Reich v. Schmidt

218 N.W. 671, 242 Mich. 130, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 739
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1928
DocketDocket No. 41.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 218 N.W. 671 (Reich v. Schmidt) 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
Reich v. Schmidt, 218 N.W. 671, 242 Mich. 130, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 739 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

North, J.

In this case the plaintiffs, who are husband and wife, are seeking to have a transaction set aside whereby they exchanged their contract interest in two pieces of Detroit real estate on the basis of $7,500 for a one-half interest in the stock holdings of the defendant Thomas B. Redmond in the Lapeer Pressed Steel Axle Company, a Michigan corporation. The parcel of real estate referred to as the Seneca avenue property was plaintiffs’ homestead. The other parcel was located on Fourteenth avenue in Detroit. The plaintiffs had sold this parcel on a subcontract to Mrs. Elinor M. Nettleton, and their interest in it was the difference between the amounts unpaid on these respective contracts, which was approximately $4,300. The defendant Herman A. Schmidt,, a real estate broker, was authorized by Redmond to dispose of his interest in the axle company. As the result of an advertisement which Schmidt placed in the paper, he was brought into contact with the plaintiffs. After some negotiations between the plaintiffs and the defendant Thomas B. Redmond, which for- the most part were carried on through Schmidt, the plaintiffs assigned their two equities in the Detroit properties to Redmond. At the outset of these negotiations Redmond had placed the price of $15,000 on his interest in the axle company. When it developed that the *133 plaintiffs did, not have sufficient property or means with which to purchase the whole of this interest, Schmidt arranged to join with them as a partner for the purpose of carrying on the business, and agreed that he would purchase for cash one-half of Redmond’s interest on the basis of $7,500, the same as the plaintiffs were purchasing the other one-half interest for. About the time the deal was closed with the plaintiffs, Schmidt produced a receipt signed by Redmond from which it appeared that the latter had received the $7,500 from Schmidt. Redmond’s stock in the Lapeer Pressed Steel Axle Company and all of his interest in this company were thereupon transferred to Mr. and Mrs. Reich and Schmidt by a bill of sale dated April 12, 1923. A schedule attached to this bill of sale contained an itemized list of the property transferred, including a patent covering the pressed steel axle which the plaintiffs and Schmidt were supposed to manufacture. At the same time the deal was closed with Redmond, an agreement was signed between plaintiffs and Schmidt whereby they became joint owners, of Redmond’s interest in the Lapeer Pressed Steel Axle Company. The plaintiffs gave possession of their home property to Thomas B. Redmond and wife and delivered to him the papers which evidenced their interest in the Fourteenth avenue property. Soon after taking possession, Mr. and Mrs. Redmond conveyed their interest in the homestead property to their son, Arthur J. Redmond. Through a real estate agent, the interest of the Redmonds in the Fourteenth avenue property, which, as before stated, amounted to substantially $4,300, was transferred to the defendant Dios M. Curtright for $1,000. The agent claimed he had bought this contract interest of Redmond for $500. In any event each had one-half of the $1,000 paid. The plaintiffs, after closing the deal, moved to Lapeer where the axle manufacturing plant was *134 located. The factory had not been operated for some time, and Mr. Reich made an effort to get it into condition to resume manufacturing operations. It had been arranged or understood between the plaintiffs and Schmidt that the latter could and would secure funds with which to finance the renewed operations in manufacturing the patented steel axles. The plaintiffs were buoyed along for weeks by communications from Schmidt, but nothing of the expected co-operation ever developed. The plaintiffs finally found themselves in straitened circumstances financially, whereupon Mr. Reich began work as a painter' and his wife secured employment in a millinery shop. Further efforts to consummate the plan with Schmidt seemed hopeless and useless and were abandoned. In the meantime plaintiffs had learned of the alleged fraudulent character of the transaction as hereinafter detailed, and they filed their bill of complaint in September, 1923, asking that the transfer be set aside and their property restored, or, in the event restoration was impossible because of intervening rights of innocent third parties, the plaintiffs asked that they be decreed damages for the loss they had sustained because of the fraud perpetrated.

The trial judge found the defendants Schmidt and Thomas Redmond had deceived and defrauded the plaintiffs as alleged in the bill of complaint. It is particularly stated in the opinion filed by the circuit judge, notwithstanding the representations of these two defendants to the contrary, that because prior to this transaction the corporate powers of the Lapeer Pressed Steel Axle Company had been suspended its stock was worthless; that the representation of Redmond to the plaintiffs that the company’s, assets were worth $30,000 was false and at the time of making such representation hé must have been aware of the falsity thereof; that the patent which plaintiffs were *135 led to believe was worth $40,000 was about to expire, and for that and other reasons was practically valueless ; that the liabilities of the axle company were many times the amount of its assets; that the receipt from Redmond to Schmidt for $7,500 “seems to' have been established beyond all doubt” to have been a “fake receipt.” A review of the record satisfies us that the circuit judge was correct in his determination that the plaintiffs were defrauded by Schmidt and Redmond and because of this the plaintiffs, are entitled to the relief sought as against Schmidt and the Redmonds. Neither Mary Redmond, the wife of Thomas Redmond, nor their son, Arthur J. Redmond, has any bona fide rights in the real estate which the plaintiffs seek to have restored.

In holding that the plaintiffs are entitled to the relief granted in the circuit, we have not overlooked the defendants’ claim that these parties dealt with each other at arm’s length; that whatever statements were made by Schmidt or Redmond were merely expressions of opinion as to future prospects of this axle manufacturing business and a legitimate “boosting” on their side of the transaction; or the fact that the plaintiffs inspected the Lapeer plant before the deal was closed, and that they endeavored for some time to carry out the plan involved in the transaction. The circuit judge found the plaintiffs were people below average intelligence, and clearly they were far from being the equals of Schmidt and Redmond in cleverness and shrewdness. That they were the victims of a frame-up between Schmidt and Redmond is quite beyond question. Notwithstanding the contention to the contrary, the plaintiffs were entitled to the restoration of their interest in the Seneca avenue property, and a decree for $500 damages against Thomas B. Redmond as repayment of the amount he received incident to the sale of plaintiffs’ interest in the Fourteenth avenue *136 property. A money decree for $4,500 was entered in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendant Herman A. Schmidt as damages which plaintiffs had sustained by reason of the loss of their interest in the Fourteenth avenue property. Schmidt has not appealed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Frank v. Brown
238 N.W. 237 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 N.W. 671, 242 Mich. 130, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reich-v-schmidt-mich-1928.