Wandel v. Wandel

57 N.W.2d 468, 336 Mich. 126, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 458
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1953
DocketDocket 21, Calendar 45,553
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 57 N.W.2d 468 (Wandel v. Wandel) 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
Wandel v. Wandel, 57 N.W.2d 468, 336 Mich. 126, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 458 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Dethmers, C. J.

John H. Wandel, deceased, was, in his lifetime, the owner of a 197-acre farm, the subject of this litigation. Defendants are husband and wife, the husband and both plaintiffs being the sons and sole heirs at law of deceased. In June of 1946, deceased conveyed the farm to defendants. Validity of that conveyance is not here involved. Defendants testified, over plaintiffs’ objection, that in the fall of 1946 they intended to take a trip and, desiring that decedent should be protected and not left without a home if anything happened to them on the trip, *128 they executed a deed of the farm to him and read it to him; that they then placed the deed in an envelope on which, after sealing, defendant Eva wrote, “In case of our death this is the property of John H. Wandel” (deceased), signed Henry and Eva; that before leaving on the trip, and also on subsequent occasions when they left on like excursions, they placed the envelope, containing the deed, in a desk in the bedroom in their home occupied by deceased, where he could get it in the event of their deaths, and apprised him thereof on each occasion; that upon their return from such trips defendants always removed the deed from the desk and returned it to their own strongbox; that all this was done with deceased’s full knowledge; that shortly before his death in February of 1949, at his request, defendant Eva burned the deed and envelope.

After deceased’s death plaintiffs instituted discovery proceedings in probate court, requiring defendants to answer interrogatories put to them concerning the execution and alleged delivery of said deed by them. Their testimony, reduced to writing and signed and sworn to by them, was made a part of the probate file in the estate of John H. Wandel, deceased. Thereafter plaintiffs brought this suit seeking a decree restoring the destroyed deed and decreeing the farm to belong to the heirs at law of deceased.

On trial the plaintiffs offered and there was received into evidence the probate file containing defendants’ testimony given in probate court. Thereafter plaintiffs objected to substantially the same testimony, given by defendants orally as witnesses at the trial, on the ground of its relating to matters equally within the knowledge of the deceased. Defendants were allowed to testify over plaintiffs’ ob *129 jection and the latter assign error. The very proofs objected to were already before the court by reason of plaintiffs’ offer of the probate files. They also touched on the subject matter in cross-examination of defendants on trial. Plaintiffs may not open the door and close it again at will. See In re Bennett’s Estate, 52 Mich 415; Beardslee v. Reeves, 76 Mich 661.

Was there delivery of the deed by defendants to deceased?

Plaintiffs cite Dyer v. Skadan, 128 Mich 348 (92 Am St Rep 461); Commercial State Savings Bank v. Bird, 254 Mich 418; Tabor v. Tabor, 136 Mich 255; Dawson v. Hall, 2 Mich 390; and Hojnacki v. Hojnacki, 281 Mich 636, for the proposition that a deed cannot be delivered to the grantee in escrow or subject to some condition not expressed therein, but that such delivery effectuates a present transfer of title to the grantee free from condition. Also cited are Wipfler v. Wipfler, 153 Mich 18 (16 LRA NS 941), and Tabacs v. Takacs, 317 Mich 72, as holding that delivery cannot be made to the grantee subject to recall unless it is expressly so provided in the deed and that without such provision the delivery results in the deed taking immediate effect. These propositions of law, sound though they be, are beside the point inasmuch as the primary question raised is whether defendants ever delivered the deed to decedent at all.

Plaintiffs contend that defendants’ burning of the deed at decedent’s request disclosed that both parties considered it to be under his control. His request was as consistent with refusal to accept delivery. Plaintiffs also point to the conduct of parties after execution of the deed, claiming that it was inconsistent with ownership in defendants and, therefore, persuasive that the parties considered delivery to have been consummated. Stressed is divi *130 sion of income from the farm between the parties, decedent’s payment of taxes, insurance and 1/2 of other farm expenses, and his making of repairs and improvements on the farm. Defendants point out, however, that decedent lived with them, that they took care of him, that they were in possession and worked the farm, made substantial improvements thereon at their own expense and effort, and had the taxes assessed in their name. In view of all the facts in the case and the relationship between the parties their acts in the above respects were not necessarily inconsistent with ownership of the farm by defendants. Statements by decedent that he wanted the farm to belong to defendants and asking defendants’ son-in-law to act as administrator of his estate (consisting of considerable property aside from the farm in question), et cetera, do not appeal to us as disclosing a belief on his part that he owned the farm.

In Schuffert v. Grote, 88 Mich 650 (26 Am St Rep 316), a father executed a deed of real estate to his son, handed it to him and stated that he would not like it to be recorded until after his death, whereupon the son handed it back to him saying that he did not want possession of property until after the father’s death. The father retained possession of the real estate and of the deed, which he later destroyed. Held, that the deed was not delivered and conveyed no title to the son. Decision was predicated on a finding, equally appropriate to the facts in the instant case, that, “It was clearly not the intention of the grantor in this case to convey to his son either possession or title until his death.” This Court said, “The object of a delivery is to indicate an intent on the part of the grantor to give effect to the instrument.” Such was not the intent of the defendants in this case at any time.

*131 In Hynes v. Halstead, 282 Mich 627, where grantor placed a deed in the hands of an escrow agent for delivery after his death to grantee, we held that any act presumptively a delivery of a deed will not he a delivery if the intent to make it such is wanting; that to constitute delivery the deed must be given to another with intention to place it beyond grantor’s recall and to vest title presently and unequivocally; that the act of depositing a deed with a third party, to he delivered by him to grantee after grantor’s death, would be testamentary in character and could not be consummated by a deed; that the test of conveyance is whether it can be said that delivery of the deed was such as to convey a present interest in the land. Applied to the facts in the instant case these tests impel to the conclusion that there was no delivery. To the same effect see Noakes v. Noakes, 290 Mich 231, and Pollock v. McCarty,

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.W.2d 468, 336 Mich. 126, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wandel-v-wandel-mich-1953.