Robinson v. Boyd

17 Mich. 128, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 46
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 Mich. 128 (Robinson v. Boyd) 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
Robinson v. Boyd, 17 Mich. 128, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 46 (Mich. 1868).

Opinion

Graves J.

The bill in this case alleges that on the 20th day of October, 1865, the complainant obtained judgment against the defendants, Boyd & Wiggins, in the Circuit Court, for-the County of Clinton, upon contract for two thousand and eighteen dollars and ninety cents damages, and costs; that on the second day of December following, an execution was issued thereon, and delivered to the Sheriff of said County of Clinton, and made returnable on the sixth day of February thereafter; that said execution, on the return day thereof, was returned wholly unsatisfied for want of property [129]*129belonging to the defendants within the county, and that the judgment remains in force. It is further alleged among other things, upon information and belief, that the defendants, Boyd & Wiggins, had lately sold to the defendant, Hodge, the east half of lots 11 and 12, in block 7, in the village of St. Johns, in said county, and the livery stable, with the horses, carriages, harnesses and other things connected therewith, lately belonging to said Boyd & Wiggins, with the intent to defraud complainant and prevent his collection of said judgment; and that such sale Avas fraudulent, and made for the purpose of defrauding complainant and other creditors of said Boyd & Wiggins; that immediately after said Boyd & Wiggins learned that the said execution Avas in the hands of the sheriff, they called upon one Timothy Baker, the agent of said Hodge, and proposed to him to sell said property, real and personal, unto said Hodge for the amount of the liens then upon it, and' being about $2,400; that said Baker assented, and'that thereupon said Boyd & Wiggins conAreyed said property accordingly; and that immediately thereafter, the said Baker, as agent of said Hodge, sold the same property to one W. C. Wolverton for thirty-six hundred and fifty dollars; the said Boyd & Wiggins being present and advising such sale, and consenting thereto. It is further alleged,- upon information and belief, that Hodge Avas to pay Boyd & Wiggins the amount of said purchase price, less the lien and expenses of sale. The bill prays that the sale to Hodge be declared void, and that Hodge be ordered to pay to complainant the amount received by the former, from Wolverton, less the liens then existing; such amount being in the hands of said Hodge, as complainant Avas informed and belieAred. An ansAver on. oath was Avaived. The defendants, Boyd & Wiggins, permitted the bill to be taken as confessed by them, but the defendant, Hodge, ansAvered.

By his ansAAm, Hodge admits that he purchased through his agent, Baker, and states that the amount paid Avas the [130]*130liens then existing upon the property, together with his claim against Boyd & Wiggins amounting in the aggregate to about twenty-five hundred dollars, and that he had no knowledge of complainant’s claim. The defendant, Hodge, further states, on information and belief, that at the time of his purchase the property was in imminent danger of being sold on execution to satisfy judgments against Boyd & Wiggins; that before and long after complainant obtained his judgment, he, Hodge, held a valid claim against Boyd & Wiggins for about $1,185, and made the purchase and assumed all the liabilities then existing as a lien on the property for the sole and only purpose of paying such liens and securing his own demand; that Boyd & Wiggins were unable to make a sale at the time to any other person or persons for enough down to liquidate or pay off the liens then existing; that he, Hodge, had reason to 'believe then, and now believes, that if he had not purchased, the property would have been sold on execution or mortgage, or both, for a sum much less than that paid by him, and thereby subjecting him to the loss of his claim; that the price paid by defendant was just and equitable, and all that the property was worth in the- market at the time, and more than it would have brought in cash. The sale to Wolverton is admitted, but all interest by Boyd & Wiggins in that transaction is denied, and the purchase of Hodge from Boyd & Wiggins is alleged to have been absolute and without qualification or condition.

The recovery of the judgment by complainant, and the issuing and return of execution, as set forth in the bill, were admitted.

The sum of the demands forming the alleged consideration for the sale from Boyd & Wiggins to Hodge was $2510.16; and this was made up of the following items:

Mortgage to Steele on real estate for.....$408 38
Mortgage to Wick on real estate for..... 428 00
Mortgage to Hodge on real estate for .... 448 60
Two liens "by attachment subsequent to the Mortgages for.............. 428 18
Chattel mortgage to Hodge on the personal property,...............737 00

[131]*131According to the proofs Hodge was to take the property subject to the liens, and surrender his own demands. He was to pay nothing except in so far as payment should be involved in the extinguishment of his own claims.

The sale to Hodge was made about the 27th of January, 1866, and the first conversation on the subject must have been had within a very few days before that. Hodge, and his agent, Baker, both testify that they knew that executions against Boyd and Wiggins were in the hands of the sheriff, and that a sale of the property thereon at a sacrifice was apprehended. Boyd and Wiggins were fully aware of the fact that such executions, including that of complainant, were in the sheriff’s hands for service. They were very solicitous to sell, and had been for some time, and had offered the property to several; but on all occasions had absolutely refused to take less than §3,500, except from Hodge. It does not appear that any one, besides Hodge and his agent, were in any way informed oiled to believe that the property could be obtained for less than §3,500 in cash; on the other hand, the testimony tends strongly to show that other parties would have readily paid a much larger sum than that alleged to have formed the consideration of Hodge’s purchase, though it had involved a sufficient payment down to cancel the demands extinguished by Hodge.

The desire of other parties to make the purchase was well known to Boyd and Wiggins, and Hodge’s agent could not have been ignorant of it; but the testimony 'very clearly shows a measurable indifference, if nothing more, by the former, on the subject of a sale to any person but Hodge, and a warm partiality for a trade with the latter.

Indeed, both Wolverton and Dayton seem to have supposed that negotiations were actually going on between them, and Boyd and Wiggins for the purchase of the property at a sum above §3,500, at the very time of the conclusion of the trade between Hodge and the latter; and the [132]*132proofs necessitate the inference that both Dayton and Wolverton were kept in ignorance of the state of the negotiation with Hodge, and the terms of it, and of the circumstance that Boyd and Wiggins regarded the negotiation with them as given up.

The bargain with Hodge being consummated on the 27th of January, the latter surrendered his claim of $737 on the personal property, and took the real and personal estate without discharging any of the liens upon it, except that covering the claim last mentioned.

He then employed Boyd at fifty dollars per month to take charge of the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Mich. 128, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-boyd-mich-1868.