Wineman v. Phillips

53 N.W. 168, 93 Mich. 223, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 969
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 53 N.W. 168 (Wineman v. Phillips) 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
Wineman v. Phillips, 53 N.W. 168, 93 Mich. 223, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 969 (Mich. 1892).

Opinion

McGrath, J.

On the 4th day of January, 1886, defendants leased from complainant the Madison House, at Detroit, for five years and three months, at an annual rental of $2,400 for the first three years, and $2,700 for the rest of the term, payable in monthly installments in advance. Defendants at the same time purchased from complainant the hotel furniture for $1,650, paying $800 down, and agreeing to pay $100 per month after July 1, 1886, until the whole was paid. The lease provided that defendants would pay all water taxes and assessments; keep the plate glass as well as the hotel effects and furniture insured for complainant's use and benefit; and, to secure the performance of the conditions and agreements of the lease on their part, defendants- should execute a chattel mortgage upon the effects and furniture purchased, and a real-estate mortgage upon certain real estate owned by defendant Mary Ann Phillips, in Jackson. The lease provided that it should not be assigned without complainant's consent. The agreement provided that, when the furniture should be fully. paid for, the real-estate mortgage should be discharged. The lease was executed and acknowledged by complainant and the defendants on the day of its date, and defendants went immediately into possession under it.

The mortgages provided for in the lease were afterwards, on January 20, 1886, executed and delivered. The condition of the real-estate mortgage was the payment of the [225]*225balance due upon tbe furniture, and tbat of tbe chattel mortgage was the performance of the conditions of the lease. Defendants occupied the premises until November 15, 1887, at which time they were in arrears for rent, and had made no further payments upon the furniture. On that date defendants, by a written instrument, assigned to Murray Dalziel the lease aforesaid, and defendants' interest in the hotel furniture, subject to all the terms and conditions of the said lease, and subject to all liens and incumbrances existing thereon. Dalziel agreed to pay to defendants $1,000, of which $500 was to be paid down, and $500 in two years, and also assumed and agreed to pay—

“All such rent upon said premises as may be now in arrears, and all liabilities against the said f Madison House,' so called, created and existing on hotel account, and accruing within the period of one year last past; and the said second party hereto does hereby further assume and agree to carry out and perform all the conditions of said lease entered into on said 4th day of January, 1886, between said second [first] and third parties hereto, and to pay the rent as therein provided, subject, however, to such modifications as may be made in respect thereto by said second and third parties, and all liabilities existing on account of the sale of the furniture as in said lease provided, in accordance with the terms and conditions of said lease, and in all respects relieve the said Richard G. Phillips and Mary Ann Phillips from their obligations in respect thereto.''

The said assignment was executed by defendants, Dalziel, and complainant, and contained the following clause:

“And the said Henry Wineman, party of the third part hereto, does hereby assent to the assignment and transfer of said lease by said Phillips and wife to him (said Dalziel), as above provided.''

On the same date complainant entered into a written agreement with Dalziel, reducing the rent to $150 per [226]*226month. Dalziel occupied till July 1, 1888, at which time he left the city and went to Jackson. It is now claimed that he, at that time, surrendered the house to complainant, and that complainant leased to one Walsh; but the answer sets up that Dalziel, at that time, made some kind of a transfer of the said hotel property, including the said furniture and fixtures, to one Walsh, who took possession and occupied the same for one month and more.

On or about the 1st of August, 1888, Dalziel came back to Detroit, and again took charge of the house, at a reduced rent of $30 per week. Dalziel remained until the last of December, 1888, and then surrendered possession to complainant, who foreclosed the chattel mortgage, and at the foreclosure sale bid in the hotel effects and furniture for $1,000, credited that amount upon arrearages for rent, and filed his bill to foreclose the mortgage upon the Jack-, son property for the amount unpaid upon the furniture.

The defendants insist:

1. That, by agreement between the parties, they were to be released from liability, and Dalziel was to be substituted, at the time of the assignment to Dalziel.

2. That when Dalziel, August 1, 1888, took possession, it was expressly agreed that the then existing indebtedness should be canceled, and the defendants released from liability, and that at that time Dalziel made a new contract for the purchase of the furniture, at and for the price of $1,000.

The answer does not set up any agreement to release defendants, entered into at the time of the transfer to Dalziel, but sets up that, on July 1, Dalziel made a transfer of the hotel property to Walsh; that Walsh took possession and paid the July rent; that afterwards complainant and Dalziel arranged that the old lease should be canceled, and the hotel property should be surrendered to and become the property of complainant; that, in consideration thereof, [227]*227complainant should cancel the old indebtedness; that complainant should oust Walsh, and complainant should make a new lease to Dalziel; that said arrangement was carried out; that Dalziel continued in possession under said lease, as tenant of both hotel and furniture, until December following, when he surrendered the property to complainant, who has since sold it, and leased the premises as his own; that in making said settlement and arrangement of August 1, 1888, defendant Mary Ann Phillips—

“Assumed, in the absence of her husband, to act and agree for them both, and that what she did in the making of said settlement was assented to by her said husband only with and upon the express understanding that the said settlement included the cancellation of the said indebtedness of $1,350 and interest, as well as of the demands growing out of the said lease, and not otherwise.”

The first claim is entirely inconsistent with this answer. Dalziel was the son-in-law of defendants, and, although not his answer, it was made after full consultation with him. Mrs. Phillips testified that she was present when the arrangement of August 1, 1888, was entered into between Wineman and Dalziel, and with reference to it she says:

“We were talking about the AValshes, and Mr. Wineman said that the Walshes would never suit his house; he didn’t like their character. And I told him, no, I didn’t think they would suit him, myself; and he told Mr. Dalziel he would very much like him to take the house back again. Dalziel said he would, provided that I would turn over all the furniture to Wineman, and provided he would release the Phillips’ of all the indebtedness and incumbrance; then, if he would do that, he would give Wineman $1,000, and $25 a week rent. Mr. Wineman said he could not take the $25 a week rent, but he would $30, and Mr. Dalziel said that he did not believe he could give him $30, but it appears they consented to it afterwards.”

Dalziel says:

“Mrs. Phillips said she wanted that part distinctly [228]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 N.W. 168, 93 Mich. 223, 1892 Mich. LEXIS 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wineman-v-phillips-mich-1892.