McClave v. Benton Harbor State Bank

256 N.W. 569, 268 Mich. 619, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 854
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1934
DocketDocket No. 135, Calendar No. 37,946.
StatusPublished

This text of 256 N.W. 569 (McClave v. Benton Harbor State Bank) 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
McClave v. Benton Harbor State Bank, 256 N.W. 569, 268 Mich. 619, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 854 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

Fead, J.

W. J. Handy and his divorced wife, Imogene, were tenants in common of a farm. Handy died in 1921 and his interest devolved upon two adnlt sons and five minor children. In 1922 Mrs. Handy contracted to sell the farm to Edward Schultz for $34,000, taking in payment on account a farm at $10,500. January 11, 1923, Willis Handy was appointed and qualified as guardian of the minors.

To obtain money to pay the adult sons and to support the family, Mrs. Handy arranged an $8,000 loan with defendant bank. The arrangement contemplated Mrs. Handy obtaining the whole title to the premises. On March 3, 1923, the guardian petitioned the probate court for license to sell the minors’ interest at private sale. On March 10th Mrs. Handy executed a mortgage to the bank covering the entire farm and warranting title. The bank paid $4,000 to the joint account of Mrs. Handy and the guardian and issued a certificate of deposit for the balance but retained possession of it.

Appraisers valued the minors’ estate at $10,000. On April 11th license to sell was granted “for purpose of investing proceeds for support of wards.” April 14th the guardian executed statutory bond and gave Mrs. Handy a deed of the 5/14 interest of the minors for consideration of $10,000. On the same day the adult sons executed to their mother a conveyance of their interest and were paid $2,100 each. On the same day Mrs. Handy executed to the guardian a mortgage of the entire farm, subject to *622 the hank mortgage of $8,000, to secure her five promissory notes of $2,000 each, payable in nine years. The statutory oath was dated April 16th. These instruments were recorded or filed April 17th, on which day the guardian made report of sale alleging that he had sold the minors ’ interests to Mrs. Handy for $10,000. The sale was confirmed April 27th. In subsequent reports of the guardian to probate court the mortgage was listed as an investment of the minors’ estate.

The bank paid Mrs. Handy and the guardian jointly the balance of the loan on April 16th. Schultz lived on the premises about five years, paid principal of $1,500 and interest, and then defaulted. The mortgage became in default and, on April 11, 1927, was foreclosed and the land sold to the bank mortgagee. After expiration of the period of redemption, the bank sold the farm on contract to defendant Belter for $11,628, taking a vendor’s interest of $3,000 in a land contract as part payment, and executed to defendant Indiana & Michigan Electric Company an easement to maintain power lines, poles and towers on the land for a consideration of $284. No part of Mrs. Handy’s mortgage to the guardian was ever paid.

This suit is by the five minor children to set aside the guardian’s deed to Mrs. Handy and the latter’s mortgage to the bank, to quiet title in the minors, for partition, and other relief. The court denied relief to two plaintiffs who have become of age on the ground that their claims are barred by the statute of limitations, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13968; dismissed the bill as to Belter and the electric company because they were bona fide purchasers; and entered decree against the bank. Plaintiffs and the bank appeal, plaintiffs attacking the decree in favor • of the electric company.

*623 The case presents three questions, (1) whether the sale by the guardian to Mrs. Handy, with mortgage back, was an investment of the minors’ funds, as claimed by defendants, because security was taken on other property than that sold, or was a sale on credit, (2) if the latter, whether defendants are protected by the records of the probate court, and (3) whether they were purchasers in good faith.

3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 15825, covering public sales, provides:

“On such sale, the executor, administrator or guardian may give such length of credit, not exceeding five years, and for not more than two-thirds of the purchase money, as shall seem best calculated to produce the highest price, and shall have been directed, or shall be approved by the judge of probate, and shall secure the moneys for which credit is given, by a bond of the purchaser, and by a mortgage of the premises sold, with interest payable semi-annually. ’ ’

3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 15841, pertaining to private sales, in part reads:

“All other provisions of this chapter, except where plainly inapplicable, shall be applicable to sales under this section, except this, that if any guardian or testamentary trustee shall file in said court a petition setting forth that after continued and diligent effort he has been unable to dispose of any real estate for cash, or on such length of credit, and on such terms as provided in * * # (section 15825 above), and such petition shall set forth the best terms upon which he is able to make sale of such real estate, the court, after due notice to the parties interested, and after the taking or causing to be taken of testimony of freeholders, as herein-before provided, may grant a license to such guardian or testamentary trustee to dispose of said real *624 estate, upon such terms as the court shall find to be for the best interest of the ward or beneficiary.”

. Reasons may be adduced to support defendants’ contention that the transaction whs in fact an investment, or plaintiffs ’ claim that it was a sale on credit. In view of the basic requirement, however, that sales of real estate be made for cash unless otherwise expressly authorized by probate court, and that the sale was on time in fact, we think it must be held a sale on credit within the meaning of the statute. Any other rule would hold serious possibilities of hazards to minors’ estates. •

It is a general rule that purchasers of real estate at probate sale may rely upon probate records and the judgment of the court, where the court has jurisdiction. Averitt v. Jackson City Bank, 114 Mich. 20; Wheelock v. Lake, 117 Mich. 11.

We need not trace the rule through its ramifications, applications and exceptions. Reference to the cases discloses that it may be invoked only by purchasers in good faith. ' Such purchaser, relying upon records not disclosing the defect, would be protected in his title although the sale were on credit and the statutory requirements therefor not observed. Asman v. Traphagen, 23 Mich. 80, 84. Obviously the rule could not aid a purchaser who had knowledge of the infirmities or was chargeable with notice of them.

At bar, the court had jurisdiction to license and confirm the sale. The jurisdiction appears of record. The proceedings were wholly, regular, and legal on the face of the records, except as to certain irregularities in filing .completed before -and. cured by final order of confirmation which gives the deed effect. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 15841.

*625 A different question would confront us had the prohate court been advised of the facts and passed upon the legality of the sale as actually made. The infirmity lies in violation of the statute as to sales on credit, which was not disclosed to the probate court and, therefore, was not cured by its judgment upon law and facts.

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Related

Osman v. Traphagen
23 Mich. 80 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1871)
Averill v. Jackson City Bank
72 N.W. 15 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1897)
Wheelock v. Lake
75 N.W. 140 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
256 N.W. 569, 268 Mich. 619, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclave-v-benton-harbor-state-bank-mich-1934.