Ushaw v. Mallett

31 N.W. 69, 64 Mich. 45, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 667
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 69 (Ushaw v. Mallett) 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
Ushaw v. Mallett, 31 N.W. 69, 64 Mich. 45, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 667 (Mich. 1887).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

The bill in this case is filed to compel the ■defendant to convey to complainant, by a good and sufficient deed, 50 acres of land off the north end of the east half of the north-west quarter of section 20, township 6 south, of range 19 west, lying in the county of Berrien, excepting five acres off the north end thereof, or that, instead thereof, if, ■upon an examination of the case as presented on the pleadings and proofs, the court should be of opinion that the complainant’s equitable rights in the premises would be better protected and enforced by securing to him the payment •of the money he has advanced upon his contract with defendant for the purchase of said land, together with the value -of the improvements he has made thereon, decree may be made accordingly; and that the defendant may be restrained by injunction from making sale of the property until final ■decree is made in the premises, and depriving complainant •of his possession.

The case made by the bill is substantially as follows:

In 1865 the complainant lived in Huron county, Ohio, and •the defendant was a resident of the same county, and owned the land in question, with other parcels lying in Berrien •county. The complainant also owned 40 acres of unimproved land lying on section 21, in the town of Lake, Berrien county. In the same year the complainant removed to Michigan, near the land of defendant in question. This land had a small house and barn upon it, but was otherwise unimproved. Soon .after the complainant with his family arrived, at the request of the defendant the complainant removed with his family jnto the house on defendant’s lot, where he has ever since remained.

[47]*47The bill further avers that he had been upon the land but u short time when defendant .proposed to sell the same to him for $1,000; that not long after this the complainant sold his 40 acres, and took $500 of the purchase money in notes, and thereupon, in the spring of 1867, wrote to the defendant he would treat with him for the purchase of his 45 acres if defendant would take complainant’s said notes towards payment; that on the first of November thereafter, Mallett came to Michigan, and saw complainant, and four days later ■agreed with complainant to sell to him the land for $1,000, and take the aforesaid notes as part payment, and for payment of the remaining sum agreed to take notes made by complainant, secured by mortgage upon the property; that the complainant made the notes and mortgage, and delivered the ■same to the defendant, as promised, and the defendant executed and delivered to the complainant a deed of the land not signed by his wife; that neither said deed nor mortgage has ever been recorded, nor has said mortgage ever been paid; that the complainant is an illiterate, uneducated man, scarcely able to read or write his name, and unacquainted with business; that he was soon informed that the defendant’s deed, unsigned by his wife, did not give him a good title, and thereupon sent the deed to defendant in Ohio to obtain the wife’s signature; that Mallett received the deed, and repeatedly promised complainant that he would have his wife sign it, and return it to complainant, which defendant never did; that complainant made many unsuccessful efforts to secure a return of said deed, and for the want thereof he underwent great anxiety and embarrassment, and was entirely •unable to raise money upon the property to relieve him from his pecuniary engagements, and suffered much damage thereby; that he has never, after repeated importunities, •been able to obtain from defendant any other deed for his property; that in the meantime he has cleared up the land, built a new house thereon, fenced the land, grown a valuable [48]*48orchard, and made the little farm a desirable homestead, and increased its value to $2,500; that he is now 65 years old, and has no other property, and is nearly worn out by hard labor that defendant now seeks to deprive him of his property, absorb the proceeds of his many years of toil, and drive him from his home without any compensation whatever; that,, about six years since, the defendant came to the house of complainant on his farm, and, after making known his business, handed to the wife of complainant the five notes and mortgage which he had given to defendant when he purchased the property, and said to her, “1 make you a present of these;” and when, shortly after, he was seen by complainant, and asked what he meant by so doing, defendant replied,. “You have lost your land.” Complainant then demanded a deed of the land, and told defendant, when that was done,, he was ready to pay him all he owed him,” and would have paid him long before had not defendant withheld the deed from him.

The bill further avers that defendant never asked complainant to pay him anything after the mortgage was-made, but has written to complainant several times, when, requested to return the deed with his wife’s signature, that he would do it, and it should be all right, and that he was-not anxious for his pay; that complainant had always paid the taxes upon the property, which has been regularly assessed to him; that the property is all the home he has for himself and wife in their feebleness and old age, and, until defendant got ready to deprive him of it, he always said to complainant and his wife it was for that purpose he desired them to have it, and he should never make them any trouble; that a few years since a lawyer from Niles called at the house of complainant, when he and his wife were alone, no one else being present, and stated he had a paper he wished them to sign,, so they could get a deed of their land, and that if they signed it they would surely get their deed, but, if complainant and [49]*49his wife did not sign it, they could not get a deed of their home; that, the lawyer being David Bacon, a gentleman with whom the parties had been acquainted for some years, and believing what he told them was true, complainant and his wife signed the paper, without hearing it Tead, and never have known what its purport was, but are informed it was a quitclaim deed of their farm running to said defendant; that from that time complainant has remained in possession of his homestead, expecting his deed from Mallett and wife therefor, until in January, 1881, when he received a letter from said Mallett that he had sold complainant’s farm to a Mr. Millar, and requesting complainant to give said Millar possession when he called for it, and that this was the first intimation he ever received from Mallett that he did not intend to give your orator a deed of his homestead; that said Mallett, by his said attorney, David Bacon, commenced proceedings before a circuit court commissioner to eject complainant from his home; and that complainant verily believes that Mallett, by the means taken and herein stated, intends to deprive complainant of his property.

The bill was filed on the nineteenth day of March, 1881. An order for the defendant’s appearance was published, he being a non-resident of the State. He failed to appear, and the bill was taken as confessed against him on the twenty-seventh day of May following.

On the twentieth day of June, 1881, an order was made vacating the order pro oonfesso. The answer of defendant was filed on the sixth of June. The proofs were taken previous to the twentieth day of September, 1882, and on that day were reported to the court by the circuit court commissioner. On the nineteenth day of November, 1883, it was stipulated by the solicitors of the parties that the cause might be heard on the pleadings and proofs.

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Related

State v. Nugent
56 P. 25 (Washington Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 69, 64 Mich. 45, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ushaw-v-mallett-mich-1887.