Melvin v. Reading

78 N.W.2d 181, 346 Mich. 348, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 321
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1956
DocketDocket 25, Calendar 46,654
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 78 N.W.2d 181 (Melvin v. Reading) 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
Melvin v. Reading, 78 N.W.2d 181, 346 Mich. 348, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 321 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

Black, J.

The defendants are legatees and distributees of the estate of Carlos A. Reading, deceased. Their motion to dismiss plaintiff’s bill of complaint, filed in the Washtenaw circuit, was denied by the chancellor. October 12, 1955, this Court granted leave to appeal from the order of denial. The question before us is whether the bill states an appropriate subject of equitable relief.

The bill, filed January 7,1955, alleges that plaintiff was injured in a vehicular collision occurring April 26, 1953, said to have been caused by negligence on the part of the said Carlos A. Reading. It alleges further that Mr. Reading was killed as a result of such collision and that she in consequence is possessed of a substantial claim for damages against Mr. Reading’s estate, the distributable corpus of which has passed into hands of the defendants by virtue of Washtenaw county probate proceedings.

The bill next alleges that proceedings toward probate of Mr. Reading’s will and estate were hurriedly instituted after Mr. Reading’s death and that same were finally concluded without plaintiff’s knowledge on September 3, 1953, “a period of about 4 months and a week after the death of Carlos A. Reading.” *351 It then alleges disability on the part of plaintiff, resulting from the collision, as reason for failure of timely filing of claim or suit against Mr. Reading’s estate or fiduciary, and charges that plaintiff at no time received notice of pendency of hearing on claims against the estate. The charging part of the bill concludes with this allegation:

“10. That, in the probating of the estate of Carlos A. Reading, every possible method of facilitating the closing of this estate was executed with the result that, in a real sense, it worked a constructive fraud on complainant, who was incapacitated for months, and who had a just claim against the estate of Carlos A. Reading, deceased.”

The bill then alleges that negotiations (apparently toward adjustment of plaintiff’s claim) were carried on between plaintiff’s counsel * and the previously discharged executor of Mr. Reading’s will, defendant Douglas K. Reading, and that such negotiations continued between September of 1953 and the date of filing of the bill. Beyond listing of the assets of the Reading estate in detail and the fact of assignment thereof to defendants, the bill makes no further charges. The material prayer of the bill follows:

“C. That said complainant be decreed a personal judgment against said defendants above named, jointly and severally, for her pain and suffering, her medical, hospital and dental expenses, her loss of wages, permanent injuries to her nerves and her loss of 4 teeth, in the amount of $12,500, proportioned to the value of the assets each defendant received from the estate of Carlos A. Reading, deceased; and further, that any and all assets of the estate of Carlos A. Reading, deceased, still in the hands, control, power, or ownership of said defendants be ordered sold under the direction of the court and the proceeds *352 therefrom he applied to the payment of plaintiff’s damages decreed by the court.”

Attached to the bill and constituting a part thereof is a letter written by the probate judge to plaintiff’s counsel under date of September 30, 1953. The letter reads, in entirety, as follows:

“Jay H. Payne Washtenaw County
Probate and Juvenile Court Judge Ann Arbor, Michigan
September 30, 1953
“Mr. Robert P. Robbins
Attorney at Law
1300 Penobscot Building Detroit, Michigan
“Re: Estate of Carlos A. Reading, Deceased Our Pile' #40,294 Estate of Lena Reading, Deceased ' Our Pile #40,295
“My dear Mr. Robbins:
“In response to your inquiry of September 28, 1953, you will please be advised that the 2 above captioned estates were probated in this court with Douglas K. Reading, son, acting as executor of his father, Carlos A.r Reading’s estate, and as administrator of his mother, Lena Reading’s estate.
“His final accounts as executor and administrator were filed, heard and allowed and the estates ordered closed on September 3, 1953.
“Mr. Douglas K. Reading is a Washtenaw county attorney with offices at 305 Ann Arbor Trust Building, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
“Courteously yours,
“/s/ Jay H. Payne “Jay II. Payne Judge of Probate”

First: The bill makes no charge of fraud beyond naked pronouncement that defendants’ prompt pro *353 bating of the estate without actual ’notice to plaintiff “worked a constructive fraud.” Neither does it charge them with affirmative representation, or silence when there was a duty to speak, on the basis of which a court of equity might find that fraud— actual or constructive — induced plaintiff to belief that failure of suit or filing of claim prior to closing of the estate on September 3, 1953, would not prejudice her rights. It does not even allege duty on the part of any of the defendants to notify her that the probate proceedings were pending and headed toward prompt closing. Reading between the lines, it establishes all too clearly that somnolent negotiations and slumber on rights to exclusion of other causes have left plaintiff in position where she has no pending estate against which to file claim and no fiduciary'to sue.

Judge Picard’s carefully considered opinion in Young v. Moore, 127 F Supp 265, discloses similar slumber and consequent mournful result. His view of Michigan law in that case, which we adopt, save only as presently noted, leads to reluctant conclusion that there is no equity on the face of this bill.

The right to file claim or suit based on an obligation of a decedent’accruing in his lifetime, whether it sound in tort or otherwise, is provided for and limited by the probate code. The equity of this bill is destroyed by the disclosed fact of written notice to the plaintiff’s attorney, by the probate judge under date of September 30, 1953, that the estate had been closed 27 days earlier. Plaintiff through her attorney thus received direct and ample notice of the expeditiously closed probate proceeding at a time when she had a full 64 days within which to petition the probate court for rehearing and setting aside of the order discharging fiduciary and closing estate: The probate judge, considering the bill-revealed fact *354 of liability-insured protection of tbe estate, undoubtedly would have done so had he been duly petitioned under the statute quoted at margin. * And, whether that be right or not, his decision would have been open to timely review.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.W.2d 181, 346 Mich. 348, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melvin-v-reading-mich-1956.