Oreland Equipment Co. v. Copco Steel & Engineering Corp.

16 N.W.2d 646, 310 Mich. 6, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 401
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1944
DocketDocket No. 22, Calendar No. 42,744.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 N.W.2d 646 (Oreland Equipment Co. v. Copco Steel & Engineering Corp.) 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
Oreland Equipment Co. v. Copco Steel & Engineering Corp., 16 N.W.2d 646, 310 Mich. 6, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 401 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

Boyles, J.

Plaintiff filed a sworn bill of complaint in the Wayne circuit court asking that the court determine the interest of the various defendants in the property covered by a certain contract,, that the defendants be restrained from selling or disposing of said property, and that they be required to specifically perform said contract. A temporary restraining order was issued by the court in accordance with the prayer of the bill. The record fails to show that the court acquired jurisdiction as to defendants Thomas Rosen and Harry Carnick and they are not parties on this appeal. The bill of complaint did not waive sworn answers and defendants Copco Steel & Engineering Corporation, Boyd Car-nick and Henry Carnick each filed a separate sworn answer alleging substantive matter. (See Court Rule No. 17, § 11 [1933].) Said three defendants also' filed separate motions to dismiss the bill of complaint, each alleging in substance that plaintiff had *9 an adequate remedy at law, that equity had no jurisdiction over the subject matter, and that the bill of complaint failed to set up a cause of action cognizable in equity. On hearing’ the motions, the circuit judge entered an order dissolving the restraining order and dismissing the bill of complaint, stating in an opinion that it would be impossible to effectuate specific performance of the contract, and that an action at law was more adequate to determine plaintiff’s damages, if any. Plaintiff appeals.

The bill of complaint alleges that prior to December 13,1943, the Antrim Iron Company was offering for sale the material and equipment in a plant owned by it at Antrim, Michigan; that Thomas Eosen, and one Joshua Epstein representing the plaintiff co-partnership placed bids for said property which were opened on December 13,1943, and that Thomas Eosen was the highest bidder, having bid approximately $70,000; that he was unable to satisfy the Antrim company as to financial ability and asked for a week’s extension to complete financial arrangements, representing to the Antrim company that he had contracted to sell the copper and brass in said plant to plaintiff who would make a substantial advance payment, that the Copco company or some of its officers were associated with him and would assume responsibility for completing the payment. The bill alleges that Joshua Epstein verified to the Antrim company Eosen’s statement that plaintiff had agreed to purchase the copper and brass and make a substantial down payment; that therefore the Antrim company granted Eosen until December 20th to complete the payment under his bid. The bill alleges that Eosen and Joshua Epstein then went to Detroit and made an agreement with Copco Steel & Engineering Corporation whereby the copper and brass in the plant was to be sold to plaintiff, that .this *10 agreement was reduced to writing, that the Copco company notified Joshua Epstein it had decided to make the contract in the name of one of its officers, that later on the same day defendant Rosen, together with Boyd Carnick and an attorney for the Copco company, appeared with Epstein at his attorneys’ office, stated they had decided to have the contract in the.name of Boyd Carnick and presented a written contract for execution by the plaintiff, that thereupon a check for down payment of $10,000 was delivered by plaintiff to the attorney for Boyd Car-nick and the contract was executed. A copy of this contract is attached to the bill of complaint and it purports to be an agreement between Boyd Carnick ' and the plaintiff copartnership, recites that whereas Boyd Carnick was to purchase the Antrim company’s plant equipment at Antrim and the plaintiff herein was desirous of purchasing the copper and brass in said plant, Boyd Carnick agreed to sell, and plaintiff herein agreed to purchase, all of said copper and brass equipment (except certain wiring, et cetera) at a designated price. The contract covers in detail what was to be done in regard to the removal and weighing of the copper and brass, how payments were to be made, and'contains a statement that it was agreed Boyd Carnick was not the owner of the copper and brass but was about to consummate an agreement for the purchase of the Antrim plant, and that if for any reason this purchase by Boyd Carnick was not consummated the parties to the contract were released from any obligation. The bill further alleges that the $10,000 down payment made by plaintiff to Boyd Carnick when the contract was signed was delivered to the attorney for Boyd Carnick under an escrow agreement, a copy of which is attached to the bill and which provides that upon the consummation of the purchase of the Antrim *11 Iron. Company plant by Boyd Carnick the check thus held by the escrow agent should be delivered to Boyd Carnick. The bill alleges that on December 20th defendants Harry Carnick, Henry Carnick and Rosen, with their attorney, closed the purchase agreement with the Antrim company by taking the property in the names of Harry Carnick and Henry Car-nick; that taking the plant in their names was in pursuance of a fraudulent scheme to avoid the contract with the plaintiff, taken in the name of Boyd Carnick; that the defendants have refused to recognize or perform the contract between Boyd Carnick and the plaintiff; that the plaintiff has a particular need for the material, being unable to purchase equivalent property in the market, wherefore plaintiff claims it is entitled to an injunction restraining all of the defendants from disposing of this material, and that it is entitled to specific performance of the contract signed by Boyd Carnick.

The case comes to us on appeal from an order dismissing the bill of complaint, on motion of these three defendants. For the purposes of this appeal, well-pleaded allegations of material facts and circumstances in the bill of complaint and the necessary inferences to be drawn therefrom must be considered as true. The statement of facts in appellant’s brief and appellees’ counterstatement of facts, as well as the argument of counsel in their briefs, discuss and rely on facts alleged by defendants in their answers. This might be proper if the case had been submitted to the lower court on the pleadings or on proofs. However, the record clearly shows that all three of the defendants who appeared in the case filed written motions to dismiss the bill of complaint on jurisdictional grounds, that the court filed an opinion stating that the cause was submitted on four motions — plaintiff’s motion for an in *12 junction, and defendants ’ three separate motions to dismiss the bill of complaint. The record conclusively establishes that the bill of complaint was dismissed on the three motions of the defendants, after oral argument in open court. Under these circumstances, the only questions before us are (1) whether plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law, and (2) whether well-pleaded allegations of material facts and circumstances in the bill of complaint sufficiently set up grounds for relief cognizable in a court of equity.

The primary objective sought by plaintiff is the specific performance of a written contract between plaintiff and one of the defendants — Boyd Carnick. The other defendants are brought into the case by the averment that they joined with.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 N.W.2d 646, 310 Mich. 6, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oreland-equipment-co-v-copco-steel-engineering-corp-mich-1944.