Weaver v. Van Akin

38 N.W. 677, 71 Mich. 69, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 576
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 N.W. 677 (Weaver v. Van Akin) 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
Weaver v. Van Akin, 38 N.W. 677, 71 Mich. 69, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 576 (Mich. 1888).

Opinions

Sherwood, C. J.

The bill of complaint in this case is filed to obtain a decree to declare a mortgage made by defendant Caroline Weaver, wife of the complainant, to Elihu L. Clark, to be in effect a mortgage made by all the defendants, and to foreclose it as such, and to make all the defendants liable for any deficiency that may arise after a sale of the mortgaged premises to pay the mortgage debt.

The property was originally owned by Paulina Fish, and known as the Hudson Farm.” Before she died, she devised and bequeathed all of her estate to the defendant Edwin Hadley, in trust for the following purposes:

1. To pay debts and funeral expenses.

2. To attend to and manage the affairs and interests of the estate during the trusteeship.

3. To receive and apply, during his trusteeship, the rents and profits of the Hudson farm, or so much thereof as should be required for that purpose, to the support of her sister, Betsy A. Vining.

4. To raise and advance, from any part of the estate, the necessary sums to relieve the wants and necessities of Caroline Hertzler and Phoebe Fish (nieces of the testatrix), and to invest any balance remaining until said Phoebe (who is the daughter of said Caroline) should become of age.

5. And when said Phoebe should become twenty-one, and after the discharge of such just dues as should then be against the estate, to convey all, with said Hudson farm, to said Caroline and Phoebe, in equal shares.

Hpon the death of the testatrix, in 1872, the will was probated, and the administration of the estate was com[71]*71mitted to said Hadley, who entered at once upon the execution of his trusts as such administrator, and as trustee under the will; hut no debts were ever proved against the estate of said Paulina, nor is it known that there were any. After probate of the will, and prior to the time when said Phoebe became of age, Hadley paid a considerable amount out of the estate to said Phoebe and Caroline, and also paid a considerable amount of the rents received by him from said farm to said Betsy A. during • her lifetime; but he never settled said estate in the probate court, nor did he ever report to said court any of his proceedings in the administration of the estate, nor render any account, as trustee under said will, to any one, nor has he made any settlement of said trusts, but the same remain open and unsettled; and he has never conveyed the' legal title to said farm to said Caroline and Phoebe, or either of them, or to any other person.

May 11, 1875, said Phoebe, while yet a minor, but in contemplation of marriage, made a voluntary conveyance of her interest in said Hudson farm to said Caroline, her mother, and in October, 1875, Phoebe attained her majority. November 24, 1875, Hadley represented to Caroline and Phoebe that it was necessary to raise 82,250 by mortgage upon said farm, to pay off the claims of certain heirs upon the land; and they, believing such loan and mortgage to be necessary for that purpose, consented thereto. Said Hadley then borrowed the money of one Clark, to be secured by Caroline’s mortgage on the farm, upon his representation to Clark that, by said will and the deed from Phoebe, the said Caroline was then the sole owner of the premises; and thereupon, for the purpose of securing said loan, the said Caroline, on November 24, 1875, by the procurement of said Hadley, and with the full knowledge and concurrence of said Phoebe, gave her note and a mortgage for 82,250 upon said farm to said Clark, the execution of [72]*72which mortgage by said Caroline was in the presence of said Phoebe and said Hadley, who were the subscribing witnesses thereto, and the same was delivered by Hadley to Clark.

February 2, 1877, Caroline reconveyed to Phoebe, by quitclaim deed, the undivided half of the farm previously conveyed by Phoebe to her, and on February 3, 1877, sold and conveyed her own undivided half of the farm to said Phoebe, subject to said mortgage to Clark, which mortgage the said Phoebe, in the agreement of purchase and in and by the deed of conveyance to her, assumed and agreed to pay.

December, 1879, the said mortgage being wholly unpaid, a foreclosure thereof by advertisement was commenced by Clark, and on 'March 13, 1880, the farm was purchased by and conveyed to said Clark, upon the foreclosure sale, for $3j409.71. April 29, 1880, Clark died; and by his will, which was duly proved, his interest in said mortgaged premises, and in said note and mortgage, were vested in his widow, Isabella T. Clark. The farm Avas never redeemed from said sale, nor has said mortgage ever been paid or discharged, except through said foreclosure. Complainant has purchased, and by quitclaim deeds of May 3 and November 9, 1881, has received a conveyance, from Mrs. Clark, of all the interest acquired by her husband, Clark, under said mortgage in said farm.

Said Phoebe has been in possession of the whole of said premises ever since the execution to her of said deed of February 3, 1877, and still keeps and retains the same, and refuses to pay the said debt secured by said mortgage to said Clark ; and, because of her infancy at the time of the execution of her deed of May 11, 1875, denies that it conveyed any interest in said farm to said Caroline; denies that the mortgage to Clark covered any more than Caroline’s half of the farm; and denies that complainant has acquired any title to said farm by virtue of said [73]*73deeds from Mrs. Isabella T. Clark, or any interest in said mortgage, or the debt secured thereby.

The theory of the case set up in the bill is that the will of Paulina Fish vested in Hadley an absolute legal title in fee-simple to the Hudson farm, and at the same time vested the equitable title in the nieces, Caroline and Phcebe ; that the legal title to the land still remains in Hadley, for the reasons—

1. That the trusts of the will have not been closed.

2. That the legal estate has never passed from him in the manner provided by the will,- — -that is, by a deed of conveyance.

3. That the legal estate vested in him was such that it -could be divested by him only by a conveyance in writing.

That Phoebe’s deed of May 11, 1875, conveyed her equitable interest in the farm to Caroline, and, when Caroline executed the mortgage to Clark, she held the equitable title to the whole, while the legal title to the land remained vested in Hadley, hence, as to her, it was an ■equitable mortgage merely; that it was an equitable mortgage on the part of Hadley, because he assented to it, procured it to be executed, delivered it, represented to Clark that Caroline was the owner of the land, and had the right to make it, procured the loan of money upon it, and intended it as a security for the loan; that, if Phosbe then had any interest in the farm, it was an equitable mortgage on her part, because she assented to it, and assisted in its execution by witnessing it, and thereby held out to Clark that Caroline was the owner of the farm, -and had the right to mortgage it; that, being an equitable mortgage merely, it could be foreclosed only in chancery, and Clark’s attempted foreclosure at law was ineffectual to bar the equity of redemption; but his statutory foreclosure and purchase at the sale, and the subsequent ■deed of the farm to complainant, operated as an assign[74]

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.W. 677, 71 Mich. 69, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-van-akin-mich-1888.