Sheahan v. McClure

165 N.W. 735, 199 Mich. 63, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 946
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1917
DocketDocket No. 44
StatusPublished

This text of 165 N.W. 735 (Sheahan v. McClure) 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
Sheahan v. McClure, 165 N.W. 735, 199 Mich. 63, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 946 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiff is the widow of James F. Sheahan, deceased, who was at the time of his death engaged in what is designated a “hand-book business,” with headquarters at 92 Woodward avenue in the city of Detroit. Without going into details, it appears that this line of business activity has to do with betting ventures on horse races. On Friday, September 17, 1915, Sheahan took an order from a customer, considerately designated as “John Doe,” to place a bet of $1,-050 on a certain horse race, and at the request of the customer advanced that sum for him, sending it to a correspondent, or agent, in Chicago to be applied in betting on a horse race as the customer had directed.

The money was personally advanced by Sheahan [64]*64from funds he had on deposit in the Peninsular State Bank of Detroit, upon which he drew a check for the requisite amount payable to the order of William Ryan of Chicago, who indorsed it to the Illinois Trust & Savings Bank of Chicago, or order, whence it was subsequently paid through the Detroit clearing house and charged to Sheahan’s account by the Peninsular State Bank. Sheahan lent this money to John Doe upon the understanding that he would call and repay it on or • before the following Monday, September 20th. On that day Sheahan was taken seriously ill and removed to a hospital in Detroit, where he died the following Saturday, September 25th.

On Monday, September 20th, the customer, John Doe, went to Sheahan’s place of business at,92 Woodward avenue, where he found defendant William McClure in charge and gave to him for Sheahan the $1,-050 in payment of his indebtedness to Sheahan.

A pawnbroker of Bay City named Tierney had an interest in the fund from which Sheahan withdrew the $1,050, and on the day Sheahan sent the money to Chicago, September 17th, he wrote Tierney advising him of the transaction, saying, in part, as follows:

“Friend Peter: I got a check from Postal yesterday and had to send check to Chicago for $1,050 for a bet. My man will be in and pay me tomorrow the money and will send check then. It was for a. bet I placed for a customer who settles next day when he is home. He is. away today, be back not later than Monday.”

After Sheahan’s death, Tierney, who was in Detroit and attended the funeral, spoke to McClure about Sheahan’s indebtedness to him, showing McClure Sheahan’s letter. Tierney testified that:

In the interview “he (McClure) said he had nothing to do with it at all. He had nothing to do with the transaction; that that was Sheahan’s own personal affairs, and that he didn’t even collect it. * * * He said Mrs. Sheahan would have to pay me.”

[65]*65Tierney then presented his claim against her husband to Mrs. Sheahan with his evidence of the indebtedness, and she subsequently paid it. She then made demand upon McClure for the $1,050, which she testified that he at first said “was Mr. Sheahan’s matter and he had nothing to do with it; * * * and I asked him about the $1,050, if the man had paid it, and he said he didn’t know anything about it,” but that, when she said to him she knew who the man was that owed the debt and was going down to ask him about it, he replied, “You need not go down, because he paid .it,” refusing, however, to pay it over to her because, he said, “Sheahan owed him”; and that he did not then, or at any other time, claim to her it was a partnership asset. McClure denied that he ever told Mrs. Sheahan he had not received the money from the customer, or that it was a personal matter of Sheahan’s; stated he did not remember any conversation with Tierney upon the subject “at all”; claimed that he was a partner with Sheahan in the hand-book business and the bet placed by Sheahan for John Doe was a partnership matter; that he had been in business, with Sheahan about 25 years, and during that time “there was no limit to what each would do for each other,” as a result of which Sheahan was heavily indebted to him; that he advised Mrs. Sheahan “to pay the $1,050, as the firm owed the money,” and in that connection said to her if she would pay it “I will never say anything further about what you owe me, or never come to you with any story of the money Jim owed me when he died.”

A stipulation in the record, signed by attorneys for the respective parties, authorizing substitution of an amended declaration in place of the original, also reads in part as follows:

“It is further stipulated and agreed, on the part of the defendant, that John Doe, mentioned in said dec[66]*66laration, was indebted to James F. Sheahan, deceased, in the sum of ten hundred fifty ($1,050.00) dollars, and on or about the 20th day of September, 1915, did call at the place of business of said James F. Sheahan, deceased, and in the absence of said James F. Sheahan did then and there leave and pay over the said sum, of ten hundred fifty ($1,050.00) dollars to the person ■ then in charge of said place of business, viz., said defendant, and that said ten- hundred fifty ($1,050) dollars was then and there paid by the said John Doe in satisfaction of his said debt of ten hundred fifty ($1,050.00) dollars.”

It was contended on behalf of defendant in the trial court that plaintiff could not recover because a partnership existed between defendant and Sheahan, and the transaction in question was a partnership matter, which could only be litigated, if at all, in a court of equity; and for the further reason that the alleged debt was the result of a bet on a horse race, and had its inception in a gambling contract, which made the whole transaction illegal; and a verdict should therefore be directed for the defense.

On the other hand, it was claimed for plaintiff that Sheahan and McClure were not in fact partners; but if they were McClure had no interest in this particular transaction, was a stranger to the gambling contract, a third party acting only as bailee, or agent, in receiving the money for Sheahan from John Doe, and could not interpose their unlawful conduct as a defense for refusing to account for it.

Reserving decision upon defendant’s request for a directed verdict,' the court decided to submit the case to the jury upon the two questions, whether a partnership existed between Sheahan and McClure, and, if so, whether this transaction was part of their partnership business, giving proper instructions as to the law applicable to those propositions. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,050. Before en[67]*67tering judgment thereon, the court decided as a matter of law that defendant’s motion for a directed verdict should prevail and ordered judgment in accordance with such decision notwithstanding the verdict; to which action of the court plaintiff had exception as a matter of course under the provisions of Act No. 217, Pub. Acts 1915 (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 14568 etseq.).

Whatever the jury may have found as. to the existence of a partnership, they manifestly decided that the transaction was not partnership business, and found that the $1,050 left with defendant at Sheahan’s place of business was, as counsel stipulated, “then and there paid by the said John Doe in satisfaction of his said debt” to Sheahan.

While the record does not contain the reasons, if any, given by the court at the time of entering judgment non obstante,

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Bluebook (online)
165 N.W. 735, 199 Mich. 63, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheahan-v-mcclure-mich-1917.