Wood v. Potter

289 N.W. 131, 291 Mich. 203, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 780
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1939
DocketDocket No. 45, Calendar No. 40,698.
StatusPublished

This text of 289 N.W. 131 (Wood v. Potter) 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
Wood v. Potter, 289 N.W. 131, 291 Mich. 203, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 780 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

Potter, J.

December 6, 1930, William A. Potter, Otto Gapske, Herbert A. Kurrasch, Julius Schulke, and Claude B. Freese borrowed $3,000 from the Alpena Trust & Savings Bank, giving therefor their promissory note due one year after date secured by a mortgage on certain crypts in a mausoleum in Alpena. The note and mortgage were later assigned to the trustees of the segregated and substituted assets of the Alpena Savings Bank. May 19, 1933, E. P. Smith was appointed conservator of the Alpena Trust & Savings Bank. September 6, 1933, he was appointed managing trustee of the segregated and substituted assets of the bank and became president of the newly organized Alpena Savings Bank. $300 was paid on the principal of the note and interest payments were made up to June 6, 1933. January 25,1937, E. P. Smith notified Potter, *206 one of the makers, that the note had been past due since December 6, 1931, and insisted on a substantial payment on principal and past due interest to February 6,1937. April 19,1937, Potter and Schulke called on Smith for the purpose of telling him to foreclose the mortgage. The parties had an agreement that if defendants could get rid of Kurrasch and Grapske and take over their interest, Smith would settle with them for the balance of the principal due on the note and throw off $693 past due interest. Potter and Schulke then called on Freese, one of the makers, and it was all right with him to begin negotiations with Kurrasch and Grapske.

O. S. Wood was appointed trustee by the commissioner of the State banking department May 17, 1937. He succeeded Smith, June 22, 1937. June 30, 1937, Wood wrote all five makers of the note to see him in relation to the liquidation of the indebtedness. July 15, 1937, Wood wrote Potter, mailing copies to the other defendants, threatening to put the note in the hands of an attorney for collection. Wood was not informed of the agreement with Smith of April 19, 1937. Smith called at Wood’s office and obtained the certificates of ownership of the crypts in the mausoleum, which were in blank, but no settlement was made, and September 1, 1937, Wood wrote Potter that unless he heard from him by September 8, 1937, he would turn the matter over for collection.

September 9,1937, defendants executed the agreement whereby Kurrasch and Grapske released their interest in the crypts to the other defendants. This was one day after the deadline stated in Wood’s letter to Potter.

September 22, 1937, Smith advised Wood of his agreement with defendants and suggested that if *207 Wood did not have authority to carry out this settlement to submit it to the banking commissioner. Wood told Smith the matter was in, the hands of an attorney. September 28, 1937, Potter and Schulke called on Wood and offered to pay the principal if Wood would relieve them of the interest, which he refused to do. He refused to recognize the verbal agreement with Smith which they were ready to carry out. No tender was made either by Potter or Schulke at the time of the $2,700 past due, nor did they advise Wood of the execution of the agreement of September 9, 1937. Potter and Schulke called on Smith during the summer of 1937 to report the progress they were making toward a settlement and release from Kurrasch and Grapske. Smith advised he had submitted the proposition to Wood and that it was now up to Wood. June 22, 1937, when his resignation became effective, he told Potter and Schulke he was no longer trustee. Potter testified that when he received Wood’s letter of July 15, 1937, he did not consult Wood but saw Smith who told him to pay no attention to Wood’s letter. Schulke said he didn’t pay any attention to Wood’s letters because he was doing business with Smith and Smith told him to pay no attention to them.

October 5,1937, action was commenced by declaration. October 17, 1938, the trial of the case began. In the previous month of September, the principal amount of $2,700 was paid and the mortgage on the crypts discharged. The sole question relates to the interest.

The trial court denied plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. The action was dismissed as to Kurrasch and Grapske. At the close of the proofs, both plaintiffs and defendants moved for a directed ver *208 diet. The court denied plaintiffs’ motion and directed a verdict for defendants. From the judgment entered, plaintiffs appeal.

Plaintiffs contend the court erred (a) in holding the verbal offer of E. P. Smith, managing trustee of the segregated and substituted assets of the bank, made April 19, 1937, to compromise the liability of defendants by canceling the accrued interest, was accepted by the defendants within a reasonable time by the execution of the agreement between the five defendant makers of the note September 9, 1937, or nearly five months after the offer was made; (b) that defendants had a right to rely on the original offer of Smith, trustee; (c) that this offer was binding on Wood, successor trustee, although the successor trustee was not informed of the offer; (d) that the letters written by the successor trustee to defendants to come in for the purpose of arranging liquidation of the indebtedness, and threatening them with a lawsuit unless they complied within the stated time limit, did not amount to withdrawal of the predecessor trustee’s offer; (e) that a legal tender was made by the defendants to Wood, trustee; (f) that the agreement of September 9, 1937, was sufficient legal consideration to support the offer of Smith, trustee, to cancel the interest and that it was binding upon the successor trustee; and (g) that the trustee of the segregated and substituted assets of the bank had authority under -the rules and regulations governing his powers issued by the commissioner of the State banking department to make the compromise agreement relied upon.

A contract of the kind claimed to have been entered into by defendants with Mr. Smith would not be valid unless based upon a valuable consideration.

“It is not denied that every promise must be founded on some legal consideration. The rule of *209 law in reference to the sufficiency of the consideration seems to be that it must arise either, first, by reason of a benefit to the party promising, or, at his request, to a third person, by the act of the promisee; or, secondly, on occasion of the latter sustaining any loss or inconvenience, or subjecting himself to any charge or obligation, at the instance of the person making the promise, although such person obtain no advantage therefrom: Chitty on Contracts, p. 29. If, in the given case, the consideration be. within either of these branches of the rule, it is sufficient.” Rood v. Jones, 1 Doug. (Mich.) 188.
“A ‘valuable consideration,’ in a legal sense, may consist either in some right, interest, profit, or benefit accruing to one party, or some forbearance, loss, or. responsibility given, suffered, or undertaken by the other.” Smith, v. Maxey, 186 Mich. 151, 165.
See, also, Sanford v. Huxford, 32 Mich. 313 (20 Am. Rep. 647); Steep v. Harpham, 241 Mich. 652; Levitz v. Capitol Savings & Loan Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
289 N.W. 131, 291 Mich. 203, 1939 Mich. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-potter-mich-1939.