Piasecki v. Fidelity Corp. of Mich.

63 N.W.2d 671, 339 Mich. 328
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1954
DocketDocket 32, Calendar 46,020
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 63 N.W.2d 671 (Piasecki v. Fidelity Corp. of Mich.) 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
Piasecki v. Fidelity Corp. of Mich., 63 N.W.2d 671, 339 Mich. 328 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

Reid, J.

Plaintiffs in this jury case seek to recover damages arising from deterioration in value of a chattel mortgage assigned with guaranty by plaintiffs to defendant, occasioned by defendant’s failure to carry out its duty to plaintiffs to file the chattel mortgage with the register of deeds for Muskegon county promptly and seasonably, by which failure interim creditors of the later bankrupt chattel mortgagor were allowed to advance credit, in ignorance of the existence of the chattel mortgage.

Plaintiffs claim that at the time the chattel mortgage was assigned to defendant with a guaranty as a part of the assignment, there was contemporaneously a duty by inference between the parties (Lee Spradling acting as defendant’s agent) that defendant should file the chattel mortgage with the register of deeds. Defendant claims that plaintiffs did not show the authority of Spradling as its agent to bind them by any agreement contrary to the express terms of the assignment and guaranty. Defendant further claims that the assignment and guaranty contain the entire agreement of the parties and be *331 ing in writing, it is exclusive of any oral agreement and that the terms of the written agreement cannot he varied hy a contemporaneous verbal agreement.

The court upon the completion of the opening statement of plaintiffs’ counsel, having taken under advisement the motion of defendant to dismiss and having proceeded with the taking of testimony, must be considered to have had in mind the testimony that had thus been taken as though amplifying and supplying details of the statement of the claim of plaintiffs. Part of plaintiffs’ opening statement was that the written assignment of the chattel mortgage and warranty showed on its face an undertaking by defendant “to do every act and thing necessary to collect and discharge the same.” Plaintiffs’ claim in that regard was found by the trial court incorrect as a matter of law. There was nothing in the assignment by which the defendant expressly agreed “to do every act and thing necessary to collect and discharge the same,” but expressly, defendant was by the writing authorised “to do every act and thing necessary to collect and discharge the same.” The assumption by defendant of the duty to conserve the asset was thus left open and undisposed of so far as concerns the express wording of the assignment. However, plaintiff in his opening statement relied not solely on his construction of the express terms of the assignment and guaranty, but in addition thereto, stated to the court that the duty of defendant to record the chattel mortgage should be implied by law “and under the circumstances The declaration alleged in paragraph 4 that by the terms of said assignment and “contemporaneously therewith ” the defendant promised plaintiff to do every act and thing necessary to collect said obligation, which included the immediate filing of said mortgage with the register of deeds.

*332 During the taking of testimony, the nature of the circumstances thus relied on contemporaneous with the execution of the assignment was set forth in the testimony of Mr. Andree, one of plaintiff's, as follows:

“Our method of dealing with the Fidelity Corporation whenever we had any contract discounted with them was for Mr. Lee Spradling to contact me, or I would contact him, and we were handed these forms and told how to fill them out, and each time he was very persistent that we have these things ready so that he could pick them up and file them himself. He had filed every one, previously, at the court house. I have never filed one of these chattel mortgages here at the court house for Fidelity.. They always took care of that. By filing I mean with the register of deeds office. These chattel mortgages are supposed to he kept on record at the court house. Mr. Spradling has done all the filing.

“Q. [by Mr. Cochran, attorney for plaintiffs] At the time you received this check for $1,200, did you have any instrument left with you by Mr. Spradling f

“A. Nothing whatsoever. He took all 3. These are made in 3 copies and he took all 3 copies with him. We were never left a copy.

“Q. On any other occasion had he ever left a copy with you ?

“A. None at all. We were never left a copy of these. The closest that I ever came to accompanying Mr. Spradling on any occasion was one that we made up with Mr. Roscoe Hobson and we left Mr. Hobson and we double parked out here on Pine street and we double parked and I remained in the car and he ran in the courthouse. I stayed out in Mr. Spradling’s car and he run in and filed it. He done all the filing.

“Q. Did you have any conversation with Mr. Spradling on the matter of this Tessler assignment —about recording—at all?

*333 “A. No. He always said they should be prompt and he took care, of that. There was never any discussion of any kind that I was supposed to record them—he always—in fact, this thing was sort of new to us. We’d only had, I think it ivas a total of 6 or 7 deals with Fidelity and he helped me a lot with them. He would usually go through the account with me and we would fill it out there and he would take them with him and at the time he did, he wrote the checks himself. He carried a checkbook right in his pocket and he would write out the check and leave it with us and take the instruments all with him. The only thing that was left with us was the check.

“Q. Can we agree that June 13, 1951, was on a Wednesday?

“Mr. Smith [attorney for defendant]: Yes.

“Mr. Cochran: This is marked plaintiff’s exhibit 4, for identification, and counsel and I agree that it is a receipt delivered to the Fidelity Corporation for recording this instrument, file number 117641 stamped, and the recording date stamped on here is June 18, 1951, and it discloses the instrument to be the mortgage of Jack S. Tessler, under date of June 13,1951.”

The assignment and guaranty are as follows:

“The undersigned, for value received, does hereby sell, assign and transfer to Fidelity Corporation of Michigan, all rights, title and interest in and to the within mortgage, and the property covered thereby and authorizes said Fidelity Corporation of Michigan to do every act and thing necessary to collect and discharge the same, and does hereby guarantee the payment of the note and mortgage hereby assigned.

“If the within mortgage or note, are in any way misrepresented by the undersigned or any of his ■agents, and the note has been indorsed without recourse, the undersigned hereby agrees to reimburse *334 the' Fidelity Corporation of Michigan for any loss it may have on account of nonpayment of said note.

“In Witness Whereof, said undersigned has hereunto subscribed his, its or their name this 13th day of June, 1951.

“Darwin R. Andree (L.S.)

“Dealer’s Signature “By Partner

“Official Title.”

The answer by the trustee in bankruptcy of Jack S.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.W.2d 671, 339 Mich. 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piasecki-v-fidelity-corp-of-mich-mich-1954.