Oliver v. Cunningham

7 F. 689, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2269
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedApril 17, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 F. 689 (Oliver v. Cunningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Cunningham, 7 F. 689, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2269 (circtedmi 1881).

Opinion

Withey, D. J.

This is a bill to set aside a conveyance of the property in question, made by complainant to the defendant Cunningham, which it is claimed was made to entibie him, Cunningham, to satisfy from the issues of the estate, by sale or otherwise, a mortgage of $35,000 held by himself and his co-defendants Hunt and Eschelman, together with other indebtedness of Oliver. The hill also asks to have set aside a conveyance of the same lands made by the defendant Cunningham to. his co-dofendants G. J. Eobinson, Haines, and Ranney; and for an accounting by all the defendants for the issues, rents, and profits of the property since the second-named conveyance.

It is alleged that the conveyance to Robinson, Haines, and Ranney was made for the benefit of all the defendants, including Cunningham himself, and with full knowledge on their part of all Oliver’s rights in the premisos. I shall not enter upon an elaborate discussion of the evidence, or give at length the reasons for my conclusions, hut content myself by stating the principal facts, my conclusions, and briefly the reasons therefor.

In the summer or fall of 1868 Oliver owned about 12,500 acres of pine lands, and held a contract for the purchase of [690]*6906,500 acres from David Preston. These lands were situated in the counties of Alpena, Alcona, and adjoining counties. Garrett B. Hunt, Jacob Eschelman, and Henry S. Gunning-ham held a purchase-money mortgage upon all the lands in townships 28 and 29 north of range 8 east, amounting to. about 6,500 acres, to secure the payment of $35,000 and interest, given to them by Oliver, who was then carrying on business at a place called. Ossineke, in the vicinity of the property, in the manufacture and sale of lumber from the lands above mentioned, in copartnership with the defendant George J. Bobinson. The lands covered by the Cunningham, Hunt, and Eschelman mortgage were also encumbered by other mortgages and claims, amounting with said $35,000 to about $100,000. Oliver & Bobinson owed about $36,000. The value of the real estate at this time was, as estimated by Oliver, $226,000, including mills and dock; and the personal property about $70,000. Making a liberal allowance for overestimate, Oliver’s assets must at this time have exceeded his liabilities by about $150,000; but he was manifestly embarrassed financially. As early as June, 1868, some difficulty had grown up between Oliver and his partner; and, realizing his financial embarrassment, he appealed by letter to defendants Hunt and Cunningham, two of the mortgagees, to obtain assistance, stating fully to them his assets and liabilities, and the obstacles to a successful prosecution of the business, interposed by his partner Bobinson, and proposing to deed his property to them in trust for the payment of his indebtedness, and in July following visited Buffalo and had a personal conference touching the same matter. On the third of September we find Cunningham, who was doing business in Buffalo, N. Y., at Oliver’s place of business in Michigan, when Oliver executed deeds of conveyance to him of all his interest in all his lands, and a bill of sale of the personal property. Before leaving Buffalo, and before receiving the conveyance from Oliver, Cunningham, by advice of counsel, executed an assignment of his interest in the mortgage to his co-mortgagees, Hunt and Eschelman, without, however, receiving any consideration therefor. Cunningham paid no [691]*691consideration whatever for the transfer to him by Oliver. He returned to Buffalo, and he and Oliver both commenced making efforts for a sale of the property. About the first of October, Oliver went to Buffalo, in answer to a telegram from Cunningham. A sale of a large portion of the lands, including those covered by the $35,000 mortgage now held by Hunt and Eschelman, and all the personal property, was negotiated to defendants George 8. Bobinson, Haines, and Banney. An agreement for the sale of such property was drawn up and signed by Cunningham, Bobinson, Haines, and Banney, which agreement, however, Oliver insists was not assented to by him, and did not embody the terms which had been previously agreed upon between the parties. Preceding this agreement for sale there had been interviews between Bobinson, Haines, Cunningham, and Hunt, upon the subject of acquiring this property. Cunningham had received nothing for the transfer to Hunt and Eschelman of his mortgage interest, and the fact of such transfer was not communicated to Oliver. At the time of taking the conveyance at Ossineke, Cunningham refused to give a defeasance showing the nature of the trust, and declared that if Oliver insisted upon this he would have nothing to do with the property. On the third of November, succeeding these transactions, a partnership memorandum was drawn up between G-. J. Bobinson, Haines, and Banney, in which Hunt and Eschelman are referred to as possible future partners. Following upon this, the transfer of the property is finally made to Bobinson, Haines, and Banney, and in December a meeting of certain of the parties wa s held at Tonawanda for the purpose of providing funds to conduct the lumbering business and make certain improvements upon the property, at which meeting Hunt and Eschelman and defendant H. M. Bobinson were present. On the seventh of January following, Cunninghan became an open partner in the now concern, contributing as capital the §35,000 mortgage, the legal title to which vested in Hunt and Eschelman. The capital supplied to the firm, nominally, by George J. Bobinson, is found to have been a $20,000 claim which he had against Oliver in event of his electing to retire from the firm [692]*692of Oliver & Robinson, and the Wayne mortgage, so called, ■which was contributed to the firm by H. M. Robinson, and upon the bond accompanying which he afterwards brought suit at law against Oliver after it had so been contributed as a part of the capital stock of the firm. It should be added that H. M. Robinson was one of the active parties engaged in consummating the so-called Buffalo agreement, as well as in forming the new partnership; indeed, it may be said that he was the real man representing the Robinson interest in the original firm of Oliver & Robinson; and the transactions in question, as well as the evidence in the case, clearly indicate that he so continued in a great measure after the.formation of the new firm. It appears that Hunt & Eschelman, pending the transactions above stated, bought most of the mortgages against the property in question, including the C. Haines & Co. mortgage, which was, after assignment to Hunt, put in as capital stock in the new firm by Haines and Ranney, who composed said firm of said Haines & Co., and the E. & G-. R. Haines mortgage, for which Hunt gave his notes, which were afterwards paid by the firm of Cunningham, Robinson, Haines & Co., and never presented to Hunt.

Notwithstanding the fact that the $35,000 mortgage had been put into the firm as capital stock, Hunt and Eschelman afterwards instituted proceedings to foreclose the same, to which proceedings we shall hereafter have occasion to allude. And it appears that the firm of Cunningham, Robinson, Haines & Co. paid all the expense of such foreclosure, and subsequently received $46,000 as the proceeds of timber sold from the lands covered by sale, although Hunt was the nominal purchaser at the sale. A letter of Cunningham to G-. J. Robinson, of date January 25, 1872, refers to Eschelman as “a very quiet and comfortable partner.” The copartnership articles between Cunningham, Robinson, Haines & Ranney were signed for Cunningham by

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. 689, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-cunningham-circtedmi-1881.