MacKey v. Baker

41 N.W.2d 331, 327 Mich. 57, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 411
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1950
DocketDocket 15, Calendar 44,603
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 41 N.W.2d 331 (MacKey v. Baker) 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
MacKey v. Baker, 41 N.W.2d 331, 327 Mich. 57, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 411 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Reid, J.

Plaintiffs filed their bill to establish a constructive trust as to title to real estate. From a decree determining that defendants acquired and hold the real estate as constructive trustees and requiring defendants to make conveyance to plaintiffs, defendants appeal.

Plaintiffs claim and defendants deny that defendant Gerald A. Baker violated his obligation as a real-estate agent by purchasing the piece of real estate in question in the name and for the use and benefit of himself and wife (the other defendant), which piece of real estate plaintiffs had engaged said Gerald A. Baker to purchase for plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs Edwin A. Mackey and Cecille R. Mackey are husband and wife. Plaintiff Charlotte J. *59 Bunnell is the wife of plaintiff Walter M. Bunnell, and defendant Rachel V. Baker is the wife of defendant Gerald A. Baker. We will refer to the respective husbands as plaintiffs and defendant because the husbands were, and the wives were not, shown to have actively taken part in the dealings between the parties.

About June 1, 1933, plaintiffs began operating a gasoline filling station and parking lot at the northeast corner of south Capitol avenue and west Washtenaw street in Lansing under the name of Lansing Crown Service, Inc., the entire property so used being lots 7 and 8 of block 115 of the original plat of Lansing. Lots 7 and 8 have a total frontage of 132 feet on south Capitol avenue and 165 feet on west Washtenaw street. Lot 7 has 66 feet frontage on south Capitol avenue and 165 on west Washtenaw to an alley. Lot 8 has 66 feet frontage on south Capitol avenue and extends to the width of 66 feet between lot 7 and Masonic Temple property, 165 feet to the alley. Plaintiffs own and control all of lots 7 and 8 except the south one-half of lot 8, known as Mrs. Johnson’s parcel, which separates plaintiffs’ holdings and which is the subject matter of this litigation.

Before 1933 lots 7 and 8 had been divided in ownership into 5 parcels. Before beginning operations in June, 1933, plaintiffs obtained leases on all 5 parcels partly through a real estate agent, a Mr. Ludwig, and partly through defendant Baker. Mr. Ludwig did not act as broker for plaintiffs thereafter. However, in the negotiations for the leases, defendant Baker also acted as the agent for Mrs. Johnson, owner of the parcel in question, as to her parcel.

Defendant Baker in 1940 acted as the agent of plaintiffs in securing a loan of $38,000 to complete the purchase from Collateral Liquidation Corpora *60 tion of the west 99 feet of lot 7, the corner tract, 66 feet on south Capitol avenue with 99 feet on west Washtenaw.street.

Plaintiff Bunnell testified that plaintiffs first disclosed to defendant Baker the plan of plaintiffs to acquire title to both of the entire lots 7 and 8 about the time that plaintiffs purchased the Collateral Liquidation Corporation parcel around 1939 or 1940; that it was discussed the first time at a lunch at the Masonic Temple one noon and that among other things, “Mr. Baker [defendant] told us at that time, as he had other times after that time, that Mrs. Johnson had told him that if she did sell it that we would get first chance to purchase-it [the Johnson property].”

Plaintiff Mackey testified that about June, 1940, plaintiffs conferred many times with defendant Baker about plaintiffs’ plan to acquire title to all of lots 7 and 8, and that defendant Baker “told us he would work with us * * * he submitted this property as an entirety to several firms who were interested.”

Plaintiffs purchased the Bishop property (the 40-foot strip across lot 7 immediately east of Collateral Liquidation Corporation) on land contract, December 1, 1939. In the Bishop purchase, defendant Baker did not act as agent for plaintiffs, because Mrs. Bishop preferred to deal directly with plaintiff Mackey.

In the acquisition by plaintiffs of the Muir property (which is the easterly 26 feet of lot 7) in 1944, defendant Baker did act as agent for plaintiffs. Plaintiffs by oral arrangements with defendant Baker (a gentlemen’s agreement, without written agreement for commission) got Baker to contact Muir relative to the purchase. Mr. Baker succeeded in getting from Muir a commitment to accept $15,-000, to which plaintiffs subsequently agreed. Baker *61 was paid by plaintiffs $750 as Ms commission, wbicb was agreed on.

About or before December, 1944, plaintiff Mackey asked defendant Baker to procure an extension of Mrs.. Johnson’s lease for 5 years. The lease was discussed by correspondence or otherwise with Mrs. Johnson. Also plaintiffs had requested Baker to procure from Mrs. Johnson a commitment for sale of Mrs. Johnson’s parcel.

There is in evidence a letter dated December 26, 1944, from Mrs. Johnson to defendant Baker wMch in part is as follows:

“I am returning two of the leases and the other I shall keep here. You may tell Mr. Mackey that so far as I know now he will have the first option on the property five years from now. I will not go back on my word to you. When I get ready to sell you will have the first chance.”

There is an inference from this letter that Mrs. Johnson had assured defendant Baker as agent for plaintiff Mackey that Mackey would have the first chance to buy the property, the subject matter of this litigation, and also that Mrs. Johnson consented that Mr. Baker, who was her agent respecting renting her parcel, should act as agent for plaintiff Mackey as to purchase of her parcel.

In February, 1945, plaintiffs were considering a plan, sometimes referred to as a long-lease plan, whereby all of lots 7 and 8 would be offered to be leased to a large firm that would be expected to pay $12,000 a year rent, to be apportioned among the owners of the various parcels comprising the two lots, 7 and 8. Defendant Baker testified that plaintiff Mackey asked him to come to plaintiffs’ office and Mackey unfolded to him there the long-lease plan (which would include the Johnson parcel) and “asked my consideration as a leasing agent to work out *62 some program on it. I had at that time different people in mind that conld use the corner. The terms of that offer were discussed, and I came back to the office, [and] prepared the agreement.” (Italics supplied.)

In the discussion, defendant Baker said the Johnson-tract owner should be paid one-fourth of the $12,000.annual rent or $250 per month, upon which the amount of rental was deleted from the proposed draft. The agreement between plaintiffs as principals and defendant Baker as agent was signed by plaintiffs and the matter was left in the hands of defendant Baker as agent to procure Mrs. Johnson’s consent to the proposition to lease of her parcel along with plaintiffs’ lands. Efforts and conversations between plaintiffs and defendant to effectuate that plan continued during the rest of Mrs. Johnson’s lifetime. It is clear that defendant Baker was continuing to act as agent for plaintiffs to obtain Mrs. Johnson’s consent to the long-term leasing plan. The renewal of Mrs. Johnson’s short-term lease was further discussed by plaintiffs with defendant. Later a separate short-term lease of Mrs. Johnson’s parcel was prepared and forwarded to Mrs. Johnson for her signature.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.W.2d 331, 327 Mich. 57, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackey-v-baker-mich-1950.