Pomeroy v. Everett

161 N.W. 902, 195 Mich. 147, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 667
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1917
DocketDocket No. 26
StatusPublished

This text of 161 N.W. 902 (Pomeroy v. Everett) 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
Pomeroy v. Everett, 161 N.W. 902, 195 Mich. 147, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 667 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Stone, J.

Action of assumpsit brought by the administrator of the estate of Albert R. Shaw, deceased, against the defendants to recover the amount of two promissory notes payable to the said Albert R. Shaw, or order, both dated April 10, 1908, one for the sum of $300, due one year after date with interest at 6 per [149]*149•cent, per annum, upon which $15 had been received and indorsed to apply on the interest May 6, 1912; the other note being for $50, due at the same time and bearing the same rate of interest as the other note, upon which was indorsed $5 to apply on the interest May 6, 1912. Both notes were signed by both of the defendants as makers thereof. The defendants are, and were at the time the notes involved in this suit were made, husband and wife. The notes were given for money loaned by Albert E. Shaw. He died in December, 1913, testate, and the plaintiff was appointed administrator of his estate. He attempted to collect the notes from the defendants, and first demanded payment in March, 1914. They refused payment, and suit was brought April 7, 1915. Upon the trial the plaintiff recovered a judgment for the full amount of his claim.

Upon the trial it was the claim of the defendants, and they offered to show by their own testimony, that the money for which these notes were given was loaned by Albert E. Shaw to defendant Edgar C. Everett, and that the consideratión did not pass to defendant Orley G. Everett, and therefore she could not be ñeld liable on the notes; that at the time the money was loaned by Mr. Shaw an agreement was made by the defendants and Mr. Shaw that the latter, having no separate home of his own, desired to make his home with the defendants, they being relatives; that he had in fact been making his home with them from about the month of August, 1907, and desired to continue so doing; that he was a carpenter by trade, and intended to go wherever his work might call him, and to come and go to and from the Everett home as his convenience might dictate; that he would keep his things and his room at the Everett home, and have his board there when he pleased, and that when he desired the interest on these notes he would ask for it, and it [150]*150should be paid to him; and if at any time he deemed he needed the principal of the $50 note, this should be paid to him on demand. But it was the claim of the defendants that the principal of the $300 note and any part of the principal of the $50 note, and any part of the interest on either note not actually called for, should be the compensation of the defendants for so furnishing a home and board and care for Mr. Shaw. The defendants further claim that they did furnish a home and board, according to the agreement, to an amount considerably exceeding, in fact, the amount of these notes, and that they paid Mr. Shaw' whatever he asked them to pay oh the notes and fulfilled the arrangement on their parts, and that the notes were thereby paid. The defendants were unable to produce any evidence of this claimed arrangement, except as it rested in the knowledge of the defendants themselves. All such offered testimony on the objection that it was prohibited by the statute the court excluded, so that this claimed arrangement was not submitted to the jury at all.

Upon the trial of the case the plaintiff testified to certain interviews which he had had with the defendant Orley G. Everett relative to the liability of - the defendants upon these notes. This witness testified that said defendant had at no time claimed that the notes had been paid; and there was considerable conversation about defendants making a loan at the bank with which to pay the notes. They claimed in the statement to the plaintiff, according to his testimony, that they had some claim against the estate; that there was a balance due them upon book account from Mr. Shaw, and that he had boarded and made his home with them for a time. In these conversations, in referring to the liability of the defendants, Mrs. Everett used the word “we” in speaking of the liability as though it were a joint matter.

[151]*151The defendant Orley G. Everett filed the following claim in the probate court:

“Estate of Albert R. Sbaw, Deceased, in Account with Mrs. Orley G-. Everett, Marcellus, Micb.
“To amount due for care, attention, washing, mending, board and room furnished for said deceased at home of claimant from August, 1907, at different periods up to the time of his decease ............................... $500.00
“This item is based upon an arrangement and agreement which existed between the parties as follows:
“In June, 1908, the said deceased had some money which he delivered over and took claimant’s, notes which were signed by claimant’s husband and herself upon the understanding that should he at any time or intervals desire the interest it would be paid, but that at his death said notes would be regarded as canceled and belong to and become the property of claimant for the furnishing of a home in the manner aforesaid ; that claimant did furnish a home and did wash and mend for said deceased and did care for him and look after him and provide him with room and board whenever he wished thereafter.
“Orley G. Everett.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 N.W. 902, 195 Mich. 147, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomeroy-v-everett-mich-1917.