Schmidt v. Jennings

102 N.W.2d 589, 359 Mich. 376, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 460
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1960
DocketDocket 53, Calendar 48,204
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 102 N.W.2d 589 (Schmidt v. Jennings) 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
Schmidt v. Jennings, 102 N.W.2d 589, 359 Mich. 376, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 460 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Kavanagh, J.

Plaintiffs sought specific performance of an oral agreement by decedent to recover certain real property, or, in the alternative, to set aside a certain deed.

For some time prior to 1941 decedent, Lillian A. Schmidt, was the owner of 2 separate and adjacent pieces of property upon each of which was located a 4-family rental unit. The property here in dispute concerns the ownership of one of these pieces of property with its accompanying rental unit.

Decedent had 4 children, 2 sons and 2 daughters. Plaintiffs herein are decedent’s sons. One daughter is the defendant. The other daughter is not a party to this action.

During the year 1941 decedent visited the office of an attorney. During the course of such visit 3 deeds and a will were executed. One of the deeds was from decedent to the attorney’s wife, which deed, after recordation, was returned to her attorney-husband. A second deed was from the attorney’s wife to decedent and plaintiffs as “joint tenants with right of survivorship, and not as tenants in common.” The *379 property here in dispute is the land included in this deed. A third deed involving the similar, adjacent piece of property placed title in the decedent and her 2 daughters. The will, drawn the same day, does not mention any of the deeded property. Both the second and third deeds, after recording, were kept in the joint safety deposit box of decedent and the defendant until 1955, when they came under defendant’s exclusive control and possession.

During the latter part of 1953 and the early part of 1954 decedent and defendant’s son, who was at that time employed by the United States internal revenue service, discussed decedent’s property matters. These discussions resulted in recommendations by defendant’s son that decedent get these properties hack from her children and then make a testamentary disposition hack to them. This transaction was supposed to result in a favorable tax benefit for the children. The decedent was not financially interested in the transaction.

On June 15, 1954, decedent held a meeting with plaintiffs. At this meeting decedent stated she had some time before put the property here involved in her sons’ names and the adjacent property in her daughters’ names. She mentioned the advice she had received relative to a tax advantage for the children if the property were deeded back to her, and decedent requested such reconveyance by the plaintiffs. Decedent told plaintiffs this transaction wouldn’t change anything and that they would get the property back just as it was. Therefore, plaintiffs followed decedent’s request and deeded the property hack to her.

On the following day, at a similar meeting between decedent and her daughters, the latter deeded the other piece of property to decedent after substantially the same discussion and request had been made by decedent.

*380 Approximately 3 weeks later decedent made a will wherein she specifically devised her property to her 4 children, share and share alike.

On July 25, 1955, decedent made another will, her last, wherein she specifically devised both the properties formerly deeded to the 4 children to defendant alone.

In September, 1957, decedent died. Upon admission of the 1955 will to probate, plaintiffs brought this action, in the alternative, either (1) to set aside plaintiffs’ 1954 deed to decedent, or (2) to conxpel specific performance of decedent’s promise to reconvey the property here in question to plaintiffs as joint tenants.

Upon trial in the circuit court it was found as a matter of fact there was delivery of the 1941 deed; that plaintiffs’ deed back to decedent was made for tax purposes only; and that decedent promised plaintiffs she would return the property to them. In accordance with such findings the court decreed specific performance by defendant of such promise of the decedent. Prom such decree, defendant appeals to this Court.

Upon this appeal defendant claims there was no valid delivery of the 1941 deed by decedent nor acceptance of such deed by plaintiffs. Defendant also contends certain testimony of the wife of one of the plaintiffs was improperly admitted contrary to the dead man’s statute, CL 1948, § 617.65 (Stat Ann § 27.914). Defendant further alleges no contract was proven between decedent and plaintiffs whereby the former promised to will or otherwise reconvey a portion of her property to plaintiffs upon her death.

Concerning the question of delivery of the 1941 deed, the following facts must be considered as found by the lower court from the testimony and evidence presented at the trial. Decedent told her daughter Elsie, who is not a party to this suit, while on their *381 way home after decedent executed the deeds, that she had deeded the back flat to the boys (plaintiffs) and the front flat to the girls. Defendant also admitted decedent told her the same thing later. The 3 deeds executed iii 1941 were all recorded. The one from .decedent to the wife of the attorney who drew up the deeds for decedent was returned to such attorney. The other 2 deeds were returned to decedent and placed in a safety deposit box held in the joint names of decedent and defendant and after decedent’s death in the sole possession of defendant. Various witnesses testified decedent had said she wished the property deeded back to her as a tax benefit could accrue to the children and that such re-conveyance wouldn’t change anything.

In the case of Hynes v. Halstead, 282 Mich 627, the Court held that the act of delivery is not necessarily a transfer of the possession of the instrument to the grantee, and an acceptance by him, but it is that act of the grantor, indicated either by acts or words, or both, which shows an intention on his part to perfect the transaction by a surrender of the instrument to the grantee, or to some third person for his use and benefit. In the instant case decedent had the deeds recorded and told others, both at the time of the execution of the deeds and at later times, that she had deeded the property to her children, one flat to her sons and the other to her daughters. Decedent further failed to mention the deeded property in her will drawn on the same day the deeds were executed. At the meetings of June 15 and 16,1954, decedent' requested a reconveyance of the property by her children to enable them to obtain a tax benefit. All of these words and acts were indicative of an intention by decedent to convey the property to the grantees.

Defendant contends the delivery of the deed to the property here in question by the decedent through the straw man (the wife of the attorney who drew up *382 thé deeds) to herself and plaintiffs jointly did not constitute delivery to plaintiffs. The governing-principle in answer to this contention was enunciated in the case of Mayhew v. Wilhelm, 249 Mich 640, where the Court stated the following rule (p 646):

“Delivery to one of several joint grantees, in the absence of proof to the contrary, is delivery to all of the grantees.”

In the Mayhew Case

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 N.W.2d 589, 359 Mich. 376, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-jennings-mich-1960.