Seguin v. Madison

44 N.W.2d 150, 328 Mich. 600, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 391
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1950
DocketDocket 10, Calendar 44,702
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 44 N.W.2d 150 (Seguin v. Madison) 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
Seguin v. Madison, 44 N.W.2d 150, 328 Mich. 600, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 391 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

*602 Carr, J.

Plaintiffs brought suit in equity in the circuit court of Wayne county to establish an interest in certain land in Alcona county, asking also for general relief. Subsequently the case was transferred to the Alcona county circuit court where it was heard and determined. Certain material facts involved in the controversy are established by the pleadings or by the proofs. The mother of the plaintiffs, Mary Madison, died September 3, 1910. Prior thereto, in connection with the settlement of a will contest, she became the owner of a mortgage on which foreclosure proceedings were pending at the time of her death.

Following the death of Mrs. Madison the father of the plaintiffs, Charles Madison, was, on the 5th of October, 1910, appointed administrator of the estate. In such capacity he continued the foreclosure suit, which culminated in the entering of a decree and the sale of the property. On such sale Charles Madison, acting in his individual capacity, was the highest bidder and became the purchaser of the property. The commissioner’s deed recited payment of the purchase price by Mr. Madison in the sum of $1,046.80, and further stated that the sale was subject to a mortgage on the property, held by another party and bearing date March 8, 1909. The amount of such mortgage was not stated. The commissioner’s deed was recorded December 2, 1911.

At the time he bid in the property in question, and also when the deed was executed and delivered to him, Charles Madison was the guardian of the property of the plaintiffs, who were minors, having been so appointed by the probate court of Alpena county on September 12, 1910. Thereafter, under date of April 24, 1914, each plaintiff signed an acknowledgment that the guardian had accounted for and paid over all moneys and effects which had come into his care and custody as siich guardian, and releasing *603 Mm from all liability in such capacity. The acknowledgments and releases were addressed to the judge of probate of Alpena county, and requested him to enter an order cancelling the bond and letters of the guardian and releasing him from all liability and responsibility in connection therewith. Each acknowledgment and release was captioned in the probate court of said county and was executed in the presence of the judge of probate and of another witness. Appended to the acknowledgment and release executed by plaintiff Seguin, then Sylvia Madison, was a receipt for $410 for money paid to her by the guardian. A like receipt signed by Arthur E. Madison recited the payment to him of the sum of $310. At the time of the transactions the plaintiffs were respectively 23 and 24 years of age.

The record before us indicates that in connection with the administration of the estate of Mary Madison appraisers were duly appointed, qualified, and returned an inventory of assets. The total appraised value of such assets was approximately $1,-200. It was dated September 23, 1910, and filed shortly thereafter. It does not appear that further proceedings were taken in the matter until after the death of Charles Madison, which occurred October 10, 1948. A petition was filed by plaintiffs herein on May 13, 1949, praying that the defendant in the instant case, Mabel Madison, as executrix or special administratrix of the estate of Charles Madison, render an accounting of the estate and effects of Mary Madison. An order was entered on such petition, and apparently the matter is now pending before the probate court of Alpena county.

The bill of complaint filed by the plaintiffs alleged in substance that it was the duty of their father, acting as guardian of their respective estates, to protect their interests, that in consequence he should have bid in the property for them at the foreclosure sale, *604 and that as administrator he stood in a fiduciary relationship to them and to the estate of theifi mother, of such nature as to require him to bid ■ in the property at the sale for the estate, to the end that plaintiffs might benefit.

Plaintiffs further set forth in their averments that they had no knowledge of the situation until after the death of Charles Madison, and that the latter was guilty of fraud and deceit because of his failure to advise them of the facts in connection with the transaction. They further stated that their father, after obtaining title to the property in question, was married to the defendant, and that in 1914, as well as on a subsequent occasion, by conveyances duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county, he placed the title to the land in the names of himself and defendant, jointly. The prayer for relief asked that the commissioner’s deed be Reformed in such manner as to transfer title to the estate of Mary Madison, that the conveyances creating an estate by the entireties in their father and the defendant be set aside, and that defendant Mabel Madison be decreed to have no right, title or interest, in the property.

■ A motion to dismiss the bill of complaint was denied, and defendant filed an answer alleging, with other special defenses, that plaintiffs had been guilty of laches. Following a hearing in circuit court at which both plaintiffs testified, the trial judge came to the conclusion that the defense of laches was well founded, that plaintiffs had not used due diligence to discover or enforce their alleged rights, and that in consequence they were precluded from seeking rélief in equity. A decree was entered accordingly dismissing the bill of complaint, but without prejudice insofar as the matters at issue were within the jurisdiction of the probate court of Alpena county *605 in the matter of the estate of Mary Madison. From such decree the plaintiffs have appealed.

It is contended by appellants that their father breached his fiduciary obligations to them by taking title in his own name to the property bid in at the foreclosure sale, and that he was also remiss in his duties in not specifically advising them with reference to the transaction. The right to the relief sought is predicated on the theory of fraud and deceit. As witnesses in the case the plaintiffs denied that they knew of the existence of the mortgage or of its foreclosure. They further claimed that they did not understand when they released their father from further obligations as the guardian of their estates that they were doing more than acknowledging the receipt of the money paid to them. As before noted, they were 23 and 24 years of age at the time, and the execution of the papers was witnessed by the probate judge.

Notwithstanding the manner and form in which the releases were executed, plaintiffs insist that they thought they were merely signing receipts for money received from the sale of wheat that they had helped to raise. It is their further claim that they continued in complete ignorance of the situation of which they now complain until after their father’s death. Then they procured an attorney and caused an investigation to be made as to what rights they might have in the property in question. There is no showing, however, that at the time they launched their investigation plaintiffs had information in addition to that possessed by them during the period from 1914 to 1948.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 N.W.2d 150, 328 Mich. 600, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seguin-v-madison-mich-1950.