Lendzion v. Senstock

1 N.W.2d 567, 300 Mich. 346, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 626
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1942
DocketDocket No. 65, Calendar No. 41,737.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 N.W.2d 567 (Lendzion v. Senstock) 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
Lendzion v. Senstock, 1 N.W.2d 567, 300 Mich. 346, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 626 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

Chandler, C. J.

It appears from the pleadings in this ease that the plaintiffs, desirous of obtaining a home for themselves, on March 30, 1939, entered into a preliminary agreement for the purchase of a certain house and lot in G-rosse Pointe Woods with Robert G. and William J. Ivitchen, title holders, for the sum of $8,500, expecting at that time that they would be able to obtain a loan for this amount from the Federal Housing Administration; that they anticipated that it would take about 30 days to obtain this loan. Plaintiffs then went to defendants, the defendant Frances being a sister of plaintiff Leonard, and also to another sister of plaintiff Leonard, a Mrs. Estelle Krebs, for financial assistance pending the negotiations to obtain the F.H.A. loan. Mrs. Krebs agreed to loan $4,000 and to take defendants’ note for this amount, and defendants agreed to advance the balance of the purchase price, $4,500, and take title to the premises in their own names.

The premises in question were purchased with the $4,000 advanced by Mrs. Krebs and the $4,500 advanced by defendants, and title to same was taken in the names of defendants. Plaintiffs then moved onto the premises.

Negotiations for the F.H.A. loan fell through and defendants then executed to Mrs. Krebs a mortgage on the premises to secure the note they had given for the $4,000 that she advanced.

It is alleged in the pleadings that some payments of interest were made to Mrs. Krebs by plaintiffs and that plaintiffs also paid some taxes.

On June 28, 1940, the plaintiffs herein filed their *348 bill of complaint alleging substantially tbe foregoing facts, but urging that defendants were to take title to the property as security for tbe money advanced by them, and further it is tbe claim of tbe plaintiffs that tbe defendants agreed orally to execute a land contract to plaintiffs for tbe sale of said' premises for tbe sum of $10,500 with interest at 4 per cent., and should allow plaintiffs a credit on said contract of $2,000, thus reducing tbe amount of tbe principal thereof to tbe amount that defendants and Mrs. Krebs bad advanced in payment for said property. Plaintiffs further allege that after moving onto said property they paid interest to Estelle Krebs on tbe mortgage given to her by defendants, and also paid to defendants interest on tbe remaining $4,500 with tbe exception of tbe June 1, 1940, payment, and that their reason for refusing to pay this interest was because defendants refused to execute a land contract to plaintiffs in accordance with said oral agreement. Tbe plaintiffs alleged that they always have been, and still are, ready and willing to enter into a land contract with tbe defendants in accordance with their said oral agreement, and in their amended bill of complaint they seek specific performance by defendants of such oral agreement to enter into a land contract.

For answer to said bill' of complaint tbe defendants admit that plaintiffs went into possession of' tbe premises described in tbe bill of complaint and made payments of interest, and admit that they refused to sign a land contract, which was prepared by plaintiffs, insisting that the agreement to make said contract is invalid and unenforceable because not reduced to writing and subscribed to by tbe party to be charged as required bv 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13411 (Stat. Ann. § 26.906).“

Defendants file a cross bill alleging that they took title to said premises as security for tbe repayment *349 of their loan, and urge that it was expressly agreed between the plaintiffs and defendants that the defendants were to hold the title to said premises only until plaintiffs could obtain an F.H.A. loan for a sum sufficient to repay them the $4,500 which they advanced in payment for said premises. They also allege the execution and delivery of a promissory note to Estelle Krebs for the sum of $4,000, and also the execution to Mrs. Krebs of a mortgage to secure the repayment of said sum. Defendants further allege in said cross bill that the proposed land contract was contrary to the agreement between the parties, and allege that the said plaintiffs are in default- in the repayment to said defendants of the amount loaned to them, as well as in interest payments, and allege further default in not paying insurance premiums and taxes assessed against said premises, and ask for a determination of the interest of the parties to this cause, including that of Estelle Krebs, and for a decree requiring plaintiffs to come to an accounting with the defendants, and in the event the court finds the deed to the defendants to be a mortgage lien on said premises, that foreclosure of same be decreed.

On April 21,1941, the defendants herein petitioned the court for the appointment of a receiver, and the determination by the court of a fair rental value for the premises to be paid to said receiver during the pendency of this suit. Said petition alleged, among other things, that the defendants had made Estelle Krebs a party to their cross suit inasmuch as she had started foreclosure against them of the mortgage given to secure her loan of $4,000, but state they had been unable to secure service of process upon her, and that she has deliberately evaded service of process in furtherance of a scheme entered into between her and plaintiffs to defraud the defendants, and that the said Estelle Krebs has com *350 meneed foreclosure of the mortgage given by defendants to her, and that she and plaintiffs are doing all they can to hinder and embarrass defendants, and to defraud them out of the funds which they advanced in the purchase of said property.

After a hearing upon the petition, and the objections filed by plaintiffs thereto, the trial court entered an order appointing a receiver with directions to said receiver to determine and collect a fair monthly rental from plaintiffs so long as they occupied said premises during the pendency of this suit.

From the order so' made as aforesaid plaintiffs take a general appeal asserting: (1) That the order so entered is contrary to law. (2) That such order was entered in violation of the Michigan court rules. (3) That such order in authorizing the receiver to determine the fair rental value of the premises in question is an illegal and unwarranted delegation to a ministerial officer of judicial power. (4) That no showing as to the necessity of appointing a receiver was made.

The appellees insist that the order appointing a receiver is not a final disposition of a part or all of the subject matter of the suit, and that the appeal should be dismissed because no leave to appeal was secured. We appreciate that this court has on many occasions dismissed general appeals taken _from orders which are not final, and has also denied leave to appeal from interlocutory orders, as there is no reason why this court should review cases by piecemeal. We do not think, however, that in a case where the facts are as they appear here, that the cases in which we have enforced this rule are applicable.

It fairly appears from the pleadings in the instant case that the deed by which the defendants obtained *351

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.W.2d 567, 300 Mich. 346, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lendzion-v-senstock-mich-1942.