Ream v. Robinson

87 N.W. 115, 128 Mich. 92, 1901 Mich. LEXIS 549
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 N.W. 115 (Ream v. Robinson) 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
Ream v. Robinson, 87 N.W. 115, 128 Mich. 92, 1901 Mich. LEXIS 549 (Mich. 1901).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

In 1871 David W. Boyden died intestate, leaving a farm of 27 acres to his three children, Etta Ream, David W. Boyden, and Daniel Boyden, subject to the rights of his widow, their mother. In 1880 the widow, now Rachel Holbrook, as administratrix of her deceased husband’s estate and in her own right, mortgaged the premises for $275. On December 2, 1897, defendant Issachar N. Robinson obtained an assignment of this [93]*93mortgage to one Julia M. Rice, for whom he was, and for some time had been, acting as agent. On October 5,1891, there was due on this mortgage the sum of $460, and upon that day Etta Ream paid $60 upon it, and on April 26, 1892, she paid $80, and on June 5, 1893, $30 more, making a total of $170 paid by her. David W. Boyden paid $45 upon it. Daniel paid nothing. Mr. Norton, a tenant, paid $136 to apply on the mortgage and interest. At the time Julia M. Rice bought it, the complainants claim that there was but $232 due upon it, and that Etta Ream had paid more than one-third of the mortgage, and interest computed to the time of hearing this cause in the circuit court.

On December 24, 1897, defendant Issachar N. Robinson bought the interest of David W. Boyden for $75. This was 22 days after he took an assignment of the mortgage to Julia M. Rice. About three weeks later he began foreclosure proceedings by advertisement, using, by permission, the name of another as attorney, but attending to the business himself, and at the sale bid the property in for himself. Immediately after bidding in the property, he wrote the following letter to Mrs. Ream:

“Fremont, Mich., April 19, 1898.
“Mrs. Ream: That mortgage on the 40 acres in which you hold an interest was foreclosed, and I bid in the land, and if you wish to give me a quitclaim deed for $75, the same that I paid your brother David, I will give you that amount. I have talked with your brother Daniel, and he says he will sell his interest for the $75 if you wish to sell yours. The land is in very poor shape, and has so many milkweeds on it, and continual cropping and not putting anything back has made it in very poor shape, so this is all I feel that I can afford to pay.
“Very respectfully,
“I. N. Robinson.”

Mrs. Ream then employed an attorney, and negotiations extending over some months ensued. Being unwilling to sell for $75, she tried to buy his interest for a similar sum, and finally offered him $125 for it. Although it had costt [94]*94him but $75, he refused to accept it, and, although he now pretends to have parted with his title, he was careful not to inform her or her attorney that he did not own it. A few days before the redemption would expire, Mrs. Ream’s attorney learned that she had paid more than one-third of the amount due on the mortgage, and, the deed from David W. Boyden to Issachar N. Robinson being of record, he asserted to Robinson that his foreclosure title inured to her benefit, because they were tenants in common. He testified that he told Robinson that, if he wanted to cut her off, he should have had the purchase at the mortgage sale made by some one else. According to the witness, he did not deny his ownership of the David W. Boyden interest, and finally offered $100 for Mrs. Ream’s interest, as a present. The witness testified that he said that he still owned it, in answer to the direct question. A day or two. before the expiration of the period for redemption, a quitclaim deed of an undivided third of the premises was presented, with the request that he execute it. This he refused. Thereupon a bill of complaint was filed, and on May 13th or 14th an answer was filed, alleging that Robinson had quitclaimed his interest to his son, about 10 days after he bought from David W. Boyden, for $100 in cash. Thereupon complainants withdrew the suit, and filed the bill in this case, asking that the quitclaim deed to the son be declared void and set aside, and that an account be taken between the tenants in common, and that payment be decreed and partition had. Both Robinson and son answered.

A part of complainants’ testimony has been stated. This is corroborated by the testimony of Mrs. Ream; also by that of Mr. Johnston, to whom Issachar said, in April, 1899:

“I don’t know what real claim they have on me to pay on this matter, because I have bought the mortgage, and I already hold one-third interest in the property; but I will make her a present of a hundred dollars. ”

The register of deeds testified that on May 3, 1899, the [95]*95deed was recorded; that, a short time before, he had a talk with Issachar N. Robinson about the land that had been foreclosed, and was told by him that he owned a third of it; that he told him he had made a mistake in bidding it in, inasmuch as he was a tenant in common. Robinson told him nothing about the deed to Albert at that time. The examination continued as follows:

Q. Didn’t he, while he was there, say something to you relative to the feasibility or the idea of executing a quitclaim deed to his son, or to somebody, of the one-third interest, and getting a deed back ?
“A. Not that I remember of.
Q. Don’t you remember a remark of that kind by him ?
“A. No; I don’t think I do.
‘ ‘ Q. Haven’t you any recollection of that ? Something of that nature was said by one or the other of you?
“A. Well, I wouldn’t want to swear to it. There possibly might have been something said in that direction. To the best of my memory, I think there was a little something said about it, but I wouldn’t want to be— I wouldn’t want to swear to it, but to the best of my recollection there was something said about a quitclaim deed; but that is not a matter I would care to take my oath upon.
Q. Your recollection is not very clear upon it ?
“A. Not very clear upon it.
Q. But is your recollection to some extent, also, that the remark was that the deed would be dated back ?
“A. No; I don’t remember anything about it. As I said, I wouldn’t want to swear to it.
Q. Your recollection is not that he said that he had already made a quitclaim deed ?
“A. No; he said nothing about that, as I remember of.
Q. Nothing to that effect ?
“A. No.
Q. But your recollection is that he then claimed to be the owner of one-third, and also the purchaser ?
“A. Yes, sir; that is what the understanding was.
Q. Between both of you ?
“A. As I understood it, he owned a one-third interest, as I understood it, in the land there, and foreclosed the mortgage on the other part, or the whole part, rather.
Q. And he said nothing to disabuse your mind of that idea ?
[96]*96“A. No, sir.
Q.

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Related

McArthur v. Dumaw
43 N.W.2d 924 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1950)
Simons v. Rood
88 N.W. 879 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.W. 115, 128 Mich. 92, 1901 Mich. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ream-v-robinson-mich-1901.