Plas v. Aldrich

213 N.W. 80, 238 Mich. 343, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 654
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1927
DocketDocket No. 116.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 80 (Plas v. Aldrich) 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
Plas v. Aldrich, 213 N.W. 80, 238 Mich. 343, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 654 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

McDonald, J.

The defendant Wulf is the owner of four acres of land in Ecorse township, Wayne county, Michigan. Some time in March, 1921, he sold it on land contract to one Harry Brower. The consideration was $7,500, of which $200 was paid *345 down in cash and $800 was to be paid on the delivery of the abstract. The $800 was not paid and no other payments were made except $37.50 interest which was paid some time in the summer. After this the contract seems to have been abandoned. On the 18th of December, 1922, a new contract was entered into between the same parties and one Rupersberg, a business associate of Mr. Brower. The consideration was $8,500. On this contract the down payment was to be $700, on which the $200 paid on the former contract was credited, and a 30-day note for $500 signed by Brower and Rupersberg was taken for the balance. When the note became due it was not paid. It has never been paid. Another payment of $500 was to be made on June 18, 1923, and $500 each six months thereafter until the balance of the purchase price was fully paid, with interest at six per cent, payable annually. None of these payments have been paid. On January 3, 1923, Brower and Rupersberg assigned the contract to defendant Ralph L. Aldrich. On September 12, 1923, Aldrich sold the property on land contract to the plaintiff Plas, together with 12 acres adjoining, which Aldrich held as vendee in a land contract with one Quandt. The defendant, who claims to have rescinded the contract in February, 1923, has paid all of the taxes and has been in possession of the property since that time. He has received no payments from any of the various vendees. The plaintiff claims possession and filed this bill to enjoin Wulf from interfering with it. Wulf filed an answer and cross-bill in which he asked for a decree quieting his title. The defendant Aldrich filed a cross-bill praying for specific performance of the Wulf contract. On the hearing the circuit judge entered a decree for defendant Wulf. The plaintiff and the defendant Aldrich have appealed.

*346 The important question presented by the record relates to the alleged rescission of the contract. The defendant Wulf contends that when the $500 note became due and was not paid, Brower and Rupersberg were in default, and that, under the stipulation of the contract, he had a right to rescind it for that reason; that he did rescind it and resumed possession of the property, which possession he has retained ever since. The plaintiff insists that he did not rescind it, that no grounds for rescission existed, because no payments were due at that time, and that therefore there was no default.

There was $500 due on the contract at the time when Mr. Wulf claims to have rescinded it, unless the note, which was not paid, is to be regarded as having been accepted as an absolute payment. And that question is to be determined by ascertaining, if possible, the understanding of the parties. It is not claimed that there was any specific agreement in regard to it. The language of the contract in reciting the payments makes no reference to the note. It contains no acknowledgment by the vendor of the receipt of the down payment. It says that $700 is to be paid on the execution and delivery of the contract, but omits the usual language, “the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged.” In the absence of any evidence from the contract or elsewhere of an express understanding, the question is controlled by the legal presumption that it was not accepted as an absolute payment. Unless there is evidence of a clear understanding to the contrary, the law will presume that by accepting the note the vendor did not intend to release his security to the extent of the debt which the note represents:

“If there is an express agreement by the creditor to receive a note as absolute payment and to run the risk of its being paid, it will be held to be an extinguishment or payment of the precedent debt, whether the *347 note is afterwards paid or not, but a clear agreement or manifestation of intention of both parties to that effect is essential.” 21 R. C. L. p. 72, § 72.

See, also, Swan v. Gregory, 195 Mich. 457.

“Where the extinguishment of a debt has the effect to strike down a lien or a title securing its payment, the presumption that it is not discharged by the acceptance of the note of the debtor in payment of it is strengthened, because in such a case the discharge of a lien is more unusual and unreasonable; and the general rule is that the receiving of a promissory note by a creditor will not have the effect to discharge a lien, statutory or contractual, Which the creditor has for the security of his debt. Applying this rule, it is held that a vendor’s lien on land is not extinguished by taking the purchaser’s note for the purchase money.” 21 R. C. L. p. 75, § 77.

We find no evidence sustaining the claim that the defendant Wulf accepted this note as an absolute payment. The effect of taking the note was merely to •extend the time for making the payment agreed upon. When that time expired the payment was not made. Brower and Rupersberg were in default for nonpayment. The contract provided that on failure of the vendees to make any of the stipulated payments the vendor might immediately declare it void. In view of this provision, it will be considered that time was of the essence of the contract. But Mr. Wulf did not immediately declare the contract void. He went "to Mr. Brower’s office and demanded payment of the note.

“I told him I wanted my money on that note. He said that he had no money; that the deal wasn’t gone through yet, and they couldn’t pay the note. And then he said ‘come in Saturday and we will have some money.’ I went back Saturday. He had no money. Saturday Mr. Rupersberg was with Mr. Brower. I told him if he couldn’t pay it I would pull out. Mr. Brower says, ‘well, if you pull out we can’t have it.’ Then I called for my abstract. He had the abstract *348 at that time. I asked him for it. He did not give it to me. He said that he hadn’t — that he didn’t have it in the office. He brought it back and gave it to my mother.”

The mother testified that when Brower subsequently" returned the abstract he remarked that he couldn’t, handle it. A few days after the abstract was returned, Mr. Wulf says that he wrote Mr. Brower a letter in which he told 'him “that we would cancel the. contract and call the deal' off, and call it null and void.” Mr. Brower denies having received the letter,, but the trial court found that he did receive it; and, in view of the unsatisfactory character of his testimony, we are not inclined to disturb this finding.. This letter was not sufficient as a notice of forfeiture,, but it was a sufficient notice of rescission. It was-not such a notice as an attorney would have written, but it shows the intention of the writer to terminate the contract, and that is all that was necessary. It is evident that Wulf regarded it as a rescission for he immediately resumed possession of the property, paid the taxes and in every way treated it as though, he were the only party in interest.

But counsel contend that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
213 N.W. 80, 238 Mich. 343, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plas-v-aldrich-mich-1927.