Union Guardian Trust Co. v. Nichols

18 N.W.2d 383, 311 Mich. 107, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 389
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1945
DocketDocket No. 71, Calendar No. 42,066.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 383 (Union Guardian Trust Co. v. Nichols) 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
Union Guardian Trust Co. v. Nichols, 18 N.W.2d 383, 311 Mich. 107, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 389 (Mich. 1945).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Defendants Nichols and Reid purchased certain property in Monroe county, Michigan, but still owed defendant Hoyt a considerable amount on the purchase price of part of the property. These three defendants sold and deeded the property to the Lagoona Beach Company, which in turn executed its notes and a purchase-money mortgage in the sum of $305,000, all running to the Union Trust Company of Detroit, Michigan. The trust company subsequently changed its name to Union Guardian Trust Company, plaintiff herein. The $305,000 was divided into serial notes, $35,000 being payable on September 1, 1927, and a like amount each year for four years, and then larger amounts each year until September, 1933, when the entire balance was to become due. Almost contemporaneously with the giving of the mortgage, *110 Messrs. Nichols, Reid and Hoyt, as “settlors,” entered into a trust agreement with the trust company as “trustee” in which they stated that the settlors had caused the mortgage and notes to run to the trust company, and that the mortgage debt at the date of the mortgage and “now is” owned by the settlors; that the settlors do covenant and agree that participation certificates in the form attached to the agreement should be issued in the total amount of the mortgage debt. They designated the amount of the participatioii certificate to be given each one of the settlors, Mr. Hoyt to receive the balance due him from the first $35,000 due under the mortgage. The trustee was to hold, manage and dispose of the mortgage and notes and interest and principal thereof as the property of. the settlors. It was further stated how the payments should be disposed of, the trust company agreeing to give proper attention to the handling' of the mortgage and the collection of the payments thereof. It further provided:

“The Union Trust Company hereby agrees to give proper attention to the handling of said mortgage and the collection of the principal thereof, and the interest thereon. The said trustee has the right and is authorized and empowered to take any and all steps deemed by it, on advice of counsel, necessary or expedient for the protection of the interests represented by the certificates of .this issue. In the event of default under the terms of said mortgage the trustee may, and upon the request of the holder or holders of one-third in amount of the certificates of this issue then outstanding, and upon being indemnified to its satisfaction, shall declare the principal sum then unpaid due and payable immediately and shall proceed to enforce the said mortgage in such manner as may in the opinion of counsel be *111 most effectual to protect the rights of the holders of said’ certificates. ’ ’

Further provisions in the participation certificate, attached to the trust agreement and made a part thereof, are as follows:

“The said trustee is authorized and empowered in connection with the foreclosure of said mortgage, to bid in the property covered thereby at foreclosure sale, in the interest of the holders of said certificates, and to hold, manage, and in its discretion to dispose of the same for their account, in proportion to their respective interests, provided that the holders of two-thirds in interest of said certificates outstanding may at any time, in writing, direct any particular disposition of said property to be made. * * *
“The interest represented hereby is transferable only on the books of the trustee, at its office in the city of Detroit, Michigan, in person or by attorney, on surrender of this certificate properly indorsed.”

No question is raised as to the release of certain acreage from the mortgage because of some question of title. Defendant John M. Reid, the sole appellant herein, received five participation certificates aggregating $77,341.45 in amount. He also received others not directly involved in this litigation.

On Jun,e 1, 1932, no payments having been made on the mortgage and a large amount also being due for taxes, a decree of foreclosure was entered by the circuit court for the county of Monroe in chancery. In this case Messrs. Nichols, Reid and Hoyt joined with the trust company as parties plaintiff. On January 5, 1933, after foreclosure sale, a deed was executed by the circuit court commissioner to the Union Guardian Trust Company which bid in *112 the property for approximately the amount due on the mortgage. On January 30,1933, when the equity of redemption on the mortgage had not yet expired, defendant Reid borrowed from the Union Guardian Trust Company the sum of $25,125 on a collateral note and secured it by indorsing in blank the foregoing participation certificates amounting to $77,341.45. The note to the trust company referred to the collateral as a pledge and empowered the trust company to sell the collateral at public or private sale in the event of default and to apply the proceeds towards the payment of the note. Both Mr. Reid, the maker of the note, and the trust company treated the participation .certificates as personal property, and if the instant case were not to be decided on a more important issue, hereafter discussed, the question would arise if Mr. Reid, the appellant, was not estopped by his conduct from making the claims he now asserts on appeal.

Collateral Liquidation, Inc., became the owner of the note and the collateral long after its maturity. In accordance with the terms and conditions of the note and the statutes relative to the sale of collateral, 2 Comp. Laws 1929, § 9561 et seq. (Stat. Ann. § 19.411 et seq.), it proceeded to sell the collateral. It bid it in for $10,000 and applied1 this sum on the note. On December 10, 1938, suit was instituted against Reid for the balance due on the note, and a large judgment was rendered against him for the deficiency. Appellant also had transferred $5,000 of participation certificates as personal property to one Arthur J. Holstein, who, together with his wife, were made parties defendant herein. No question is raised by appellant as to the regularity of this transfer. It was stated at the hearing that Holstein had transferred his interest to another party.

*113 On May 22, 1941, the Union Guardian Trust Company received a letter signed by certificate holders Arthur J. Holstein, Hobart B. Hoyt, Collateral Liquidation, Inc., and Elliott S. Nichols stating'that they were the owners and holders of the certificates of participation issued pursuant to the trust agreement and asking that the property be conveyed to them as tenants in common in proportion to their respective interests as evidenced by said certificates. They were entitled to such a deed under the terms of the trust agreement. John M. Reid, however, claims that he still is entitled to his interest in the real estate. He demanded that he be made a party to the deed to the extent of the certificates that had been issued to him and which Collateral Liquidation, Inc., claimed to own.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 383, 311 Mich. 107, 1945 Mich. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-guardian-trust-co-v-nichols-mich-1945.