Parkes v. Parker
This text of 23 N.W. 458 (Parkes v. Parker) 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.
Opinion
The bill in this case was filed to procure a discharge of a mortgage upon the homestead of complainants, and to recover the statutory penalty of the defendant for his refusal to discharge the same. The complainants requested the defendant to make the discharge, and after waiting more than seven days, and the defendant failing to comply, they brought this suit, as the statute permitted them to do. The case was heard on pleadings and proofs, and the circuit judge in his decree found that the complainants had paid the mortgage, and directed the defendant to discharge the same, and pay the costs of the suit, but did not require him to pay the penalty given by the statute. (How. Stat. § 5704.) . From this decree the defendant took his appeal to this Court.
The mortgage purports to have been given for the sum of $300, to seteure a note of equal amount, bearing the same date, given by the complainant T. H. Parkes, payable in six months after date with interest, and dated December 6,1873. When the mortgage was given, the complainant T. H. Parkes was engaged in the retail grocery trade, and the defendant in the same business at wholesale. About two months' thereafter, complainant T. H. Parkes took in a partner by the [59]*59name of Belden, and thereafter did business with his partner under the firm name of Parkes & Belden. At the time the mortgage was given, Parkes claims he only owed the defend ant a few cents over $50, and the defendant claims he owed him about $98; and defendant further claims that the mortgage was not only given to secure this amount, but for a continuous credit for groceries, and that when the account was closed, a large portion of which was with the complainants’ firm, there was quite a large sum owing him, and, including the firm account, was considerably more than the sum stated in the mortgage. It seems, however, to be conceded that if the firm indebtedness cannot be held secured by the mortgage, then the mortgage was fully paid long before the request was made of defendant to discharge the same.
The only agreement claimed, that the mortgage was intended to secure indebtedness for goods which might be incurred after the making of the mortgage, rested in parol, and without now determining how far such an agreement may be shown by parol, if at all, it is quite clear it could not be made to extend to the partnership indebtedness without a written agreement to that effect, and none is claimed to have been made in this case. We have, however, failed to discover any intentional wrong in the defendant’s refusal to discharge the mortgage; but it rather appears that he was in good faith relying upon his assumed legal right to withhold the discharge until the balance of the firm indebtedness was paid, and have no doubt that such was the interpretation of defendant’s conduct in the premises given by the circuit judge in withholding the penalty.
Upon the pleadings and the proofs in this record, we think .the decree at the circuit was correct and should be
Affirmed with costs.
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23 N.W. 458, 57 Mich. 57, 1885 Mich. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkes-v-parker-mich-1885.