Taylor v. Ward

249 N.W. 473, 264 Mich. 118, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 960
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1933
DocketDocket No. 45, Calendar No. 37,093.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 249 N.W. 473 (Taylor v. Ward) 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
Taylor v. Ward, 249 N.W. 473, 264 Mich. 118, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 960 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Cecil F. Taylor and wife are the owners of a very substantial equity in property at the northeast corner of Livernois avenue and Six Mile road in the city of Detroit. They purchased it on contract from Henry Diehr, the owner of the fee, in July, 1924, when the property had a frontage of 62 feet on Six Mile road and 100 feet on Livernois avenue. Condemnation proceedings were begun by the city of Detroit on February 28, 1927, for the purpose of widening Livernois avenue. The city sought to take a 27-foot strip off the Six Mile frontage of the Taylor lot and thus leave a parcel, with a frontage of 100 feet on Livernois avenue and of 35 feet on Six Mile road. A jury was impaneled on May 16, 1927, long before negotiations for the sale of the Taylor equity were begun, a tentative agreement was arrived at between the Taylors and the city, fixing the value of the 27 feet sought at $27,835.90, and an award was made accordingly by a jury verdict rendered in May, 1929. A part of the 35 feet remaining was leased to a restaurant and another portion thereof was occupied by a gas station.

A short time prior to November 24, 1928, the Taylors entered into a written preliminary agree *121 ment for the sale of the entire parcel to a drug company for $58,000, with a down payment of $10,000 and monthly payments of at least $300, including interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, until the purchase price was paid. It further provided that the purchaser was to receive the Livernois condemnation award. The sale to the drug company was never consummated.

There were two leases on the property, one dated October 24, 1928, for a term of five years, with a privilege of cancellation at the end of two years in case of sale of the property, conditioned upon indemnification of the lessee for any damages up to $2,500; the other for a term of two years from the first day of August, 1928.

Defendant Harvey B. Dumas, a real estate dealer and president of the Livernois Improvement Association, heard of the proposed deal with the drug company, and, after it fell through, requested the right to sell the property. Dumas claims that on November 24, 1928, Taylor signed a listing card form giving Dumas the exclusive sale of the property for five days, at a price of $58,000, $10,000 to be paid down, the balance at the rate of $350 per month with interest, the total amount to be paid within two years. It also provided that Dumas was to receive a commission of $1,740 and everything obtained over $58,000; that any sale was to be made subject to the two leases hereinbefore mentioned; that the property was to be sold free from incumbrances, except “widening condemnation awards for which owner agrees to pay to purchaser.” A purported copy of the listing card was introduced in evidence, signed by Dumas alone, who testified that it was an exact duplicate of a form signed by Taylor. Dumas claimed that he had kept the dupli *122 cate but destroyed it after the deal was consummated. The card introduced in evidence was produced from the files of Laverne Courtney, Taylor’s legal representative in the transaction. Taylor admitted that it was a copy of the agreement he had given Dumas, although he could not remember signing it.

Dumas interested defendant Harold B. Ward in the property. Ward was cashier of the Peninsular State Bank of Highland Park and occupied a high place in civic and other communal affairs, which seems to indicate that he was a man of position and character. Taylor claims that Dumas first represented to him that the property was being purchased by the bank itself for the erection of a building, but he admits that when he was told that the bank was not the purchaser he made no objection to a sale to Ward.

A memorandum agreement was executed and signed by plaintiffs. The parties met in the offices of the Peninsular State Bank of Highland Park on November 28,1928, together with attorneys for both vendors and purchaser. The usual form of land contract was executed as drafted. It substantially embodied almost all of the terms contained in the authorization given to Dumas for the sale of the property and in the earlier memorandum agreement, with the exception of the commission. The vendee took possession subject to the two outstanding leases, which he assumed. The contract provided that the vendee was entitled to any award made in the condemnation proceedings, but that he was to pay all street widening assessments and taxes levied against the property thereafter. The purchaser was also to pay plaintiffs’ costs and attorney fees in the condemnation proceedings.

*123 It is claimed by defendants and denied by plaintiffs that, on December 15, 1928, the date set for the down payment and consummation of the deal, Dumas stated that he desired to acquire an interest in the property and borrowed $500 of the down payment from the Taylors for that very purpose. Courtney, the attorney who represented plaintiffs,, corroborated the testimony of Dumas and Ward on this point, while Taylor testified that the loan was requested so that Dumas in turn might loan the money to Ward, to enable him to complete the deal.

Within 10 days after the contract was entered into between plaintiffs and Ward, defendant Ward executed an option to Dumas, entitling the latter to acquire one-half of the vendee’s interest in the contract. This option was exercised on December 15, 1928, and was the occasion for the $500 loan made to Dumas. Payments were made regularly for a considerable period. The proceedings in the condemnation suit were concluded on May 9, 1929, and the jury’s verdict was confirmed on the 11th day of the following month. The sum of $27,835.90. was allowed for the 27 feet appropriated by the city. This amount, less $644.62 for attorney fees, was paid to Ward and divided between Ward and Dumas as owners of half interests, after a deduction of $3,500. After the preliminary contract was executed and just prior to the consummation of the deal on December 15th, Taylor and Dumas went to see Diehr, the owner of the fee, who agreed to be satisfied if $3,500 of the award was applied on his contract with Taylor, as his share in the condemnation award.

In December, 1929, Ward told plaintiffs that he was unable to continue with the contract owing to financial reverses. At that time, all payments and *124 taxes then due had been paid. Plaintiffs not only-consented to an assignment of Ward’s interest to Dumas but also gave Ward a written memorandum releasing him from all further liability under the contract. Plaintiffs also gave Dumas an extension of three additional years in which to pay the balance of the contract, conditioned upon his paying $1,000 on the contract and $3,000 more on or before November 1,1930. Payments were kept up by Dumas with a fair degree of regularity for over a year. He paid the $1,000 necessary to secure an extension on the contract and also sums aggregating $1,400, or thereabouts, in addition to the regular monthly payments of $350 provided for by the contract. However, after January, 1931, he became irregular in the amounts of his monthly remittances. The assessment against the property for the widening of Livernois avenue had not been levied at the time of the trial. It is estimated that it will run into a large amount.

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Bluebook (online)
249 N.W. 473, 264 Mich. 118, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-ward-mich-1933.