Thurn v. McAra

130 N.W.2d 887, 374 Mich. 22, 1964 Mich. LEXIS 326
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1964
DocketCalendar 4, Docket 50,359
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 130 N.W.2d 887 (Thurn v. McAra) 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
Thurn v. McAra, 130 N.W.2d 887, 374 Mich. 22, 1964 Mich. LEXIS 326 (Mich. 1964).

Opinion

Souris, J.

Many, if not most, courts in this country, as well as England’s, impose constructive trusts upon property acquired by intestate succession by one who induced a decedent to make no will by *24 expressly or impliedly agreeing to'bold such property for tbe benefit of another and, after death of the deeedent.,intestate, refuses to do so. The. authorities, none fr-ona Michigan, are collected in the classic texts ’ on equity, trusts, and restitution, including among them 4 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (5th ed, 1941), §§ 1054, 1054c; 1 Scott, Trusts (2d ed, 1956), §§ 55.1, 55.3, 55.9; 1 Restatement (Second), Trusts (1959), §55; and Restatement, Restitution (1937), §186.- See, also, annotation at 11 ALR2d 808 (1950), “Rights and remedies against one who induces, prevents, or interferes in the making, changing, or revoking of a will,.or holds the fruits thereof.”

Courts of equity have not been deterred, in their commitment to prevent such unjust enrichment, by statutes of frauds and statutes of wills such as our own-. * While .such statutes are designed to thwart false claims against another’s property, particularly a decedent’s, in most jurisdictions they are not per- *25 milled to be used as 'a weapon in the arsenal of those who otherwise would be unjustly enriched by their own wrongdoing. Professor Scott has articulated the rationale by which courts of equity impress resulting and constructive trusts over property in order to right such wrongs which could not be undone otherwise because of the provisions of statutes of frauds and statutes-of wills:

“Statutes like the statute of frauds and the statute of wills, which sometimes defeat the perfectly legit- ‘ imate intentions of the owner of property in making a. disposition of that property, necessarily cause hardship. In order, however, to prevent false claims, .based on perjured testimony, the legislatures have .provided that.cértain dispositions'cannot'-be effectuated unless evidenced in certain formal ways. The legislatures have presumably balanced the hardship ..to the intended beneficiaries Which occurs where there is an intention to create a tfúst, against the hardship which would result from the making of false claims; and in order to prevent the making of false claims they have required that the disposition should be evidenced in a certain formal manner. It is true that the modern tendency is to insist less than formerly on hard and fast rules as to the mode of expression of intent, and less than formerly are legitimate transactions invalidated because of a lack of some technical formality. Nevertheless, it is believed that there is a real policy involved in the statute of frauds and in the statute of wills, and there has been no tendency to do- away with the formalities required by those statutes. If the requirements were merely technical and there were no sound policy underlying the statutes, it would perhaps be legitimate to avoid their operation by making purely technical distinctions; but since that is not the case, it would seem improper for the courts to undermine the statutes by such methods.
“On the other hand, the courts should not permit these statutes to be used as a means whereby a per *26 son is enabled to enrich himself by making and breaking a promise, even though the promise is unenforceable. * * *
“It is submitted that where the owner of property transfers it to another, either inter vivos or by will, relying upon his promise to hold the property in trust for or to convey it to a third person, the transferee should not be permitted to keep the property. Ordinarily, if due respect is to be paid to the statute of frauds or statute of wills, the intended beneficiary should not be entitled to enforce a constructive trust in his favor, but a resulting trust should be imposed in favor of the settlor or his estate. If, however, the transferee obtained the property by fraud, and thereby prevented the owner of the property from making an effective disposition in favor of the third person, he thereby commits a tort against the third person; and a court of equity should give specific reparation for the tort by charging him as constructive trustee for the third person.” 1 Scott, Trusts (2d ed, 1956), § 55.9.

See, also, comment b to Restatement, Restitution, § 186, and comments to 1 Restatement (Second), Trusts, § 55.

While there are no Michigan eases imposing constructive trusts in precisely such circumstances, our own recent decisions in closely analogous eases suggest that such equitable relief is available here, as it is in other jurisdictions, to prevent one’s unjust enrichment from a decedent’s estate. See Burgess v. Jackson Circuit Judge, 249 Mich 558; Kent v. Klein, 352 Mich 652; and Nelson v. Woodworth, 363 Mich 244. Particular attention should be given to the latter two eases in which we impressed constructive trusts upon property formerly belonging to decedents and, in doing so, said and said again that the doctrine of constructive trusts does not depend upon fraud in the inception, that the doctrine may be applied to cases where property is unconscionably *27 withheld as where it is wrongfully acquired.’ ■ But cf. Hewelt v. Hewelt, 245 Mich 108, and Haack v. Burmeister, 289 Mich 418.

In this appeal it is claimed the chancellor misapplied the foregoing principles of equity in decreeing that a constructive trust he impressed upon all of the assets of defendant administrator’s decedent, Charles Remus Burr, amounting to about $140;000 in real and personal property, to the end that plaintiff, decedent’s step-daughter, share equally the beneficial interest therein with his five daughters. Mr. Burr, a widower, died intestate from injuries received in an automobile accident. It is conceded that, absent a will, his estate passed by intestate succession to his five daughters, plaintiff, his stepdaughter being excluded from the class entitled to share therein. However, plaintiff asserts she is entitled to a one-sixth beneficial interest in her stepfather’s estate as the result of a death-bed declaration made by him to four of his daughters that he wanted his property equally divided among his “six daughters”. It is her claim, in essence, that Mr. Burr expressed a wish to draw a will and, for that purpose, requested two nurses to be called to act as disinterested witnesses thereto, but upon being advised that only one nurse was available, made his declaration of testamentary desire and abandoned further effort to execute a formal will upon the assurances of his four daughters present at his bedside that his desire would be honored.

While one of the four daughters present denied at trial that she heard her father make such a declaration, the other three daughters who were present testified in substantial accord that he did, and the chancellor so found. Those three daughters subsequently assigned to plaintiff one-sixth of the share of each in decedent’s estate. The fourth daughter present at decedent’s bedside, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
130 N.W.2d 887, 374 Mich. 22, 1964 Mich. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurn-v-mcara-mich-1964.