Vollmer v. Coenis

15 N.W.2d 654, 309 Mich. 319, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 333
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1944
DocketDocket No. 10, Calendar No. 42,721.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 N.W.2d 654 (Vollmer v. Coenis) 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
Vollmer v. Coenis, 15 N.W.2d 654, 309 Mich. 319, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 333 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Defendant John Coenis purchased lot 3 of block 2, Warren’s Addition, Bay City, Michigan, and received a deed therefor. He also purchased on land contract lots 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6 of block 2 of the same subdivision. This property is located just within the corporate limits of Bay City and fronts on a four-lane highway leading to Saginaw.

Plaintiff Vollmer was employed by Coenis to build a large brick restaurant on lot 3 and to make other improvements including the erection of a garage and the moving of a barbecue stand from Saginaw and placing it on one of the other lots, all for a consideration of $16,400, part of which was paid in cash on hand and part with the proceeds of a mortgage of $9,000 given to the Peoples’ American State Bank. .Defendants gave plaintiff a note and a mortgage on lot 3 heretofore described for $3,239, the balance unpaid. Defendants owed other amounts, including sums due for fixtures being purchased on title-retention contract. They also were indebted for lumber to the Bressler Lumber Company, of which plaintiff was president. A large sum was also due from them to an ice cream company. Because of their inability to keep up the payments, defendants as first parties on the 20th of November, 1934, entered into an agreement with plaintiff as second party and the ice cream company as third *321 party in which it is set forth that defendants are the owners of an interest in the six lots, that a building was erected on lot 3, that certain personal property was chattel-mortgaged to the ice cream company and to a soda fountain company, and that certain debts were owing to the various parties including the Bressler Lumber Company. It provided for monthly payments to be made by defendants to the various creditors including the mortgagee bank. Specific amounts were set for each month’s payment to the various creditors. The agreement further provided that:

“To secure the faithful performance of the payments above specified, said first parties have this day drafted and executed to Arthur Vollmer a quitclaim deed of the property above described, which deed has been placed in escrow with Henry T. Robinson, and the said first parties hereby agree with the said Arthur Vollmer and other parties to this transaction that should they fail to make the monthly payments above specified, then the said Arthur Vollmer may make proof of such failure to the said Henry T. Robinson and the said Henry T. Robinson shall forthwith deliver said quitclaim deed to said Arthur Vollmer and the said Arthur Vollmer shall own said property free and clear of claims of said first parties, and said first parties expressly waive all benefit of any laws or statutes, and hereby acknowledge that the said Arthur Vollmer shall own said property free and clear of any claim on their part upon their default.

“In consideration of the posting of the deed and the payments to be made by first parties, said M & B Ice Cream Company, for itself and as agent for the Knight Soda Fountain Company, agrees to withhold foreclosure of its chattel mortgage. It is also understood and agreed that People’s American State Bank, while not binding itself in any way or in any *322 way agreeing’ not to foreclose, will be satisfied with its payment.

“It is further agreed on the part of Arthur Vollmer that in consideration of the payments made to him, he will withhold foreclosure on his second mortgage, and will likewise withhold the foreclosing of the land contract held by the Bressler Lumber Company.”

The agreement further provided that the creditors might audit defendants’ books, and the latter agreed not to further incumber the property nor to execute a transfer without applying the full consideration therefrom to the debts. In the event the business should make larger sums than contemplated, the parties agreed to prorate the increase among the creditors. This agreement was to extend for a period of two years except on default of defendants. It further stated that failure to make payments constituted grounds for plaintiff to take over the property and receive delivery of the deed from the escrow agent, as stated in the quoted paragraph. A quitclaim deed running to plaintiff was duly executed and deposited with the escrow agent, Henry T. Robinson, who was an officer of the mortgagee bank. Defendants failed to keep up the payments and thereupon the deed to plaintiff was recorded and he took over the property. Plaintiff thus not only became the title owner to the property, on which he had a second mortgage, but the record discloses that he took possession of the property and rented it to others. While the record is not at all clear, it indicates that the bank foreclosed its mortgage and the parties having liens repossessed themselves of the personal property.

Plaintiff brought the instant suit on his second mortgage note. Defendants claim that the deed to plaintiff operated as a merger of the second mort *323 gage with the fee estate and not only disposed of the second mortgage lien but also satisfied the mortgage debt in accordance with the understanding at the time the papers were executed.

Plaintiff complains of the fact that defendants did not clearly give notice in their first plea of the defense of payment by the giving of the deed. The supplemental answer, filed almost two years before the case was heard, undoubtedly supplied this deficiency. The order granting leave to file a supplemental answer was never signed by the circuit judge, because, it is claimed, of the judge’s illness and his subsequent death. However, it was approved in form by the attorney for plaintiff. The case was tried as if this order had been made and we will so consider it (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14149 [Stat. Ann. §27.843]; Court Rule No. 72 [1933]).

Plaintiff’s testimony was hesitant and evasive. In some manner the deed to plaintiff, which was deposited with Mr. Robinson as escrow agent, was withdrawn from him, duly recorded, and at the time of the trial was in the possession of plaintiff’s attorney. The return address to which the register of deeds mailed the instrument was written in pencil on the back of the deed and, significantly, designated plaintiff’s office. It was shown that the handwriting resembled that of plaintiff’s daughter who looked after his office. During another phase of the trial, plaintiff admitted that he had the keys to part of the premises though at first he denied it.

Strenuous objection was made to testimony that was offered by defendants to show that plaintiff agreed to release defendants from all further liability if he became the owner of defendants ’ equity in the premises. The trial judge upheld the objection to this testimony upon the grounds that the written agreement was complete and unambiguous *324 in its terms, and that parol evidence could not be received to show the prior negotiations between the parties. Because he found nothing in the contract itself that' provided for the extinguishment of the debt upon the delivery of the deed by the escrow agent, he allowed recovery on the note. The deed, however, was absolute in form. According to the written agreement, upon default - plaintiff was entitled to receive from the escrow agent the deed to the property free and clear of all claims of defendants including all benefits of any laws or statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.W.2d 654, 309 Mich. 319, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vollmer-v-coenis-mich-1944.