of the mortgage trustee, $550 to *525 Henry Guthard, State tax upon the mortgage, stamp tax upon the bonds, recording charges, fee of the securities commission, fees and expenses of attorney for the Hotel Company and bond premiums; all such expenses to be a part of the construction costs and covered by the payment of $385,000.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stratford Arms Hotel Co. v. General Casualty & Surety Co.
229 N.W. 506 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1930)
Johnston Realty & Investment Co. v. Grosvenor
217 N.W. 20 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 N.W. 103, 236 Mich. 520, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-stratford-arms-hotel-co-mich-1926.