Nichols v. Nichols

3 N.W.2d 53, 301 Mich. 177, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 528
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1942
DocketDocket No. 56, Calendar No. 41,637.
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.W.2d 53 (Nichols v. Nichols) 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
Nichols v. Nichols, 3 N.W.2d 53, 301 Mich. 177, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 528 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

North, J.

Plaintiffs by their bill of complaint primarily sought an accounting incident to a farm lease. Defendants answered and asserted a somewhat indefinite claim for affirmative relief. After full hearing in the circuit court a decree was entered denying without costs relief to any of the parties insofar as accounting under the lease was sought. Plaintiffs have appealed.

The factual background in general may be stated as follows: In 1928 plaintiff Jessie Nichols obtained a decree of divorce from defendant George Nichols, who subsequently married defendant "Winifred Nichols. Plaintiff Herbert Nichols is an adult son of- George and Jessie Nichols. At the time Jessie Nichols was decreed a divorce George was in at least fairly good financial condition; but by 1932 he *179 was in somewhat serious financial difficulty, and was unable to comply with the decretal provision as to payments of alimony to his former wife. Pending an application for modification of the decree, the parties in March, 1933, entered into a property settlement. A certain phase of this settlement gave rise to a controversy which was finally adjudicated in this Court. See Nichols v. Nichols, 298 Mich. 603. Incident to the 1933 property settlement, a three-party lease of two farm properties was consummated. Defendants George Nichols and his wife Winifred, designated in the lease as parties of the first part, possessed a life estate with right of survivorship between the two in one-half of the leased property. Plaintiff Jessie Nichols, designated in the lease as party of the second part, possessed a life estate in the remaining half of the leased property. Plaintiff Herbert Nichols designated in the lease as party of the third part, became the farm tenant under the lease. While the lease was dated March 10, 1933, it was given retroactive effect to October 15, 1932. The first term ran to March 1, 1934, but the lease provided for automatic annual renewals, with the provision:

“That it shall be cancelled by either parties of the first part, party of the second part or party of the third part giving notice of cancellation to the other parties hereto 90 days prior to March 1, 1934, or 90 days prior to March 1st of any successive year.”

In general the lease provided that each of the three contracting parties should have one third of the net income from the leased farms; that Herbert Nichols was to operate the farms as a dairy farm and from the proceeds was to pay certain items for the lessors before dividing the net income. Out of the receipts he was to pay the cost of repairing *180 farm machinery, of replacing farm machinery, interest on the mortgage to which a portion of the leased property was subject, to pay the taxes, and the purchase price of necessary new equipment. It is not necessary at this point to note more detailed provisions as to which of the parties became the owner of acquired personal property or the exact adjustment between the three parties as to payments of interest and taxes, et cetera. The lease further provided, and these provisions are somewhat stressed by appellees, as follows:

“1. Party of the third part promises to work the said farm in accordance with good husbandry and promises to devote his full time to the operation of said farm. * * *
“2. Party of the third part promises to keep books of account necessary for the carrying out of the terms and conditions of this agreement and permit the parties of the first part and party of the second part to examine said books at least once each month.
“Party of the third part promises to make all disbursements under the terms of this lease by check when said disbursement amounts to $1 or any sum in excess thereof.”

In the fall of 1939 and more than 90 days prior to the expiration of the annual term ending March 1, 1940, George Nichols served notice of termination of the lease as of the last-noted date. Shortly after service of this notice plaintiffs filed their bill of complaint for an accounting. As above noted, the trial court denied the relief sought.

Herbert Nichols continued to operate the farm properties for the balance of the annual term, and shortly thereafter a temporary receiver appointed in this suit took over the operation of the properties. *181 The account shown in this suit involves the rights of each of the three parties to the lease for a period of over 7 years, beginning with October 15, 1932. Because the lease so provided, whatever income accrued under the one-third interest of George Nichols and his present-wife, Winifred, belongs to George Nichols personally. But the lease provided:

“[paragraph 5.] that all the livestock on said farm and all the equipment and farm machinery thereon at the present time is the sole property of said Winifred Nichols, and that the said property is to be returned to the said Winifred Nichols at the expiration of this agreement in as good condition as reasonable use and wear thereof will permit.
“6. It is mutually agreed by all the parties hereto that the cost of repair to the farm machinery mentioned in paragraph 5 shall be deducted from the total income of the produce of said farm in computing what is net income, and that also there shall be deducted the replacements of said farm machinery and equipment mentioned in paragraph 5, said machinery so purchased shall become the sole property of Winifred Nichols, but that other farm machinery and equipment purchased shall be owned jointly by the parties hereto (each one third).”

Appellants claim that George Nichols has had more than his share of the net income; and that under the record as made he should be decreed to account to plaintiff Herbert Nichols in the amount of $2,343.50, and to plaintiff Jessie Nichols in the amount of $517.13. Thus the total claimed by plaintiffs is $2,860.63. Of this' amount a substantial portion is made up of a claim that the value of the personal property on the farm at the conclusion of the lease exceeded the value of like property at the beginning of the lease.

*182 The trial judge filed a lengthy opinion wherein he set forth much detail of the record. He reached the conclusion that none of the parties had established a right to relief in the way of an accounting. While he made note of the failure of Herbert “to work the said farm in accordance with good husbandry” and his failure “to devote his full time to the operation of said farm,” his failure to keep books of account properly and “to make his disbursements by check” for amounts in excess of $1, nonetheless the real ground of decision was that from the record as a whole the trial judge concluded that none of the parties had satisfactorily established a right to an accounting as claimed. Insofar as this finding concerns a general accounting of items of receipts and disbursements incident to the operation of the farm we are satisfied that the conclusion of the trial judge was correct.

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Related

Nichols v. Nichols
299 N.W. 732 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.W.2d 53, 301 Mich. 177, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-nichols-mich-1942.