Widner v. Olmstead

14 Mich. 124, 1866 Mich. LEXIS 11
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 Mich. 124 (Widner v. Olmstead) 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
Widner v. Olmstead, 14 Mich. 124, 1866 Mich. LEXIS 11 (Mich. 1866).

Opinion

Christiancy J.

These two cases being closely connected in their facts, will be considered together.

The complainant, who is the wife of Moses B. Widner, was, on the 22d day of February, 1854, the owner in fee of an eighty acre lot, in the township of Huron, in the county of Wayne, upon which there was a steam saw .mill, erected mainly with her money, but the engine and boiler in which seem to have been obtained on the credit of the husband, with certain chattel mortgages thereon, as collateral security. On that day the husband in his own name entered into a certain contract by deed with defendant Olmstead, by which he, “for himself, his heirs, administrators and assigns,” purports to sell and convey to Olmstead, “ his heirs, assigns and admini[129]*129strators, the equal undivided half of his steam saw mill, together with all its fixtures, tools, implements anti appurtenances thereto belonging,” describing its location, and “ further agrees to lease and let the equal one undivided half of the mill-yard, consisting of three acres of ground, to be used by said Olmstead as long as the premises shall be used for a mill, which premises shall always be free to be used in common by either or both parties, so long as either or both parties shall want to occupy the ground with a mill; upon the following conditions, viz: the said Olmstead agrees for himself, his heirs, assigns and administrators, to pay to said Widner, his heirs and assigns, the sum of nine hundred and fifty dollars ($950) as follows; one hundred and fifty dollars at this date; secondly, he is to pay J. & J. Brainard the amount due for the boiler now in said mill, supposed to amount to about four hundred and fifty dollars ($450); thirdly, two hundred dollars ($200) to be paid by the first day of June next, and the residue to be paid on, or before the first day of October next. It is further understood by both parties that they be, on and after this date, equal partners in the said mill, without hindrance or opposition, one from the other; they are to share equal and alike, both as to gain and loss, and to be at equal expense in running said mill.”

Olmstead and complainant’s husband went into business and carried on said mill as partners, under said agreement, for some time, and then rented it to their sons.

On the 10th day of September, 1859, complainant and her husband entered into a contract with the defendant, David Lane, by which upon certain terms and conditions they purport to convey to Lane the other undivided half of said saw mill, machinery, &c.; and agreed to rent him the undivided half of two acres of the ground on which the mill stands, for which Lane agrees to put the mill in order, and to pay one thousand dollars in sawing, as therein specially provided. This agreement,'however, though awkwardly worded, when [130]*130fairly construed, may perhaps amount merely to a conditional sale, to become absolute only on payment by Lane.

After this conveyance to Lane, he and Olmstead ran the mill together, and finding the old engine (originally in the mill at and before the sale to Olmstead) worthless of unfit for use, sold the same or some parts of it as old iron, for which they realized $42, and purchased a new engine from defendant, Vanderbilt, January 16, 1861, for which they agreed to pay $550 in instalments, (none of which had become due when Vanderbilt’s answers in these cases were filed,) and for which they executed a chattel mortgage in the usual form upon the engine so purchased, and also upon the steam boiler in said mill with all the tools, fixtures and appurtenances therein. It may be loosely inferred from the mortgage and the evidence, though nothing is said upon the point in the pleadings, that the boiler was the same originally in the mill before the sale to Olmstead; but the bill does not place complainant’s lien for purchase money upon any such ground, nor upon any ground different from that upon the engine and tools; nor is there any allegation that it was attached to the freehold, in any other manner than the engine.

The bill in the first entitled case is for the enforcement of complainant’s lien for the purchase money claimed to be due from Olmstead under his contract above set foi’th; and the object of the bill in the second case is for the enforcement of a similar lien for the purchase price due from Lane under the contract with him; treating the lien in each case as an equitable mortgage. Lane is only made a party to the first bill under an allegation that he claims some interest under Olmstead, and is charged in common with Olmstead with having sold the old engine and iron, and replaced them with others, and with the intention of removing the engine, machinery and boiler, and even the mill, from the premises to avoid complainant’s lien, and to the prejudice of her security. Olmstead is made a party in the second bill only as claiming some interest under Lane, and charged in common with Lane with [131]*131the design of removing the engine, &c. Vanderbilt in both cases is made a party only in respect to his chattel mortgage, and the bills claim that the engine and other mortgaged property had become and were a part of the real estate, and subject to complainant’s prior lien for the purchase money; but no distinction is made between the engine and the other mortgaged property. Both bills pray for the enforcement of her lien for purchase money, as prior to any lien of Vanderbilt, and for a decree of foreclosure and sale as in case of the foreclosure of mortgages ; and each prays for an injunction to restrain said Lane and Olmstead, and all acting under them, from removing said mill and machinery of selling the same. They also pray for an injunction against Vanderbilt to restrain him from removing or detaching from the lot “ the property, tools and fixtures” mortgaged to him. The remedy by injunction, here sought, is merely subsidiary to the main object of the bill — the enforcement of her lien as a security for the purchase money; and no proper ground is laid for an injunction as an independent remedy. Her right to the injunction will therefore depend upon her right to enforce in these suits her lien for the purchase money, and must stand or fall with it.

Olmstead answers both bills, relying upon the conveyance by comjDlainant’s husband and his agreement therein as above set forth, claiming the validity of all its provisions, and insisting that complainant cannot affirm a part of it without affirming the whole; alleges full payment of the purchase money; that nothing is due thereon; specifies the various payments and sums claimed to apply in the nature of offsets, — all of which would properly apply on the purchase money, either as payment or offsets, if the provision for a partnership between him and complainant’s husband be held valid as to her; admits that he went into partnership with the husband under the agreement; denies that he has threatened, or intends to remove the mill or machinery; avers that the matters growing out of said contract, between him and the husband, have not been settled, that upon a just settlement of the same a large [132]*132sum would be due to him, Olmstead; insists that it appears from the bill that Moses B. Widner, the husband of complainant, is a necessary party, and prays the benefit of a demurrer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Mich. 124, 1866 Mich. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/widner-v-olmstead-mich-1866.