Upell v. Bergman

224 N.W. 404, 246 Mich. 82, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 846
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1929
DocketDocket No. 28, Calendar No. 34,037.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 404 (Upell v. Bergman) 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
Upell v. Bergman, 224 N.W. 404, 246 Mich. 82, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 846 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

North, C. J.

The defendants William Bergman and Emma Bergman, husband and wife, were the owners of the Park hotel in the village of Orion, Michigan. They conveyed it to the defendant John Coromilas, and in part consideration received a deed of his equity in four houses and lots in the city of Detroit, which are referred to herein as the Doris avenue property. Shortly after this transaction, and on to wit, September 15, 1925, Mr. and Mrs. Bergman traded the equity in this Doris avenue property as part payment of the contract price of the Arlington hotel, also located in the village of Orion, and then owned by the plaintiffs Mr. and Mrs. Dp ell. In this transaction the price of the Arlington hotel was fixed at $18,000 and the equity in the Doris avenue property at $10,500. Nothing has been paid on the balance of the contract price. Both exchanges of property were brought about through a real estate agency composed of defendants Taylor and Brillinger. The defendant Townsend is charged in the amended bill of complaint with conspiring with other defendants in perpetrating the alleged fraud *85 hereinafter set forth. Mr. and Mrs. Robertson, also named as defendants, were formerly owners of the Doris avenue property. As to three of the lots constituting this property, the record title is defective ,in that the deeds to grantees subsequent to Mr. and Mrs. Robertson have not been recorded. To secure payment for materials furnished in improving these properties, Mr. and Mrs. Robertson conveyed these four lots to the Hartwick Lumber Company. The instruments thus given were in form warranty deeds but in fact were mortgages constituting a separate lien on each of the lots amounting to $1,527. A suit was instituted by the lumber company to foreclose these liens and a lis pendens was filed June 9, 1925; foreclosure was followed by sale on March 3, 1926. The commissioners’ deeds were recorded March 19, 1926.

By this bill of complaint the plaintiffs seek rescission of the transaction between themselves and Mr. and Mrs. Bergman; and also to be reimbursed for $900 claimed to have been paid by the plaintiffs to Taylor and Brillinger as commission for services in consummating the deal. This relief is sought upon the following alleged fraudulent misrepresentations claimed to have been made to the plaintiffs by the defendant Brillinger: (1) that he (Brillinger) was well acquainted with the Doris avenue property, that it was worth more than was being asked for it, and that each of the four places was well worth $10,500; (2) that the cost of completing two of the places which were unfinished would be $450, when in fact the cost was very much more; (3) that the Hartwick Lumber Company “had a claim against each place in the sum of $1,529 for lumber * * * hut that they had filed no lien or suit against the property,” and were willing to wait for their money until the *86 plaintiff could refinance the property; (4) that plaintiffs supposed the real estate agency, composedof the defendants Taylor and Brillinger, was acting solely in behalf of the plaintiffs in consummating the transaction with Mr. and Mrs. Bergman, when in fact the, men composing this agency were also acting for and in behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Bergman and conspired with the defendants Bergman, Coromilas and Townsend to induce the plaintiffs by misrepresentations to accept the Doris avenue property at a valuation greatly in excess of its actual worth; and (5) relief is also sought on the ground that no legal conveyance was made of their title to the Doris avenue property by the defendants Bergman to the plaintiffs, but instead the names of the plaintiffs were wrongfully substituted in the place of the names of Mr. and Mrs. Bergman as grantees in the deed given to them by the defendant Coromilas, and that this was done with the fraudulent intention of malting it appear that Coromilas was plaintiffs’ grantor.

As to the defendants Coromilas and Townsend, a cause of action in behalf of the plaintiffs is not alleged in the bill of complaint except as they are rather indefinitely included in the conspiracy charged. This charge is not established by the proofs. The transaction with which Coromilas and Townsend were concerned was completely closed with Mr. and Mrs. Bergman before the trade was consummated out of which . this suit arises, and which was a matter in which neither Coromilas or Townsend had any, interest so far as appears from the testimony.

Neither does the record contain any proof which justifies malting the Hartwick Lumber Company a party defendant. No complaint is made as to the validity of their claim or the regularity of the pro *87 ceedings by which it was foreclosed. The bill contains no prayer for relief against the Hartwick Lumber Company or the defendants Mr. and Mrs. Robertson. No relief was granted in the lower court against any of these defendants, the appeal as perfected does not involve their rights, and hence we are not concerned with them in this review.

In disposing of the case, we are concerned only in ascertaining what relief, if any, the plaintiffs are entitled to have against the defendants Mr. and Mrs. Bergman, Dur Taylor, and Clark W. Brillinger, or either of them, and this on the ground of fraud and deceit alleged in the bill of complaint. Brillinger, as a member of the firm of Taylor and Brillinger, was acting as the agent of the plaintiffs, and also of Mr. and Mrs. Bergman in this exchange of property. If Brillinger perpetrated a fraud on the plaintiffs in the manner alleged in their bill of complaint, the Bergmans, as principals, must be held responsible for the act of their agent even though they were not aware of his fraudulent conduct. They cannot profit by his fraud. Chaffee v. Raymond, 241 Mich. 395.

We have given the record careful consideration, and are of the opinion that there was fraud and misrepresentation which justified the trial judg.e in granting relief to the plaintiffs. They were inexperienced in matters of the character here involved, they relied upon the judgment of Brillinger, and, knowing of this, he deliberately deceived them by the misrepresentation that each of the four places constituting the Boris avenue property was worth $10,500. Before the transaction was closed the plaintiffs went to Detroit and looked at the property for which they were about to trade; but notwithstanding this we think the record shows they relied *88 upon and acted upon Brillinger’s statement as to value. Mr. Upell testified:

“We went with Mr. Brillinger to see this Detroit property. I told Mr. Brillinger I knew nothing of real estate values in Detroit at the time. He told me they were four wonderful places and we ought to do well with them. Mr. Brillinger said he knew the places were well worth $10,500 for each place.”

Brillinger also deceived them as to the condition of the title to this property. Notwithstanding his testimony to the contrary, it is incredible that Brillinger had consummated the trade between Mr. and Mrs. Bergman and John Coromilas without learning that the Hartwick Lumber Company had a mortgage in the form of a warranty deed against each of the four places on Doris avenue, and that a decree of foreclosure had been taken.

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 404, 246 Mich. 82, 1929 Mich. LEXIS 846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upell-v-bergman-mich-1929.