Tuttle v. Bristol

105 N.W. 145, 142 Mich. 148, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 656
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1905
DocketDocket No. 73
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 105 N.W. 145 (Tuttle v. Bristol) 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
Tuttle v. Bristol, 105 N.W. 145, 142 Mich. 148, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 656 (Mich. 1905).

Opinion

Blair, J.

The facts of this case and the legal questions arising therefrom are, in the main, well stated by the circuit judge in his opinion for a decree, from which we quote, as follows:

“Complainant held a verbal option upon a parcel of land principally valuable for the timber thereon, situated in Kalkaska county. The consideration in the option was $4,000, which was later raised to $4,500.
“Complainant was a land and timber looker and the option was taken to enable him to find a purchaser. Defendant Bristol’s attention was first called to these lands and complainant’s option at Traverse City, and by agreement they went to the premises in company with Mr. Moran and examined the same, with the result that they concluded the lands were desirable at the price named. [149]*149It was agreed between them that defendant Bristol was to advance the sum of $2,000, being all the ready money he then had, and, as Tuttle had no ready money, that the title of the real estate should be taken in the name of the party who should advance the balance of the purchase price, $2,500, and that the land should be sold and the proceeds of the entire purchase price be paid, together with the necessary expense of cutting and removing the timber, if the lands were not sold outright, after which the profits arising from the venture were to be divided equally, share and share alike.
“ The testimony is conflicting as to whether Tuttle or Bristol was to obtain the $2,500, but in view of all the. testimony and the acts of the parties, I consider it immaterial which party was to take the active part in finding the person who would advance the money. The land was to be deeded to the party who might advance the money, and this amount was first to be paid. As both parties •considered the land of considerable more value than the sum of $2,500, and that this sum could be readily met by them by taking off and selling the timber and bark, in case they did not find a purchaser for the land, the question as to who would be personally responsible for the $2,500 did not probably enter very largely into their consideration, at least, I do not consider it a controlling question.
“ Bristol advanced the sum of $2,000, as agreed upon, the same being advanced equally for the benefit of Tuttle and himself. He would be, therefore, equally, if not more, interested than Tuttle in finding a person to advance the remainder of the purchase price.
“Later, becoming uneasy, defendant Bristol arranged a meeting with the owners of the land at Kalkaska, without notice to Tuttle, and closed up the deal, defendant Bockes being substituted for complainant, but without the knowledge of Tuttle or of the owners of the land, who made the conveyance to defendant Bockes supposing that Tuttle was the real party in interest with Bristol, and that ■defendant Bockes was advancing the money as a loan and taking title in his own name as security for the money advanced.
“Defendant Bockes was fully advised as to the rights of the complainant, Tuttle, in the premises. Defendants have taken off and sold certain of the timber from these lands. Complainant contends he has a.n interest in the profits, if any, arising from the lumbering operations, by [150]*150reason of his option and agreement with defendant Bristol, and the subsequent payment of a part of the purchase price by Bristol to the owners and the conveyance by them to Bockes of the land in compliance with the terms of his option, and cites Petrie v. Torrent, 88 Mich. 43, among other cases.
“ Defendants claim the agreement to be for the sale of an interest in lands and within the provisions of the following statutes, and therefore void, viz.: 3 Comp. Laws §§ 8835, 9509.
“ The facts in Petrie v. Torrent, 88 Mich. 43, and 100 Mich. 117, are very similar, and the reasons apply with equal force to the case at bar; while the uncontradicted facts that the owners of the premises recognized their option to Tuttle as a subsisting obligation and received the consideration and made conveyance to Bockes as a security, in the interest of Tuttle, understanding and intending to discharge that obligation, and that Tuttle had no knowledge or notice that the conveyance was made until a later date, when he immediately protested against the acts of defendants, furnish additional reasons why the statutes cited do not apply.”

We add to the above statement of the facts of this case the following: The verbal option covered the land and timber of three 40’s, but the timber only of three other 40’s. It is apparent, from the opinion above quoted, that the circuit judge regarded the contract between the parties as simply a profit-sharing agreement, not involving any interest in lands. We do not think the pleadings and proofs sustain such a construction of the agreement. As bearing upon this question, we quote from the bill of complaint and from complainant’s testimony.

Paragraphs 5, 6, 10, 12,16, 21, and 22 of the bill of complaint, as originally filed, read as follows:

“5. That Bethel Bristol, one of the defendants herein after named, after learning that your orator had the option aforesaid, informed your orator that he would with your orator’s consent become a party thereto with your orator and that in consideration that your orator would permit him to have an interest in said option and in the lands and timber to be procured thereunder on advancing the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000) as part of the [151]*151purchase price of the said lands and timber and that as to the remaining two thousand • five hundred dollars ($2,500) required for the payment of the said purchase price, the said Thomas Moran and John Morrison might deed the said lands and timber to whomsoever would be willing to advance the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) to your orator and the said Bristol, to be held in trust, by the person so advancing the money until such time as your orator and the said Bristol might be able to pay for the same under an arrangement to be made between your orator and the said Bristol and the person so advancing the said money; it being expressly understood that your orator and the said Bristol should become the equitable owners of the said lands and timber and should equally bear in share the cost and expenses of conducting the business of cutting down and taking away the timber therefrom, and after the payment of the costs and expenses so incurred should equally share the profits that arise from the business as well as the money to be received in any way from the sale of the lands so to be owned by them.
• “6. And it was expressly understood between your orator and the said Bristol that upon the payment to the party to whom said lands might be deeded of the said sum of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) and that the party so holding the lands should deed the said lands to your orator and the said Bristol.
“ 10. That the said Thomas Moran and John Morrison did not on or before the 21st day of March, 1902, have any notice to the effect that your orator had in any way relinquished his right to the said lands and timber under the said option.

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Bluebook (online)
105 N.W. 145, 142 Mich. 148, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuttle-v-bristol-mich-1905.