Sweitzer v. Littlefield

297 N.W. 522, 297 Mich. 356, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 646
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1941
DocketDocket No. 78, Calendar No. 41,455.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 297 N.W. 522 (Sweitzer v. Littlefield) 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
Sweitzer v. Littlefield, 297 N.W. 522, 297 Mich. 356, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 646 (Mich. 1941).

Opinion

North, J.

Defendants are the executors of the estate of Elizabeth Miller, who died on December 10, 1937, and who was the vendor of the premises involved herein, plaintiff Sweitzer being the land contract vendee. These premises mil hereinafter be described as lot No. 240.

On August 27, 1938, defendants commenced summary proceedings before a circuit court commissioner to regain possession of lot No. 240 from plaintiff, who was in default in payments due on the land contract. At that time plaintiff herein was in Florida, and service was made by publication under 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14978 (Stat. Ann. § 27.1989). See, also, Act No. 208, Pub. Acts 1939. On November 10, 1938, there was a hearing before the circuit court commissioner. No appearance having been made on behalf of Mr. Sweitzer, judgment by default was taken, and the commissioner found the amount of $838.26 to be due and unpaid. Writ of restitution was issued on February 14, 1939, and the same was executed on February 20, 1939.

Plaintiff states that at the time the writ of restitution was executed he was still in Florida, and that *359 the first actual notice to him of the summary proceedings was the receipt of a letter from defendants ’ attorney, dated March 8, 1939, and forwarded from Detroit, which requested him to vacate said premises. Plaintiff claims that as soon as his health permitted, he returned from Florida, employed counsel, and a petition for leave to make a delayed appeal from the judgment of the circuit court commissioner was presented to the circuit court. . This petition was filed on July 19, 1939, and the circuit judge, on July 24, 1939, granted leave to appeal, conditioned, however, upon plaintiff’s repaying to defendants $522.37 with interest within 30 days, the stated sum being the amount paid by defendants on back taxes on the lot after they had taken possession. This condition was not fulfilled; and on September 14, 1939, plaintiff filed the instant bill, praying that the judgment of the circuit court commissioner be set aside, that the land contract be decreed to be a mortgage and subsisting lien on the premises, that a warranty deed of this lot from plaintiff to Elizabeth Miller, to which reference will subsequently be made, be cancelled, and that possession be restored to plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s bill alleges: That in 1921 he accepted from Elizabeth Miller a loan of $1,450 for use in his business, said sum to be repaid in five years with interest at 6 per cent, per annum; that to secure the loan, plaintiff executed a warranty deed to lot No. 240, and that the terms of repayment were set forth in an instrument purporting to be on its face a land contract, but which was in fact a real-estate mortgage. Plaintiff further alleges that on May 20,1932, the land contract above mentioned was surrendered, and at that time, since Elizabeth Miller did not feel secure as to the $1,450 loan, it was agreed that $1,000 of said loan be transferred to another loan secured *360 by other property under a similar arrangement, and that as a result of such transfer there remained due only the sum of $508, the repayment of which was secured by a new land contract involving lot No. 240. By the terms of this land contract, the money was to be repaid within three months of the date thereof.

The bill of complaint further states that a second land contract was executed on the same date, the purpose of which was to secure the $1,000 previously mentioned, that this second contract covered lots Nos. 292, 293, and 294, and that in 1934 Elizabeth Miller commenced summary proceedings to recover possession of lots Nos. 292, 293, and 294; that the proceedings were dismissed because the land contract was held in effect to be a mortgage, and shortly thereafter Elizabeth Miller filed a bill in equity asking that the land contract involving the three last-mentioned lots be decreed to be a mortgage, and that the same be foreclosed; and further that this relief was granted on March 23, 1935, the period of redemption thereafter expired, and Sweitzer was dispossessed.

It is further alleged that the proceedings before the circuit court commissioner to regain possession of lot No. 240 were irregular, and that when the motion for delayed appeal was filed as above noted, it was granted on conditions which could not be performed by plaintiff within the time limited. The claim is also made that after defendants took possession of lot No. 240 under the circuit court commissioner’s judgment, they removed or caused to be torn down a building which was worth in excess of $700.

Defendants answered the bill of complaint, denying the irregularity of the proceedings before the circuit court commissioner, admitting the removal *361 of the building after they had gone into possession under the writ of restitution, but denying that it was worth over $700, and stating its value to be in the neighborhood of $50; and defendants disavowed sufficient knowledge to answer plaintiff’s allegation that the purported land contract was in fact a mortgage, and left plaintiff to his proofs.

Defendants also filed a written motion to dismiss the bill of complaint. In support of the motion they assigned the following reasons: (1) that the bill of complaint does not make a case which warrants the intervention of the court of chancery, (2) that the plaintiff, who seeks equitable relief, does not offer to do equity, and (3) plaintiff has had an adequate remedy at law of which he neglected and refused to avail himself. This motion was heard and denied. Thereafter defendants filed a “further and additional” answer whereby the defenses of res judicata and laches were raised. Ample notice was given plaintiff of this proposed modification of the answer prior to the day of hearing. When the case was called for hearing in the circuit court defendants orally renewed their motion to dismiss. The court granted the motion and decree was entered accordingly. This appeal followed.

Notwithstanding appellant’s contention to the contrary, we are of the opinion that the' proceedings before the circuit court commissioner, which resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in that case, were regular. Plaintiff in the instant case asserts that the instrument upon which plaintiffs proceeded before the circuit court commissioner, notwithstanding it purported to be a land contract, was in fact a mortgage. Other than this, plaintiff in the instant case has not alleged any specific defect in the proceedings before the circuit court commissioner. The commissioner had jurisdiction of the *362 subject matter set forth in the complaint filed in his court; and he obtained jurisdiction of the person of plaintiff herein by substituted service. At least plaintiff herein did not allege any-fatal defect in service. 'Further, by filing a motion for a delayed appeal in those proceedings, without having entered a special appearance for that purpose, defendant in the summary proceedings became a party to that suit. Thereafter he was bound by the order of the circuit court which granted him conditional leave to appeal. Granting leave was in the sound discretion of the court and the condition imposed was not an abuse of discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
297 N.W. 522, 297 Mich. 356, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweitzer-v-littlefield-mich-1941.