Mason v. Vogue Knitting Corp.

114 N.W.2d 154, 365 Mich. 552
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1962
DocketDocket 50, Calendar 49,260
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 114 N.W.2d 154 (Mason v. Vogue Knitting Corp.) 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
Mason v. Vogue Knitting Corp., 114 N.W.2d 154, 365 Mich. 552 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

Dethmers, C. J.

(concurring). A statement of the facts in this ease is to he found in this Court’s opinion reported at 361 Mich 481, when it made its first appearance here. Plaintiff brought this suit in his own right and as assignee of 22 other persons, on his and their individual claims, all of which were of the same character, against the same defendants and arose out of like individual transactions in each instance. On defendants’ motion, a severance of plaintiff’s individual claim had been ordered and trial thereof resulted in verdict and judgment for him which was affirmed here on'the previous appeal. This appeal presents questions touching his subsequent proceeding with his remaining claims held as assignee.

After this Court’s decision on plaintiff’s individual claim, he moved for consolidation for trial of all claims held by him as assignee. Defendants moved to dismiss count 2 of plaintiff’s declaration sounding in tort for fraud. The trial court, by 1 order, denied defendants’ motion to dismiss count 2 and granted *554 plaintiff’s motion for consolidation to the extent of i permitting not to exceed 5 claims at a time to be tried as 1 case. From that order defendants appeal.

Defendants’ motion to dismiss count 2 was predicated on the proposition that causes of action for misrepresentation and fraud are personal and not assignable. For this they cite Cochran Timber Co. v. Fisher, 190 Mich 478 (4 ALR 9); Grand Trunk W. R. Co. v. H. W. Nelson Co., Inc. (CCA6), 116 F2d ■ 823; and Jones v. Hicks, 358 Mich 474. These w e shall presently discuss after consideration of Michigan statutory and case law background.

In Final v. Backus (1869), 18 Mich 218, this Court said :

“As a general rule, the right of action for a tort ¡is not the subject of assignment. But the rule applies only to those torts which are merely personal, and which, on the death of the person wronged, die with him.
“Rights of action for such torts as survive to the .personal representatives may be assigned so as to-pass an interest to the assignee, which he can enforce by suit at law.” (Syllabus.)

In Stebbins v. Dean (1890), 82 Mich 385, 388, this Court said:

“It has frequently been held by this Court that rights of action which survive are assignable. * * * It is also the settled rule in this State that actions for fraud and deceit are not assignable. * * * Now, in such cases, the right of assignment •and survival to personal representatives are convertible propositions.”

In 1897, by Act No 195, §1 (CL 1897, § 10421 ), the Michigan legislature authorized actions in assumpsit for recovery of damages for fraud and deceit *555 and, in section 2 (CL 1897, § 10422) thereof, provided for survival of such causes of action.

In 1905, this Court, in Hicks v. Steel, 142 Mich 292 (4 LRA NS 279), in holding that an assignee of a cause of action for damages produced by fraudulent misrepresentations may maintain an action in assumpsit thereon, referred to the mentioned 1897 statute and said (p 294):

“As the act provided for the survival of the cause of action, it could be assigned.”

Then come Fuller v. Bilz (1910), 161 Mich 589, and Davis v. McCamman (1912), 168 Mich 587. Opinions in these eases repeated the old doctrine that a cause of action for fraud is not assignable. Both of these, however, were chancery suits, one to quiet title and the other for an accounting, to which the 1897 act had no application because it provided only for survival of actions for fraud to be brought in assumpsit. A similar case, where the action was not in assumpsit but was a chancery action to quiet title, was Cochran Timber Co. v. Fisher, supra (1916). There having been no survival at common law and none provided for by the statute of 1897, in effect at the time that case was tried, for the kind of right and relief in that case sought to be attained by defendant’s cross-bill, this Court properly held (p 485) that it should be dismissed. In so doing, it based its holding on the Fuller and Davis Cases. The holdings in these last 3 cases reflected the state of the law on the subject in Michigan up to that time, although some of the language in the opinions did not.

In 1915 the judicature act, PA 1915, No 314, was adopted. Chapter 12, § 32 (CL 1948, § 612.32 [Stat Ann § 27.684]), provides, with respect to actions that survive, as follows:

*556 “In addition to the actions which survive by the common law the following shall also survive, that is. to say, actions of replevin, actions for conversion of property, for deceit, for assault and battery, for false imprisonment, for negligent injuries to persons, for damages done to real and personal estate, and actions to recover real estate, or any interest therein, where persons have been induced to part with the same through fraudulent representations and deceit.”

It will be noted that in providing for survival of actions for deceit, the 1915 act eliminated the provision in the 1897 act which had limited it to actions in assumpsit.

The mentioned Federal case, Grand Trunk W. R. Co. v. H. W. Nelson Co., Inc., supra, decided in 1941, expressly based its statement that under Michigan law “a mere right to litigate for fraud and nothing more is not assignable at law or in equity” on Cochran Timber Co. v. Fisher, supra, apparently without awareness of the 1915 change in statute law rendering obsolete the quoted language attributed to Cochran.

What, then, of Jones v. Hicks, supra, decided by this Court in 1960? Plaintiff urges that it be overruled, apparently thinking’ that it has upset the preexisting Michigan doctrine of the convertible relationship of survivability and assignability; that is, that an action which survives may be assigned. We think plaintiff’s apprehensions in that regard unfounded. In that case the question presented was a different one, namely, whether the right, which the bankrupt had had before bankruptcy, to elect whether to pursue the property of which he claimed he had been deprived fraudulently by defendant or to seek damages therefor passed by assignment to the trustee in bankruptcy. The majority of this Court held that that right of election did not pass *557 to the trustee. We reaffirm the position of this Court as stated in Final v. Backus, supra, Stebbins v. Dean, supra, and Hicks v. Steel, supra, that rights of actions for torts which survive may be assigned, the rights of assignment and survival to personal representatives being convertible propositions.

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Bluebook (online)
114 N.W.2d 154, 365 Mich. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-vogue-knitting-corp-mich-1962.