Patrons' Mutual Fire Insurance v. Holden

230 N.W. 152, 250 Mich. 408, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 982
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1930
DocketDocket No. 121, Calendar No. 34,599.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 230 N.W. 152 (Patrons' Mutual Fire Insurance v. Holden) 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
Patrons' Mutual Fire Insurance v. Holden, 230 N.W. 152, 250 Mich. 408, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 982 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

In the year 1927, plaintiff recovered a judgment against defendant Ellsworth A. Holden, which, as modified by this court in 245 Mich. 493, amounted to $32,078.03. The indebtedness for which the judgment was rendered was contracted during the period from 1915 to 1924. Defendant Holden married Rizpah Holden in 1916; there were no children of this marriage. Defendant had a son, Harold P. Holden, by a previous marriage. Mrs. Holden was the heir of her parents, from both of whom she inherited property, included in which were the old family home, referred to as the St. Joseph street property, in Lansing, Michigan, and a mortgage on property in Hillsdale county. Plaintiff seeks in this action, by means of a judgment creditor’s bill against Holden and wife, to subject certain property to execution. The court below dismissed the bill.

We shall discuss the properties separately. Holden owned a homestead at No. 600 Shiawassee street, Lansing, Michigan, upon which he gave to Mrs. Holden a mortgage for $14,000, and also a life lease. The record does not show any irregularity in this transaction. Mrs. Holden showed that she had received $6,500 from the mortgage inherited from her mother on property in Hillsdale county; and further, that she had obtained $7,000 on a mortgage on the *411 St. Joseph street home. There was also a small amount which she received as interest and certain other small sums that Holden owed her. She showed that she turned all of this over to her husband, and there is no satisfactory proof to the contrary. It is further shown that the value of the Shiawassee street home is not much in excess of the amount of the mortgage, and that Mrs. Holden furnished a considerable sum to repair the home, and in consideration of this a life lease was given to her. We find no reason to disturb the findings of the lower court that Mrs. Holden was the lawful holder of the life lease and mortgage.

Mrs. Holden, as owner of the St. Joseph street property in Lansing, Michigan, entered into a land contract with Mr. Holden, dated the 4th day of September, 1919, to sell the property to him for $16,000. On the 28th day of May, 1923, the contract was formally terminated by an underwriting on it, written in what appears to be indelible pencil. There' was still a balance of $13,783.74 due on the contract, according to the statement of defendants’ counsel taken from Mrs. Holden’s account book, which is not disputed by plaintiff. The contract appears to be a valuable one, although the record is very bare as to what the real value of the property is. There was testimony that a real estate agent had told Mrs. Holden that the property, exclusive of an adjoining vacant lot which was also included in the land contract, was worth between $12,000 and $13,000. Notwithstanding the fact that the-land contract had been surrendered in the year 1923, Mr. Holden invested, a little over a year later, a sum between $7,000 and $9,000 in remodeling the old home into an office building, and for three years thereafter he collected the rent from said property. *412 Again the record is bare as to what rent was paid for the building, but inferentially it amounted to somewhere between $2,500 and $3,000 a year after the remodeling. Mrs. Holden explains that the reason she permitted Mr. Holden to collect the rent after the cancellation of the land contract was in order to reimburse him for the amount spent by him in the remodeling’ of the building. She, however, produced no formal evidence as to any agreements-concerning this matter. It seems a bit strange that a couple who were as meticulous as these defendants in reducing their business transactions, as well as those relating to household expenses, to writing, did not execute any written agreement in this instance. The testimony indicates that, notwithstanding the surrender of the contract, Holden continued for some time to make payments of $100 a month. He claimed that these payments were for interest on the mortgage on the Shiawassee street home, although the exact amount of $100 a month was due on the contract, while it would require only $70 a month to pay the interest on the mortgage. This fact alone, however, is not decisive. It seems still stranger that Holden, at a cost of between $7,300 and $9,000, should remodel the building with his own funds after he had surrendered the contract, and then he was permitted to remain in possession of the property for a further period of three years. This expenditure was made by him but a little over a year after the time when he had been so hard up that he had had to borrow $7,000 (included in the $14,000 mortgage) from Mrs. Holden, in order to pay a debt. Mrs. Holden volunteered the information that at one time she had executed a deed to Mr. Holden for the property so that he would become the owner of it in case of her death, and that it was made just prior to *413 taking a trip to California, but upon their return the deed was destroyed. The- deed remained under her control, and was made solely for testamentary purposes, and did not pass title.

It further seems strange that Holden would surrender a land contract on which there was but $13,783.74 due, when the rental from the property, after the remodeling was completed, exceeded the amount of the payments due under the contract by a large amount. The burden of proof was upon Mrs. Holden to show that Mr. Holden had no longer any interest in this land contract. Eberline v. Prager, 209 Mich. 322. We are satisfied from the record, that, if there is any equity over and above the balance due on the land contract, which is herewith reinstated, it should belong to the creditors. The lower court is instructed, therefore, to treat the land contract the same as if it were still in existence, and Mrs. Holden should be credited with interest to date, together with any taxes and insurance or expenses of upkeep that she paid out, the same as if the land contract had not been surrendered. She, however, should be debited with all moneys received and the balance due her on the land contract thus ascertained. Any equity over and above the amount due her is subject to levy and execution. Out of the balance found due and to be paid to Mrs. Holden she must pay the first mortgage, and any other liens created by herself on the property.

In April, 1926, defendant Ellsworth Holden had a claim against the estate of one Corbin, which was eventually settled at a date not indicated in the record, by transferring to Holden a piece of property subject to a $1,600 mortgage. One Devore approached Holden for the purpose of purchasing this property, but hesitated to buy unless he could secure *414 sufficient funds to reconstruct the building thereon. It was eventually arranged that Mrs. Holden should loan him $3,000 upon another piece of property on Francis street, Lansing. The land acquired from the Corbin estate was then deeded to Devore, subject to the outstanding mortgage, for a consideration of $1,400, $500 of which was paid in cash to Mr. Holden and the remainder by a $900 mortgage to Mrs. Holden. This $900 was credited by her on a debt due her from Mr. Holden for household expenses.

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Bluebook (online)
230 N.W. 152, 250 Mich. 408, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrons-mutual-fire-insurance-v-holden-mich-1930.