Michigan Trust Co. v. Flanagan

254 N.W. 194, 266 Mich. 527, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 711
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1934
DocketDocket No. 102, Calendar No. 37,533.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 254 N.W. 194 (Michigan Trust Co. v. Flanagan) 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
Michigan Trust Co. v. Flanagan, 254 N.W. 194, 266 Mich. 527, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 711 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

North, J.

This is a suit upon a renewal of a promissory note in the sum of $11,000, dated October 10, 1928, payable to the order of the Norton Lumber Company one year after date. Another note given for an interest instalment is also involved. The principal note was signed by defendant, John J. Flanagan and by H. A. Newkirk. On the back of the note there is an indorsement making it payable to the order of plaintiff, Philo C. Fuller. On trial before a jury plaintiff’s right to recover was challenged on the ground that there was mutual mistake in the execution of the note of which the one in suit is a renewal which mistake resulted in failure of consideration, and also that by reason of a subsequent oral agreement defendant was entitled to credit on the note for certain personal property in *529 an amount sufficient to satisfy the obligation. Defendant had verdict and judgment, and plaintiff has appealed.

The following facts are pertinent to the questions presented by this appeal. In October, 1922, John J. Flanagan and Dr. H. A. Newkirk, operating as partners, purchased timber in northern Michigan from the Norton Lumber Company. Briefly this purchase covered 18,000,000 feet of timber at a price of $7 per thousand, with a down payment of $25,000. Defendant and his partner began logging operations and continued such until the latter part of 1925. During the course of operations, in accordance with the purchase contract, the partners undertook to pay the $7 per thousand on the amount of logs shipped or ready for shipment from month to month. The Norton Lumber Company seems to have been owned or at least largely controlled by Mr. Philo C. Fuller and Mr. William C. Anderson, the former being president and the latter secretary and treasurer. The amount due on the logging contract was ascertained from month to month by Mr. Anderson, an expert accountant, checking the partnership books and ascertaining therefrom the amount of logs shipped or ready for shipment. The partnership evidently fell in arrears in making these payments. In April, 1926, the parties met and discussed settlement. At that time Fuller, Anderson and Newkirk checked the books kept by the partnership. They reported to defendant Flanagan that the books showed an indebtedness to the Norton Lumber Company of $20,000. Flanagan testified that this alleged indebtedness pertained only to the logging operations. Aside from this indebtedness the partners had also purchased from the Norton Lumber Company a logging equipment for which the partners *530 had given to the company two promissory notes, one for $9,000, the other for $8,000. On April 29, 1926, a settlement agreement was reached, reduced to writing and signed by the respective parties. It provided that in full settlement of the Norton Lumber Company’s claim against the partners the latter should give to the former a note in the sum of $11,000 dated April 10,1926, and payable 18 months thereafter, with the privilege of renewal for an additional year. The $9,000 note and the $8,000 note given for the logging equipment were to be can-celled. The settlement agreement also provided that the partners should execute a bill of sale to the Norton Lumber Company for all the personal property then at the place of the logging operations. The $11,000 note was not only renewed for the additional period of one year, but it was renewed a second time and this second renewal is the note in suit.

As stated above, the note given to the Norton Lumber Company was indorsed to Philo C. Puller. After suit was instituted thereon Mr. Puller died and the suit is prosecuted by the administrator of his estate. Both Mr. Anderson and Dr. Newkirk are also deceased.

As noted above, the defenses submitted to the jury were mutual mistake and a subsequent oral agreement. Appellant contends that the evidence does not sustain either the alleged mutual mistake or the claimed subsequent oral agreement. But appellant presents as a primary question for review the following :

“In a suit upon a renewal note, the original of which was executed in accordance with the terms of a settlement agreement, can the defendant interpose the defense of mutual mistake in the execution of said agreement and the defense of a subsequent oral agreement amending it?”

*531 Under the facts here involved we think the trial judge correctly held that each of these defenses was available to defendant. The respective litigants stand in the position of original parties to the transaction. No innocent third parties are involved. The testimony discloses nothing which works an estoppel as a matter of law or constitutes a waiver. The undisputed testimony is that it was not until after the last renewal note was given that defendant learned of the facts relied upon as disclosing the mutual mistake. Appellant points out that such facts were at all times ascertainable from the books of account in defendant’s possession and asserts that therefore defendant should be charged with actual knowledge as a matter of law. But this contention ignores material facts disclosed by the record. Plaintiff’s associate, Mr. Anderson, was an expert accountant, and during the course of the logging operations he inspected defendant’s books from month to month and ascertained the amount to be paid by defendant and Dr. Newkirk. The partners seemed to have accepted Anderson’s statements and payments were made in reliance upon his computations. Finally, at the time of the settlement, Anderson in conjunction with Mr. Fuller and Dr. Newkirk inspected the books of account and reported to defendant that the partners owed on the account about $20,000. Defendant testified that at the time he signed the settlement agreement he relied upon Anderson’s representation that the books showed an indebtedness of $20,000. There is testimony that instead of $20,000 indebtedness on the logging operations the books disclosed only $4,672.77. As before noted, this fact was not known to defendant until after the last renewal note was given. Defendant testified he was not a bookkeeper but that he had more particularly the charge of the logging end of the enterprise in *532 which these partners were engaged. As bearing upon the question of mutual mistake, appellant asserts that the reported indebtedness of $20,000 covered both the logging operations and the amount due from the partners to the Norton Lumber Company incident to the purchase of the logging equipment.

With the foregoing facts in evidence, it cannot be said as a matter of law that the defendant was estopped by laches or otherwise, or that he had waived the defense of mutual mistake. As to the defense of mutual mistake the legal aspect of the case was not changed by giving renewal notes. Anderson v. Engard, 236 Mich. 221; New Jersey Title Guaranty & Trust Co. v. McGrath, 246 Mich. 553, 562. The rights and remedies of the respective parties were the same as though the suit had been brought on the original note. Nor are such rights and remedies affected by the fact that the note was given incident to a settlement between the parties. A settlement procured by fraud or resulting from mutual mistake is no more a binding settlement than is an original contract consummated through fraud or mutual mistake a binding contract. Venske v. Smith, 265 Mich.

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Bluebook (online)
254 N.W. 194, 266 Mich. 527, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-trust-co-v-flanagan-mich-1934.