Seligman v. Estate of Ten Eyck

42 N.W. 134, 74 Mich. 525, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 677
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 42 N.W. 134 (Seligman v. Estate of Ten Eyck) 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
Seligman v. Estate of Ten Eyck, 42 N.W. 134, 74 Mich. 525, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 677 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Morse, J.

This is the fourth time this case has been in this Court, and each time it has reached us upon the verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiffs. It will be found reported as follows: 49 Mich. 104 (13 N. W. Rep. 377); 53 Id. 285 (18 N. W. Rep. 818); and 60 Id. 267 (27 N. W. Rep. 514). It will not be necessary to state the facts at issue, except in so far as they bear ujmn the assignment of errors discussed.

As the case now appears before us, the plaintiffs show the delivery of 2,147,130 feet of logs under the contract between their assignor, J. P. Kroll, and the firm of C. & E. Ten Eyck. The defense make no proof of payment, [527]*527and defend under two claims, each one in the nature of an offset:

1. That by a written contract between Kroll and O. & E. Ten Eyck he sold to that firm a one-half interest in a certain lot of standing pine and logs then cut upon the same lands from which the logs delivered by Kroll under the contract sued upon were obtained; that C. &. E. Ten Eyck paid Kroll §1,500 in full for the timber and logs sold to them, as above stated; that Kroll cut this timber, and sold and delivered all the logs, one-half of which were the Ten Eyck's, and received the money; and upon a settlement between the parties a large profit was made, one-half of which belonged to O. & E. Ten Eyck, and-this must be an offset against anything found to be. due Kroll for the logs sued for by plaintiffs.

3. That in February, 1878, Kroll sold to 'C. & E. Ten Eyck a lot of J P K logs, which Kroll afterwards sold to one Gould, and received therefor §4,034.13; that this money belonged to Ten Eyck, and must be set off against the plaintiffs' claim.

The contract under which the first claim of set-off is made is called in the record the undated contract, and was found among Ten Eyck's papers after his death. Upon the trial the plaintiffs admitted a credit upon the contract under which Kroll delivered the logs, reducing their claim to §3,815.37. This contract was dated November 33, 1878, nine months later than the contract for the sale of the J P K logs, under the second claim of the defense.

The plaintiffs contended on the trial that the contract for the sale of the J P K logs, although conveying an absolute title on its face, was in fact given as a security, and not intended as an absolute transfer of title. The court instructed the jury that, if they found it was given as a security, they might eliminate it entirely from the case. It is apparent that the jury so treated it. But he also charged them that if they found it to be an absolute sale of the logs, and Kroll sold them to Gould (of which [528]*528sale there was no dispute), and received pay for them, it would wipe out plaintiffs' claim. This matter, therefore, went squarely to the jury.

The plaintiffs claimed that the undated contract was never delivered, and was inoperative, and offered testimony to support this claim. The court instructed the jury that under the circumstances the presumption would be that the contract was properly executed and delivered, and of force and effect between the parties; that it was a paper which by its terms did not require anything to he done by Ten Eyclr; that it did not require that it should be signed by Ten Eyck, or that any action should be taken on his part in regard to it; that it was not necessary that the defense should prove any consideration in order to make it a valid paper; that the burden of showing that it was not delivered and was inoperative was upon the plaintiffs, who must by testimony overcome the natural presumption arising from its being found after Ten Eyck's death among his papers. The jury evidently found that it was not delivered for the purposes mentioned in it, and that it was inojoerative and of no effect, and we cannot say they were not justified in so finding.

Testimony was given by Mr. Tennant, one of the counsel for the plaintiffs, that the first claim of set-off made by the defense under the contract or bill of sale of the J P K logs was- on the third trial of the case, — the one next preceding the trial now here for review. ■ This was offered and received in explanation of the testimony of Mr. Cogswell in reference to said bill of sale, which was offered by the plaintiffs for the first time on the last trial of the case, and to show that up to the next to the last trial there had been no necessity of calling on Mr. Cogswell, or any other person, to testify upon the subject, as the bill of sale had never before that time been [529]*529relied or rested upon as a defense to plaintiffs’ claim, and that upon the trial before, when it was first presented, the plaintiffs were taken by surprise, and then unable to meet it. This evidence was proper. It is always competent .to show that any evidence in a cause is given for the first time, when there have been previous trials, or to explain why it is so given, and the reason it was not produced before.

It is claimed, further, that the evidence of Cogswell of a parol conversation between himself and Ten Eyck should not have been received at all, without the direct caution of the court to the jury as to -the manner in which it was to be considered, and the weight to be given to it as against the terms of a written instrument; and that the court also erred in not sufficiently warning the jury that the terms, tenor, and effect of this bill of sale could not be altered or changed by parol proof, unless the oral testimony was such as to make a clear and conclusive case that the instrument was given as a security, and not, as it purported to be, as an absolute conveyance of the logs, — “a case which, by the force of the evidence, commands unhesitating consent.” A large number of authorities are cited to support this assignment of error, and to maintain the proposition that the proof to convert a deed absolute on its face into a mere security or mortgage must be clear, convincing, and unequivocal; citing, among other cases, that of McMillan v. Bissell, in this Court, and reported in 63 Mich. 66 (29 N. W. Rep. 737).1 But it must be remembered that a mere bill of sale, as this was, not under seal, is not governed by the rules applicable to such solemn instru[530]*530ments as deeds under seal. It does not require by any means the same amount and strictness of proof to declare a mere bill of sale a chattel mortgage or security as it does to determine a deed to be a mortgage.

“A simple bill of sale does not embody the preliminaries nor the essential terms of a contract in such a way as to exclude parol evidence." Picard v. McCormick, 11 Mich. 68. See, also, Rowe v. Wright, 12 Id. 289; Trevidick v. Mumford, 31 Id. 467; Sirrine v. Briggs, Id. 443.

The court instructed the jury that it was competent to show that an instrument of this character, although conveying an absolute title on its face, may have been given by way of security, and that it was competent to show this by parol testimony. • We do not think it was necessary to go further, inasmuch as the defendants5 counsel on the trial did not ask any further instruction in this regard. It is now contended that the court should have at least told the jury that the burden of proof was on the plaintiffs to introduce sufficient evidence to overcome the presumption that the instrument was what it purported to be, — an absolute sale.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.W. 134, 74 Mich. 525, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seligman-v-estate-of-ten-eyck-mich-1889.