Long v. Landman

76 N.W. 374, 118 Mich. 174, 1898 Mich. LEXIS 975
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 76 N.W. 374 (Long v. Landman) 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
Long v. Landman, 76 N.W. 374, 118 Mich. 174, 1898 Mich. LEXIS 975 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

Moore, J.

This is a proceeding to foreclose two mortgages. A decree was rendered in the court below in favor of complainant, from which decree some of the defendants appeal.

Prior to 1878, Arthur B. Long, of the State of Pennsylvania, and his son, George H. Long, had been engaged in the business of lumbering. In April, 1878, a partnership agreement was made, which, omitting the formal part, reads as follows:

“As this agreement has reference now to the late firm of A. B. Long & Son, who has formerly been doing business as the firm of A. B. Long & Son, and is now carrying on and doing business of lumbering in the name of A. B. Long & Son at this date, and for some time has been doing and carrying on the business in this name, and «hat all lands and lumber, logs and other property, have been made to George H. Long and A. B. Long, for which property in logs, lands, and lumber, and sundry personal property has been made, by deed and otherwise, unto the late firm of A. B. Long & Son, A. B. Long and George H. Long, who in their own right and by deed own the property so sold and deeds held for the same as follows: That A. B. Long owns in said property and lands the undivided two-thirds of all lands and other property now held and owned by the firm of A. B. Long & Son, and that George H. Long now holds and owns the undivided one-third interest in all the above lands and other property; and now, for the purpose of continuing and carrying on the business of lumbering, we this day agree to continue the business in all its various branches and places as they shall from time to time think most proper and best for them to do, and the length of time shall be determined by the parties themselves, and to their best interest; and it is further agreed by and between the parties that A. B. Long shall not draw or take from the firm more than $500 [176]*176monthly, and that George H. Long shall not draw or take from the firm more than $250 monthly, and that A. B. Long is to have two-thirds interest and profits made by carrying on the said lumbering business, and bear the two-thirds losses, and George H. Long to have the one-third interest and profits made by carrying on the lumbering business, and bear the one-third losses.”

Arthur B. Long died in 1884, leaving a will, which was duly probated in Pennsylvania,' and afterwards in this State. The property was given by 'the will, one-fifth of it to each of four children, and one-fifth to one child and his children, after providing the sum of $3,000 annually to his wife. The sum of $10,000 was to be held by George H. Long as trustee, and the income from it was to be paid annually to William J. Long as long as he lived. By a codicil, George H. Long and David W. Woods were made executors. The will contained these provisions:

“All of my estate, both real and personal, that is being and lying in the county of Clearfield and State of Pennsylvania, and now leased unto Robert Hasse Powell, the same bearing date the 11th day of June, 1872, and June the third, 1871, and that my executors or .their executors or administrators shall continue the said lease with the said Robert Hasse Powell for the full term of ten (10) years after my decease, and the royalties that accrue from said coal or lease shall by my executors be paid to the above legatees, as prescribed in section second, at the end of each year after my decease.
“ The lease made on the ninth day of July, 1881, by and between George H. Long and A. B. Long, for certain pine timber being and lying in Mecosta county and State of Michigan, and that my executors or their executors or administrators, and with the sawmill at Grand Rapids, with the adjoining lands to said mill for sidings and ground for sticking and drying lumber, shall continue and remain as they now are, for such use and purpose, until all the pine timber on the above-named lands shall be manufactured at said mill, and sold, and the moneys thereof made shall from such lumber shall by my executors or their executors or administrators shall at the end of each year divide among the above legatees, as specified in the above in section second, after my decease. Any other lands being or lying in [177]*177the State of Michigan, not mentioned above, shall be sold by my executors as soon as convenient after my decease.
“I do by these presents give unto my executors, or a majority of them, or their executors or administrators, or a majority of them, full power and authority to grant, alien, bargain, sell, and convey by deed, and assign, all the said lands mentioned in this my last will, and any other lands or personal property I may have at the time of my decease, unto person or persons and theirs forever, in fee simple, by all and every such lawful ways and means in the law as to my said executors or their executors or administrators, or a majority of them, his or their counsel learned in the law, shall seem fit or necessary to be done.”

Mr. Woods and Mr. Long qualified as executors; Mr. Woods having charge of affairs in Pennsylvania, and Mr. Long in this State. The business of lumbering was continued after the death of A. B. Long as it had been before, and the proceeds of the Michigan business were taken to Pennsylvania by Mr. Long, annually reported to the probate court, and distributed; the amount so taken by Mr. Long, and distributed, amounting to upwards of $500,000. Mr. Long also filed annual accounts in the Kent county probate court. The coal lands in Pennsylvania ceased to be productive in 1892 or thereabouts. The lumber was all manufactured in 1891 or 1892, and the mill in Grand Rapids was soon after that dismantled.

It is the claim of the executor that he had distributed the funds which came into his hands, amounting to upwards of a half a million of dollars, so that January 1,1892, he had in his hands as executor but $134. In February of that year, he received upon a judgment a little over $600, which, he says, he had agreed to forward to the Pennsylvania executor, to help him pay the taxes on the coal lands. It is his claim that in October he was notified of an assessment against the Grand Rapids property of $2,400 for street improvements, and that there would be other taxes due, and that he had no money as executor with which to pay them. In January, 1895, he petitioned [178]*178the probate court for leave to mortgage the real estate, to enable him to pay the debts against the estate. The petition contained, among other things, the following statements :

“That the amount of personal estate of the said Arthur B. Long that has come into, the hands of your petitioner is the sum of $386,385, of which only one or two hundred dollars remains undisposed, of; that the debts outstanding against the estate of the deceased, as far as can be ascertained, amount to the sum of $2,000 or thereabouts; that the charges of administering the estate of the deceased, including future probable charges, amount to the sum of $800; that the expense of administration of the estate of the deceased will amount to the sum of $800.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 N.W. 374, 118 Mich. 174, 1898 Mich. LEXIS 975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-landman-mich-1898.