Maynard v. Dorner

220 N.W.2d 161, 53 Mich. App. 568, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 1171
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 30, 1974
DocketDocket 17300
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 220 N.W.2d 161 (Maynard v. Dorner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maynard v. Dorner, 220 N.W.2d 161, 53 Mich. App. 568, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 1171 (Mich. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinions

Holbrook, J.

This appeal follows a judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff and against Bonnie Dorner as guardian of Charles R. Dorner, mentally incompetent, and Bonnie Dorner, individually.

Defendant Bonnie Dorner, individually, has appealed and has set forth in her brief the following claimed facts. The plaintiff, Gilbert Maynard, was a jobber for auto polish sold by Charles R. Dorner, doing business as (d/b/a) Dorner Products, Dorner Laboratories, Liquid First Class Auto Polish Company, Liquid Glass Auto Polish Company, and Glass Wax Company. The various names of the companies were changed from time to time. Plaintiff started out as a small salesman in the business, but worked his way up to the point where he would be considered a distributor of the product.

The primary claim in this particular case, however, arises out of a transaction that commenced on or about July 7, 1965, when the plaintiff placed an order with the defendant, Charles R. Dorner, for 728 cases of auto polish. On that date, the plaintiff placed an order for that amount of polish and enclosed with his letter a certified money order for $7,150 which he claimed represented payment for that amount of polish, along with certain bonus sheets that allegedly entitled plain[570]*570tiff to additional cases of polish. As a result of the order, a disagreement came about between the plaintiff and Charles R. Dorner as to exactly what the plaintiff was entitled to with respect to this particular order. There had been hard feelings that had been created on earlier dates between the plaintiff and defendant Dorner. In any event, the order was not delivered until September 3, 1965, and there was a question as to whether or not it was completely filled. It was refused by the plaintiff.

Because Mr. Dorner did not immediately fill the order, but cashed plaintiff’s check and because plaintiff was unhappy with what was shipped, plaintiff commenced suit in Calhoun County against Charles R. Dorner, also known as (a/k/a) C. R. Dorner, a/k/a Dr. C. R. Dorner, and Bonnie Dorner, d/b/a Dorner Products, Dorner Laboratories, Liquid First Class Auto Polish Company, Liquid Glass Auto Polish Company, and Glass Wax Company. While that suit was pending in Calhoun County, Charles R. Dorner was declared mentally incompetent and committed as mentally ill to the Kalamazoo State Hospital. Bonnie Dorner, his wife, was appointed guardian of Charles R. Dorner. That suit was dismissed for lack of progress.

After the dismissal by the court in Calhoun County, this suit was commenced in Wayne County against Charles R. Dorner, a/k/a C. R. Dorner, a/k/a Dr. C. R. Dorner, and Bonnie Dorner, d/b/a Dorner Products, Dorner Laboratories, Liquid First Class Auto Polish Company, Liquid Glass Auto Polish Company, Glass Wax Company, and Bonnie Dorner, guardian of C. R. Dorner, mentally incompetent, jointly and severally, praying for damages in the amount of $64,990.10.

Because Charles R. Dorner was still under the [571]*571impairments stated, he did not appear at time of trial, and the witnesses that gave testimony were the plaintiff, Gilbert Maynard, Charles Sevrans, Fred W. Shields, and defendant Bonnie Dorner. Mr. Sevrans, Mr. Shields, and the plaintiff, Mr. Maynard, all testified that they had, over a period of time, purchased the auto polish from Charles R. Dorner doing business as the various companies set forth in the complaint. They each testified as to the actual mechanics of the sales promotion, the commissions earned, and the promotional incentive that were awarded various sales persons. Not one of these three witnesses, however, indicated that they had ever done business with the defendant Bonnie Dorner, that they had any reason to believe that Bonnie Dorner had any official capacity in relation to the business, nor that they were dealing with anyone other than Charles R. Dorner in their relationship in this business.

Plaintiff introduced two exhibits that contained the name of Bonnie Dorner, along with letterhead bearing her caricature, an advertising brochure which contained her picture, and a magazine article that carried a story indicating that Charles Dorner and Bonnie Dorner were a successful husband and wife team. There was no testimony from either Maynard, Sevrans, or Shields that at any time had they relied upon any of these particular items believing that Mrs. Dorner was involved in the business.

Mrs. Dorner testified that she was aware of the fact that her husband had purchased a rubber stamp which was used to stamp material that was sent out of his office indicating that she was the circulation manager. She indicated, however, that Mr. Dorner had done this with other family member names and had put his father’s name down on [572]*572some documentation as a shipping manager, even though Mr. Dorner’s father actually was a retired minister. She further stated that she had objected to the use of this stamp, and had on occasions hidden the stamp from her husband, but he continued to use the stamp. When he could not find it, there had been some violent episodes when she was forced to return the stamp to him. Mrs. Dorner further indicated that she was aware of the magazine article, but had not been interviewed; and that the first time she was aware of the article was when it had been in print. She also was aware of the fact that this article had been used in an advertising brochure, but asserted that she had played no part in the business until sometime in 1968 after her husband had been committed to the state hospital. Mrs. Dorner and other family members had more or less agreed between themselves that they would try to continue the business on a very limited scale feeling that it would help in the eventual rehabilitation of Mr. Dorner.

It was her claim that she played no part in the transaction upon which this suit was founded; and other than the advertising material and the stamped name, she did not have any connection with the business whatsoever, except after 1968; that none of the three businessmen who testified indicated that they had relied upon the stamp with Mrs. Dorner’s name imprinted thereon, any printed material carrying her name, those items that carried her photograph, or the article that had been written about her husband and herself; that all of the testimony, and specifically the testimony of plaintiff, concerned itself with the business relationship with Charles R. Dorner and his various companies.

The plaintiff-appellee claims that both Charles [573]*573R. Dorner and Bonnie Dorner acted together in the assumed named businesses, Dorner Products, Dorner Laboratories, Liquid First Class Auto Polish Company, Liquid Glass Auto Polish Company, Glass Wax Company. Further, that they used a pyramid-type promotion scheme in selling' the product. Plaintiff claims that he carried on extended business dealings with the defendants for several years previous to the order in question. The plaintiff sent a certified check for $7,150 to defendants for an order of the product. The check was cashed and the order was not filled for a period of nearly two months. When the shipment was delivered it was not in accord with the order and he refused it. Therefore, plaintiff claims that Bonnie Dorner was in business with her husband and plaintiff was entitled to a judgment against both her husband and her individually.

The trial judge after hearing the testimony, rendered an opinion which in pertinent part reads as follows:

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Related

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253 N.W.2d 801 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1977)
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229 N.W.2d 897 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1975)
Maynard v. Dorner
220 N.W.2d 161 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.W.2d 161, 53 Mich. App. 568, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 1171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maynard-v-dorner-michctapp-1974.