Murray v. Menzies Real Homes Co.

210 N.W. 217, 236 Mich. 77, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 800
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1926
DocketDocket No. 24.
StatusPublished

This text of 210 N.W. 217 (Murray v. Menzies Real Homes Co.) 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
Murray v. Menzies Real Homes Co., 210 N.W. 217, 236 Mich. 77, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 800 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiff filed this bill asking a receivership, injunction and accounting based on an alleged agreement between the parties named in the bill as a joint adventure with defendant. In a subsequent affidavit and his testimony at the hearing he calls it a partnership. Defendant answered issuably directly denying any contractual relations whatever between it and plaintiff. Plaintiff alleges in his bill that on September 6, 1923, he entered into an agreement with defendant—

“to look after the building operations of fifteen (15) buildings which were to be constructed and were con *79 structed on lots hereinafter described.upon the following terms and conditions:

“(a) Said plaintiff was to receive a sum of one hundred ($100.00) dollars per week, as a drawing account commencing on September 13th, A. D. 1923, and continuing each week thereafter until the buildings were completed, and was to receive in addition thereto twenty-five (25%) per cent, of the profits, which profits and drawing account should not, in any event, be less than ten thousand ($10,000.00) dollars per year, or on a basis of ten thousand ($10,000.00) dollars per year, and said defendant was to pay said plaintiff his share of profits upon completion and sale of each of said buildings.”

He further alleges that he commenced work for defendant on September 6, 1923, and continued to March 4, 1924, when the buildings were finished and his work ended; that the various lots with the buildings constructed under his management were sold by defendant, but although he called upon defendant “at least a dozen times and asked for an accounting and for his division of the proceeds” defendant refused him, ignoring his “rights and demands in said matter,” to secure which he filed this bill.

Upon the trial it was shown without dispute that defendant Menzies Real Homes Company was a corporation which had been engaged in the real estate business in Detroit for a number of years, buying, selling, leasing, and at times building upon its property, for lease or sale. At the time of the transaction involved here it owned and was managing a valuable quantity of unimproved and improved real estate in various parts of Detroit. It had some stores on Livernois avenue, a garage property on Cass avenue rented to the General Motors Company for $18,000 a year, one piece of its property on Cass avenue alone being appraised at between $300,000 and $400,000.

H. D. Menzies is defendant’s president and Leslie J. Menzies its secretary. They own most of its stock *80 and manage its business. It was their claim that the corporation had ceased its building activities as such about 1921, and since then had confined itself to collecting its rents, reinvestments, and management of its property, although they two had at times since then, as individuals or under separate companies, engaged in some building projects, and the contract or joint venture involved here, was entirely with them personally, of which plaintiff was fully advised from the beginning.

Following the hearing the trial court found that the contract on which plaintiff’s bill was based was with H. D. Menzies and Leslie J. Menzies personally and not with the defendant corporation which he had sued, and entered a decree dismissing his bill, with costs to defendant, but prior to the decree an opinion was filed discussing the salient issues raised at the hearing, in which the court not only held there were no contractual relations between plaintiff and defendant but found the contract or joint adventure between him and the Menzies was financed by H. D. Menzies with the credit or assistance of defendant, to protect which, title to the lots upon which the buildings were erected was held in defendant’s name—

“by virtue of a trust relation for the benefit of the plaintiff and the other two individuals involved. And it was the understanding of these three individuals that when necessary to convey titles to the lots acquired, they would be conveyed by its officers, the two Messrs. Menzies, to any appropriate grantee, or vendee, at the actual cost price to the defendant corporation of the lots.”

The court also found the contract different in certain material particulars from plaintiff’s- contention; that some of the houses and lots had not yet been sold and contracts with small payments down under which others had been sold were doubtful assets for their determining profits; and held in substance that in any *81 aspect of the transaction plaintiff’s demand for an accounting was premature.

The controlling and final question in the case as decided by the trial court was whether the contract, whatever its terms or significance, was between plaintiff and the defendant corporation. On that question, the burden of proof was on plaintiff. If the court rightly held that he failed to sustain it by a preponderance of evidence and no contract relations were shown between the parties to the suit, that ended the case. What further was said in the court’s opinion is upon points not necessarily involved in the determination of the cause and but obiter dictum, which calls for no review of the arguments of counsel in relation to it.

The contract was concededly oral and the only parties present at its making were plaintiff and the two Menzies. Plaintiff testified it was with the corporation through them acting as its officers. This they specifically denied, claiming it was distinctly with them personally and plaintiff was fully informed of the fact at that time. Assuming all three equally creditable, upon that direct contradiction he failed to sustain the burden of proof; but a comparison of his testimony and theirs as to disputed and undisputed facts makes their story more convincing and persuasive.

The undisputed testimony shows that prior to this time the two Menzies had personally made a similar contract of partnership or joint adventure with an architect named Harry C. Vicary. He proved to be an office man without the experience and capacity to profitably and efficiently handle the actual work of construction and their agreement with him, which was in writing, was ended by an amicable adjustment before the number of houses intended had been built. This contract, which was produced in evidence at the hearing, is brief and graphic, made directly between H. D. Menzies and Leslie J. Menzies, and Harry C. *82 Vicary “for the purpose of building and selling houses.” By it H. D. Menzies was to furnish the necessary capital and “devote some time to the enterprise,” while Vicary and Leslie 3. Menzies were to devote their entire time and energy to the project. Each party was to draw $300 per month as salary to be charged directly as overhead to the cost of the houses with other expenses such as office rent, heat, light, stationery, clerical help, discount of contracts, etc. The ultimate profits, if any, after all expenses had been taken into consideration, were to be divided as follows:

“H. D. Menzies, 50 per cent.; L. J. Menzies, 25 per cent.; H. C. Vicary, 25 per cent.”

Plaintiff was known as a practical builder with years of experience and about that time had no building projects on hand.

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Bluebook (online)
210 N.W. 217, 236 Mich. 77, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-menzies-real-homes-co-mich-1926.