Letts v. Letts

41 N.W. 99, 73 Mich. 138, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 685
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 N.W. 99 (Letts v. Letts) 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
Letts v. Letts, 41 N.W. 99, 73 Mich. 138, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 685 (Mich. 1888).

Opinion

Morse, J.

The plaintiff brought suit against the defendant, declaring upon, the common counts in assumpsit, and filing the following bill of particulars:

[140]*140“ 1. The plaintiff claims for the amount due on a certain promissory note given by defendant to Mahlon Wines, and by him transferred to plaintiff, which note bore date about April 17, 1867, and was for $800, with interest at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum, on which was indorsed one year’s interest, and on which $10 were paid by defendant to plaintiff within six years prior to the commencement of this suit, and after the note was transferred to her.
“2. Plaintiff also claims an amount for money loaned by her to defendant on or about June 1, 1881, with interest thereon from that date at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum, the amount of money so loaned being about $1,528.’’

The defendant pleaded the general issue, and gave notice of the statute of limitations in defense; also that the plaintiff, in 1883, and prior thereto, was the lawful wife of the defendant; that in 1883 or 1884 they were divorced, at which time defendant paid over to her the sum of $8,000, which payment was not only in full of all alimony, but of “all other claims and demands of whatsoever nature against this defendant;’’ and that said sum was received by the plaintiff, and was by her receipted for, as and for all demands, inclusive of the claim or demand set up in this suit.

The note which forms the basis of the plaintiff’s claim was executed by defendant of date May 22, 1867, payable to’the order of Mahlon Wines in ten years from its date. Mahlon Wines was the father of plaintiff, and died leaving a will, which was never probated, April 15, 1868. He left surviving him two children, the plaintiff and Charles H. Wines.

The claim of the plaintiff is that her father, a few days before his death, handed the note to her brother, who was'named as his executor in his will, and told him to' take the same into his care as custodian of his estate, and keep it; that the note was to belong to plaintiff, [141]*141and to see that she got the pay upon it. He did not tell him to pass the note over to plaintiff. The brother of plaintiff kept the note about a year, and then mailed it to her. Mrs. Letts kept the note until June or July, 1881, at which time she swears her husband came and demanded the note. He said he wanted -to take it up. She told him she did not wish the money. She said:

“You need the money in your business, and I am willing you should keep it.”

He threw down a roll of bills on the table. She picked up two five-dollar bills, and said:

“I will take ten dollars. The rest you keep in your business. When I want it, I will call for it.”

Her husband took the note and the balance of the money away with him. She does not know how much there was of the money he threw on the table. She claims the amount of the note and interest to date, less the payment of this $10, and one payment of interest made in 1868.

The defendant denies any such occurrence as the one above stated, but claims that he received the note from his wife in 1881. She gave it to him, saying it ivas as much his as hers, and therefore surrendered it up to him. On the cross-examination of the defendant, he was asked by the plaintiff’s counsel to produce the note, and did so. Across its face was written: “Paid June 20, 1881.” On the back of the note was indorsed—

“Chelsea, Oct. 4, 1868.
“Received on the within note fifty-six dollars ($56).”
The following also app.eared upon the note:
“Detroit, -, 1870.
“This note was received by me from Charles H. Wines, in accordance with a provision in the will of the said Mahlon Wines, and I hereby acknowledge payment in full of the same.”

[142]*142The counsel for plaintiff then offered the note in evidence, but the court excluded it, on the ground that it was made payable to the order of Mahlon Wines, and had never been indorsed by him. He also offered to show by the defendant that he wrote, “Paid June 20, 1881,” and also the writing above-set forth, and that he presented the note to his wife, and requested her to sign such writing, and that she refused to do so. He also offered to show in whose handwriting was the indorsement of $56. The court refused to allow any of these facts to be shown. The court also, at the close of the testimony, directed a verdict for the defendant, upon the ground that no title to the note' had been shown in the plaintiff.

We think the court was in error in his rulings upon the admission of evidence, and in his direction of the verdict.

It was offered to be shown by plaintiff’s counsel before the case was submitted to the jury that the will of plaintiff’s father had never been probated; that by the will he disposed of the property he then had. He willed his real estate to Charles H. Wines and plaintiff, who were his only children. The will was made in 1862. The note in this suit came from the proceeds of property sold after he executed his will, which in such will was devised to plaintiff. Before he died he disposed of all his property, deeding the real estate to the said children, and placing this note in the hands of Charles for the plaintiff. This rendered it unnecessary to probate the will. The court refused to allow this showing, because the testimony had been closed. The counsel claimed, as a reason why this testimony should be admitted, that he supposed the will had been probated until he went to get a certified copy of the same.

It was entirely immaterial whether the handing of the note by the father to Charles H. Wines, and his direc[143]*143tions, was a valid gift of the note or not. The note was ■delivered by the brother to the sister as her property, and no one has complained about it for 20 years, and it does not ■appear that any one has any right to complain. The brother and sister, being the sole heirs and legatees of their father, and no creditors appearing, had a right to divide the property as they saw fit. Foote v. Foote, 61 Mich. 181, 190 (28 N. W. Rep. 90), and cases there cited; Needham v. Gillett, 39 Id. 574.

It seems also that the defendant acknowledged her right to the note when he received it of her, and it was competent to show that he wrote the indorsements upon the note, and to admit the note in evidence to show its amount and the indorsements. The fact that he wrote, Paid June 20, 1881,” on the note, would have some tendency to corroborate the claim of plaintiff, and also to fix the time when the note was received by defendant; and if her theory was true, and this was the date of the transaction, the cause of action was not outlawed; this suit being commenced May 18, 1887.

The fact that the note had never been indorsed over to plaintiff by her father or his legal representatives has no bearing upon the case. She is not seeking t'o recover upon the note. If, as she claims, the defendant took the note with the understanding that it was paid, and he was to use the money due upon it in his business until she called for it, her action lies, not upon the note, but for the money due on it at the time it was taken by the defendant as paid, which must be considered as loaned to him at that date. ‘

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 N.W. 99, 73 Mich. 138, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/letts-v-letts-mich-1888.