Mulford v. Stender

184 N.W. 490, 215 Mich. 637, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 802
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1921
DocketDocket No. 25
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 184 N.W. 490 (Mulford v. Stender) 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
Mulford v. Stender, 184 N.W. 490, 215 Mich. 637, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 802 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Stone, J.

On January 25, 1918, Elmer W. Mulford, as executor of the last will and testament of Hugo H. Stender, deceased, filed a bill of interpleader in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, in chancery, against William Stender and the Niles Invisible Door Check Company, a Michigan corporation, in which he alleged that there was in his hands, as such executor, the sum of $8,900 which originally was payable to said defendant William Stender as one of the legatees under said will, but which sum the defendant the Niles Invisible Door Check Company claimed by virtue of an alleged assignment from said defendant Stender; that defendant William Stender had repudiated the said alleged assignment, and that plaintiff was unable to ascertain who was entitled to said sum of money, and prayed that the parties defendant might make answer, and that the court might hear the matter and decide which of the defendants was entitled to said fund. On March 2, 1918, the defendant Niles Invisible Door Check Company filed its answer, setting forth that it was entitled to the fund under an assignment from defendant William Stender, dated April 5, 1917, and praying that it might be so decreed by the court.

On March 28, 1918, defendant William Stender filed his answer, in which he set forth that on April 5, [639]*6391917, the defendant Niles Invisible Door Check Company by William Daniel Johnson, its secretary and treasurer, and the owner of the majority of the stock of said corporation, obtained from him a conditional subscription for 60 shares of the preferred stock of said company of the par value of $5,000, and that said Johnson, while acting as the attorney for said defendant Stender in the matter of the estate of Hugo H. Stender, deceased, had obtained the sum of $1,100 of the moneys coming to said defendant Stender, from said estate, and had applied the same on the purchase price of said $5,000 worth of stock, without the knowledge or consent of said defendant Stender. He further alleged that the said subscription was obtained from him, as was also the claimed assignment of the money due him from the estate aforesaid, by certain false and fraudulent representations, and that he had brought suit in the circuit court for Cook county,, State of Illinois, against the Niles Invisible Door Check Company and said William Daniel Johnson, to recover the said sum of $1,100 taken by said Johnson as aforesaid, ánd to rescind the alleged subscription, and assignment by him to said Johnson of the said sum of $3,900. He asked that a decree of inter-pleader be entered, and prayed that the final adjudication of the matter be deferred in the Wayne circuit court, in chancery, until a final decree had been obtained in the case pending in Cook county, Illinois. The court below refused to continue or postpone the hearing of the case, and the same was heard upon pleadings and proofs, and on November 6, 1920, a final decree was entered in favor of the defendant Niles Invisible Door Check Company, and directing the plaintiff to pay said fund to that defendant, together with such interest as had accrued thereon. Costs were awarded to plaintiff to be paid out of said fund, and costs were awarded said company as against the [640]*640defendant William Stender, together with such costs as were taxed to the plaintiff. The defendant Stender has appealed.

Under the authority of Maxim v. Shotwell, 209 Mich. 79, the bill of interpleader was properly filed. It is urged by counsel for defendant Stender that the court below improperly heard and disposed of the case, and that its action should have been deferred until the Illinois court had tried the case there pending. But as it appears that the bill of interpleader was first filed, and as defendant Stender in his answer asked that a decree of interpleader be entered, we are of the opinion that the Wayne circuit court, in chancery, properly entertained jurisdiction, under the familiar rule that the court which first, obtains jurisdiction has the exclusive right to decide the matter in issue. Barnum Wire & Iron Works v. Speed, 59 Mich. 272; Allen v. Allen, 188 Mich. 532, and cases there cited. We shall therefore proceed to consider the case upon its merits.

It is the claim of counsel for defendant Stender that he (Stender) is a person of weak mind, and is easily imposed upon by a designing and scheming person, and that he was made the dupe of the witness Johnson; and it must be conceded that the record gives some support to this claim. Defendant Stender testified to the effect that, prior to the execution of any papers, he went to Johnson’s law office in Chicago, to retain him to look after his matters in Detroit, pertaining to the said estate, because he had become dissatisfied with the allowance of certain claims against the estate. Johnson does not deny that Stender consulted with him about the matter, or that he went to Detroit to examine into it, b.ut says that he was not employed as attorney, but that his action was purely voluntary, and created no confidential relation. Stender claims that he went to Johnson’s office several [641]*641times between March 27th and April 5, 1917; that he was directed there by a Mr. Koehling, whom he had known for some time, and that on March 28th he found Johnson in his office with two other men, and heard the telephone ring; that one of the men took the receiver, and then said “Mr. So and So would like to buy 200 or 250 Invisible door checks;” that he (Stender) left that day, without the parties coming to any arrangement, but returned on the next day, when he claims a similar conversation took place, about a man wanting to buy some of said stock. He claims that he then inquired of Johnson about the door checks, and the company, and was shown certain photographs, and then went with a Miss Jacobs and another person from Johnson’s office to see some of the door checks in operation in the Marshall Field building, and some other store.

There is an irreconcilable conflict between the testimony of the defendant Stender and that of Johnson as to the representations made by Johnson. It does appear, however, that on or about April 5, 1917, and after Johnson had visited Detroit and learned about the estate, Stender signed and delivered to Johnson the following papers:

“Niles Invisible Door Check Co.,
29 South La Salle street, Suite 916,
Telephone Randolph 4480,
Chicago, Ill.
“Subscription to 6% preferred Cumulative Stock of the Niles Invisible Door Check Co.
“The undersigned hereby subscribes to and purchases fifty shares of $100 each par value, of the 6% cumulative preferred stock of the Niles Invisible Door Check Company, a Michigan corporation, total amount $5,000, good after this subscription agreement has been countersigned by its authorized representative.
“Duly executed stock certificates shall be issued within five days from date of payment. All checks [642]*642must be made payable to the order of Niles Invisible Door Check Company. Said $5,000 to be paid as soon as money is collected from estate of Hugo H. Stender, and which $5,000 I hereby assign to said company.
“Dated April 5, 1917. Wm. Stender, Subscriber,
_ “Authorized representative, Address 620 Wells St.,
“A. C. Jacobs. Chicago, Ill.
“Accepted, W. D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 N.W. 490, 215 Mich. 637, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulford-v-stender-mich-1921.