Lippman v. Martin

39 N.W.2d 69, 325 Mich. 553, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 387
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1949
DocketDocket No. 56, Calendar No. 43,935.
StatusPublished

This text of 39 N.W.2d 69 (Lippman v. Martin) 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
Lippman v. Martin, 39 N.W.2d 69, 325 Mich. 553, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 387 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Tony Tudryck and Mary Tudryck, his wife, were for some years the owners of a 140-acre farm in Deep River township, Arenac county, Michigan. On March 1, 1934, they had deeded the property to the Sterling Bank of Sleeper and Chamberlain of Sterling, Michigan, which gave back to them a land contract for the repurchase of the property. The bank was represented by J. Otis Mutch, its cashier and agent. On August 24,1935, they had given an oil and gas lease of the property to one Alvin Wilkinson, but oil was not discovered at that time and the lease was evidently later terminated. In 1938, the Tudrycks had attempted to sell their interest in the property" through Thomas Olszynsld, a real estate dealer, cross-plaintiff and cross-appellant herein. *555 There arose some question as to the title of the property and on June 22,1938, Olszynski took-them to the office of Harry J. Lippman, an attorney of many years experience, and in whose office the daughter of Olszynski was employed as a stenographer. The Tudrycks believed they were entitled to a reconveyance of the property, but they had no money with which to pay an attorney. Mr. Lippman testified that when asked about his fees for handling the case, he stated that he “would handle it on a contingent-fee basis.” On the following day 4 instruments prepared by Lippman were signed by the Tudrycks. One, a contract of employment, also signed by Lippman and Olszynski, provided that in consideration of past and future services, Lippman was to receive 50 per cent, of all money or property recovered in the contemplated lawsuit with the bank. It also provided thht any proceeds from the oil and gas lease on the land or any other thereafter executed by the Tudrycks should be divided one third to Lippman, one third to Olszynski, and one third to the Tudrycks. The agreement further stated that the Tudrycks were that day conveying a one-half interest in the land to Lippman, and under his_ direction the deed was to be made out to Harry J. Lippman and Marian Lippman, his wife, plaintiffs and appellants herein. There is no claim that Mrs. Lippman rendered any services to the Tudrycks, or had anything whatsoever to do with the transaction. She did not testify at the hearing of the instant suit. The other instruments signed by the Tudrycks consisted of a quitclaim deed of a one-half interest in the 140 acres to Lippman and wife, an assignment of a one-half interest in the land contract with the bank to Lippman and wife, and an assignment of a one-third interest each to Lippman and Olszynski in the oil and gas lease, as provided for in the contingent-fee contract. None of the instruments were recorded at the *556 time, but 6 years later, after oil was discovered on the property, the quitclaim deed of the one-half interest to Lippman and wife was recorded.

Lippman after the execution of the contingent-fee contract opened a correspondence with Mr. Mutch,, the cashier and agent of the bank, seeking an amicable adjustment. He finally began a suit in equity and secured a temporary injunction, which he personally served with a summons and bill of complaint, on Mr. Mutch. Lippman claims that when he served Mutch he showed him the employment contract, deed, et cetera, but Mutch stated he did not-remember that he had ever seen the instruments. Olszynski testified that Lippman handed Mutch the agreement, that the entire interview lasted “around 10 to 15 minutes,” that Mutch did not read it all through, that he glanced through it, looked at the last page, and handed it back to Lippman. In making application for the temporary injunction, Lippman did not disclose to the court that he and his wife had any interest in the property. In fact the bill of complaint negatives such claim, as Tudryck and wife, the sole plaintiffs, w.ere described as the owners. A trial judge at the hearing may disbelieve a party litigant, even though there 'be no direct denial of his testimony.

A receiver was appointed for the said bank on October 14, 1938, and was permitted to intervene as a party in the case. When it was ascertained that the Tudrycks actually owed a very much larger sum to the bank, Lippman opened negotiations for a settlement with the attorney for the receiver, and finally, with the consent of the court, $300 was paid in full settlement. In the negotiations for settlement between Lippman and the attorneys for the receiver, the former wrote “if the receiver can acquire title to the property freed from all claims, for the sum of $500, that would be an exceptionally good bargain *557 for him,” et cetera. The Tudrycks executed a quitclaim deed of all their interest to the receiver of the bank, and Lippman gave them $110 and kept $190 of the $300 received hy him in satisfaction therefor. On January 18, 1940, at the time of the settlement, Lippman wrote Olszynsld that the attorneys for the receiver demanded that they sign over their interest in the oil and gas lease. Lippman and Olszynsld then jointly executed an assignment of the lease (evidently the Wilkinson lease) that was attached, and they included in the assignment the further statement that “we in no manner holding any other right, title or interest in the premises under the lease involved.” On stipulation of the attorneys, duly approved by Lippman, a decree was entered in the •equity suit establishing and confirming title to the 140 acres in the receiver of the bank. This effectively closed the entire transaction.

Mr. Lippman stated that shortly before May 9, 1944, when he recorded the Tudryck deed, he learned that oil had been discovered in paying quantities on the. property. He claims that the deed was not recorded earlier because he had given it to his wife, who had placed it for safekeeping in a safety deposit vault'. Shortly after recording the deed, he .and his wife as tenants hy the entirety, and Mrs. Lippman in her individual capacity, as plaintiffs, brought the present suit against Olszynski, Mutch, and others who respectively claimed either ownership or interest in the overriding lease and the subleases of the gas and oil rights in the property. A protracted hearing was held, as shown by the 3 volumes of the printed record before us. In addition, frequent reference was made in the record to the case of Tudryck v. Mutch, 320 Mich 87, with which the trial judge was familiar. The trial judge rendered an opinion in which, after reviewing the former case, brought hy the Tudrycks in regard to the *558 land contract and its final disposition by a decree cutting off all tbeir rights or claims, and the abandonment of the cross bill seeking a foreclosure, he said:

“That defendants had notice of plaintiffs’ interest in the premises. This claim involves a consideration of the nature of the interest of plaintiffs. I am satisfied from an inspection of the attorney-client agreement and from all the testimony that the deed under which plaintiffs’ claim was but part of an employment contract on a contingent basis, and was never intended to convey a present, existing interest in the real estate. That the deed was taken by Harry J. Lippman for, or as a protection for his attorney fee in event he succeeded in obtaining a decree favorable to his clients.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.W.2d 69, 325 Mich. 553, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lippman-v-martin-mich-1949.