McKay v. Williams

35 N.W. 159, 67 Mich. 547, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 860
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 35 N.W. 159 (McKay v. Williams) 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
McKay v. Williams, 35 N.W. 159, 67 Mich. 547, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 860 (Mich. 1887).

Opinion

Chahplin, J.

Plaintiff brought ejectment against defendants.

Mary McNerna is made a party simply as tenant in possession under her co-defendant at the time the suit was brought.

On the twenty-first day of May, 1886, one Ida J. Shults was the owner of the premises in question. On that day she executed to her husband, Oliver O. Shults, a power of attorney to convey, by good and sufficient deed, said premises. This was recorded in the Kent county register’s office on the ninth day of June, 1886, at 8:45 o’clock, a. m. On the same day Oliver O. Shults, as attorney in fact for Ida J. Shults, executed a deed in the name of his principal of the premises in question to Henry H. Knight. This was duly witnessed and acknowledged. And again, on the same day, Henry H. Knight executed a deed of the premises to Oliver C. Shults. This was also witnessed and acknowledged. Both these deeds purported to be for the consideration of $600. The notary who drew the deeds and took the acknowledgments saw no money consideration pass between the parties. Both deeds were recorded the same day and at the same time.

On the twenty-seventh of July, 1886, Ida J. Shults conveyed the premises to the plaintiff in this suit, and on July 9, 1886, Oliver O. Shults conveyed the premises to Jane A. Williams, defendant.

The plaintiff claims that the deeds from Ida J. Shults, executed by Oliver O. Shults as her attorney in fact, to Knight, and from Knight to Oliver C. Shults, are fraudulent and void upon the face of the transaction; that they show upon their [549]*549face the case of an agent conveying the property of his principal to himself; and that they should be so declared by the court in an action of ejectment brought by the principal or her grantee.

The judge of the superior court of Grand Bapids, before whom the case was tried, held that, in the absence of proof of actual fraud, the title to the property passed from Ida J. Shults to Knight, and from Knight to Oliver C. Shults, and from him to defendant Williams; and, consequently, the plaintiff acquired no title by virtue of his deed from Ida J. Shults.

If, as the judge of the superior court held, the legal title passed by the deeds to defendant notwithstanding the apparently fraudulent transaction between Oliver O. Shults and Knight, then the later deed, executed by Mrs. Shults to plaintiff, only conveyed an equitable title, the defendant being simply a trustee of the legal title for the plaintiff, and the remedy of plaintiff would be in equity to compel a conveyance of the legal title by Williams to McKay.

Plaintiff’s counsel contends that the fraud which presumptively exists upon the face of the papers vitiated the transaction and rendered the deeds wholly void, and therefore the legal title did not pass by the execution of the deeds; that Mrs. Shults held the legal title all the time until she conveyed it to plaintiff. Here, then, there are two persons, each claiming the legal title to the same real estate, and who trace their source of title to a common grantor.

The record discloses that Oliver O. Shults, as attorney in fact of Ida J. Shults, on the ninth of June, 1886, conveyed the premises to Knight, and that he immediately reconveyed them to Oliver O. Shults. These deeds, bearing the same date, executed between the same parties, conveying the same subject-matter, must be construed together. The language they speak is plain. By this transaction the agent authorized [550]*550by Ida J. Shults to sell the land in question, and convey the same, has sold and conveyed it to himself.

Such a transaction cannot stand. It bears upon its face its own condemnation. It is prima facie void, and as between the parties the principal is not bound by the deeds, and may repudiate the transaction and recover the land. Public policy will not tolerate such misdoings on the part of au agent, and courts will not stop to inquire whether a fraud was intended, but, looking alone at the relation of the parties, will, upon that relation appearing, declare the conveyance invalid. Gillett v. Peppercome, 3 Beav. 78; Whart. Ag. § 232; 2 Sugd. Vend. c. 20, § 2; Gilbert v. Burgott, 10 Johns. 457; Claflin v. Bank, 25 N. Y. 293; Obert v. Hammel, 18 N. J. Law, 74; Michoud v. Girod, 4 How. 503; Clute v. Barron, 2 Mich. 192.

In very many of the cases which have been brought to the attention of the courts, the agents or trustees have so covered their misfeasance as to make it necessary for the injured party to go into a court of equity to obtain adequate relief. But when the fraud appears upon the face of the papers or conveyances, the remedy can as well be administered in a court of law as in a court of equity. Thus in Claflin v. Bank, cited above, an action was brought to recover upon three checks drawn by the president of the bank, and certified by its president as good. The defense that the president committed an abuse of his fiduciary relations with the bank was permitted to be shown. Judge Selden said : “The act of the agent is deemed to be unauthorized, and the contract is void;” and that “there could be no bona fde holder of such an instrument,” for the reason that the want of authority in the president to bind the bank appeared on the face of the check.

In Gilbert v. Burgott, 10 Johns. 457, which was a contest, between the grantee of an unrecorded deed and a subsequent grantee who first placed his deed of record, the court held that actual notice to the second grantee of the existence of [551]*551the unrecorded deed might be shown in an action of ejectment. Chief Justice Kent held that the action of the subsequent grantee in obtaining and recording a deed when he had notice of the first conveyance was a fraud upon the holder of the unrecorded deed, and he said:

“Fraud will invalidate in a court of law as well as in a court of equity, and annul every contract and every conveyance infected with it.”

Obert v. Hammel, supra, was a case in point, and the court held in an action of ejectment that the sale and conveyance-could be avoided in a court of law, citing several English cases in support of the position.

It is laid down by Sugden on Vendors and Purchasers, and supported by numerous authorities, that, “where the trustee buying is the trustee for sale,|the purchase is absolutely void.” Chapter 20, §2 (8th Amer. ed.), p. 689, bottom, note n.

“ So careful [said Mr. Justice Manning, in the case of People v. Township Board of Overyssel, 11 Mich. 222] is the law in guarding against the abuse of fiduciary relations, that it will not permit an agent to act for himself and his principal in the same transaction; as to buy of himself, as agent, the property of his principal, or the like. All such transactions are void, as it respects his principal, unless ratified by him with a full knowledge of all the circumstances.”

Mr Justice Christianoy concurred with Justice Manning. Mr. J ustice C ampb ell assented to the general doctrine, stated, that the same person cannot be vendor and purchaser because his contract lacks the necessary elements of two parties; but he also stated that “even these contracts, however, are not universally void. They are usually voidable at the option of the party defrauded or affected, but they are not absolutely void, except where,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 N.W. 159, 67 Mich. 547, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckay-v-williams-mich-1887.