Shepard v. Shepard

36 Mich. 173, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 98
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 Mich. 173 (Shepard v. Shepard) 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
Shepard v. Shepard, 36 Mich. 173, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 98 (Mich. 1877).

Opinion

Graves, J:

It appears from the case, that Alpheus F., William S. and George Shepard are sons of William Shepard; that Catherine L. is his wife, and that complainant is his nephew; that prior to and until some time after November 20, 1871, William Shepard and his son George Shepard and Jacob L. Button carried on business at Shepardsville, in Clinton county, as partners under the style of “W. & G. Shepard & Co.;” that the firm became indebted to complainant for money borrowed in something like two thousand two hundred dollars, and he insisted on payment or security; ' that the firm thereupon, and on the- day before mentioned, gave him their promissory note for two thousand three hundred dollars, with interest at ten per cent., and William Shepard and his wife Catherine executed a mortgage to him as collateral security, which he put on record on the 27th of the same month.

This mortgage was wholly prepared by William Shepard, and nothing passed between Mrs. Shepard and complainant concerning it.

In March thereafter, and toward the latter part of that month, creditors proceeded against the firm in bankruptcy, and some time after September 12, 1874 (but the true time of which does not appear in the printed record), the complainant filed the present bill to foreclose the mortgage before mentioned.

Assuming to give the effect of the descriptive part of the mortgage, the bill claimed that the property was “all the south half of the southeast quarter of section nine, in township seven north, of range one west, Clinton county, Michigan, excepting lots six, ten, and eleven, in block eight, lots one, two, eight, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen and seventeen,' [175]*175in block seven, and lots one and two, in block six, in the village of Shepardsville, Clinton county, Michigan; and also mill-lot number one, in block number three, with mills thereon, and lot number three, in block number two, with store thereon, in said village of Shepardsville, and being on the north half of southeast quarter of said section nine.”

The bill set up, among other things, that subsequent to the mortgage, and on March 5, 1872, there had been placed on-record what purported to be a deed dated some twenty days earlier than the mortgage, namely, November 1, 1871, from the mortgagors to the sons, Alpheus and William S. Shepard, for all the south half of the southeast quarter of section nine, township seven north, range one west, excepting the part platted in the village of Shepardsville, the same being a part of the premises apparently mortgaged, and complainant alleged that he had no knowledge of this grant when he took the mortgage, and further, that it had not been delivered at that time.

The assignee in bankruptcy made no defense, but Mrs. Shepard and the sons, Alpheus and William S., answered.

They admitted the mortgage, but claimed that the property was not described in it as in the bill, and proceeded to give a verbatim copy of the description as follows, from the mortgage: South half of southeast quarter of section nine, township seven north, of range one west, excepting lots number six, ten and eleven, on block number eight; also lots sixteen and seventeen; also lots number one, two, fourteen, fifteen, and eight, on block number seven, and lots number one and ten, on block number six, including mill-lot number one, on block number three, with mills thereon; also lot number three, on block two, with store thereon, in the village of Shepardsville, being on north half of southeast quarter of said section nine.”

This description corresponds with that in the mortgage, and the apparent discrepancies between it and the claim'in the bill are of no practical importance in the case. The suit is not brought to reform the mortgage or to obtain a [176]*176clearing up of ambiguities, and there are no materials for either. The plat is not in evidence, or any intelligible or proper description of it, and there is no proof touching its application to the tract. We cannot take judicial notice "of the rel ative situation of lots and blocks on the map or plat, or as to how they apply to the ground. There is no question as to the identity of the mortgage, and if the bill is not accurate in its assumption of the effect of the mortgage description, it can do no harm to the defendants. Any order of sale would have to follow the description in the mortgage, and not one possibly different.

If either party wished a judicial settlement as to what precise parcels of ground the description attached to, in view of the terms used, a proper ease therefor should have been made and followed by proper proof.

The answer further maintained, on the part of the defendants Alpheus and William S. Shepard, that the deed from the mortgagors to them and mentioned in the bill was duly delivered previous to the mortgage, and that complainant took the mortgage with actual knowledge that they had become owners of the laud by virtue of such deed. And on the part of Mrs. Shepard, the answer alleged that 'when the mortgage was given by herself and husband she was absolute separate owner, by virtue of a conveyance to her from her husband on the 15th of February, 1871, of lots one, two, three, four, five, seven, eight, nine, thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, eighteen, nineteen, twenty, twenty-one, twenty-two, twenty-four, twenty-five and twenty-six, in block number eight in the village of Shepardsville, according to the plat of said village, being a part of the south half of the southeast quarter of section number nine, in township number seven north, of range one west; and she made the deed from her husband part of her answer, and annexed it. On turning to the deed so made a part of the answer, the description, instead of placing the lots on part of the south half of the quarter, as in the body of the answer, places them on a part of the east half. This is perhaps not im[177]*177portaut, because the effect of the two statements would be to place the lots on the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter.

On the part of Mrs. Shepard the answer further stated, that she understood the complainant claimed that these lots were covered by the mortgage, and that if the mortgage did cover them, it was by the mistake of her husband in drawing up the instrument; that when she executed it she did not know what it contained, and did not intend to encumber her separate property; and that her husband “intended to exempt her said land from the description of land in the said mortgage;” and further, that complainant was at the time advised that she owned said lots.

It is noticeable that the answer on the part of Mrs. Shepard no where alleged that by its terms the mortgage covered the land she claimed. On the contrary, it seems to have been framed on the assumption that whether or not the mortgage by its terms did cover that land, was uncertain and a matter to be specially inquired into and determined.

The decree declared that so far as the same could bo ascertained from the mortgage and bill of complaint, the property authorized to be sold was all of block seven in the village of Shepardsvillej.except lots one, two, eight, fourteen and fifteen, and all of block six in said village, except lots one and ten, and mill-lot one in block three, with the mills thereon, and lot three in block two, all in said village.

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Related

Pastorino v. Palmer
128 N.W. 188 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1910)
Kinyon v. Cunningham
109 N.W. 675 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Mich. 173, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-v-shepard-mich-1877.