Wooley v. Drew

13 N.W. 594, 49 Mich. 290, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 551
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 N.W. 594 (Wooley v. Drew) 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
Wooley v. Drew, 13 N.W. 594, 49 Mich. 290, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 551 (Mich. 1882).

Opinion

Marston, J.

Complainant comes into court to compel the defendant Elizabeth P. Drew to re-convey a certain eighty acres of land, which complainant conveyed to her in 1879 under an alleged promise to reconvey in two years thereafter.

The complainant’s theory is that a certain slander suit was pending against her husband; that he had previously conveyed the farm to her; that defendant John F. Drew “excited ■complainant into the belief that she would lose her homestead, unless she made a conveyance of it to Mrs. Drew;” and that in consequence thereof the conveyance was made.

The defendants deny all this and claim that the sale made was in good faith for a valuable consideration, and made at the earnest solicitation of complainant and her husband.

[291]*291The case was heard upon the pleadings and proofs taken in open court, and the bill dismissed. The complainant appealed.

If the complainant’s theory is sustained, the case comes within Barnes v. Brown 32 Mich. 146, and she is entitled to relief.

'Where the witnesses have been examined in open court, ■and the case is one that must be governed by the credibility >of the witnesses for-the respective parties and the weight to-be given their testimony, the conclusion arrived at by the ■court below should not, upon what might seem to this Court a mere preponderance of testimony, be overturned. This ■case does not however come within that class, where the .appearance of the witnesses upon the stand can be given any ■decisive effect, as the transaction, when viewed upon the ■defendant’s testimony, shows that it was one so fraudulent ■and barefaced that it could not be permitted to stand.

The complainant and her husband were uneducated, and they seemed to have had a good deal of trouble with their ■neighbors, while the defendant JohnF. Drew seems to have Fad, or claimed to have, considerable knowledge pertaining to legal matters.

The complainant and her husband at the time the conveyance was made, evidently were afraid, that because of the slander suit they were in some danger of losing this farm, ' and that the plaintiff in that suit and other parties were conspiring against them to cheat them out of their property. Whether these ideas were suggested to them for the first time by John F. Drew, as complainant claims, or not, we do not deem it necessary to determine. It is certain that defend-”’' ants._dld not make anv effort to allay these fears, or to assure complainants that thejr property could not be attached in ■the slander suitfor they be enjoined from transferring their farm because of the pendency thereof. On the contrary these impressions were strengthened and the trade-consummated within a very short time — a few days after being first mentioned or thought of between the parties.

The complainant’s farm contained 80 acres, with suit[292]*292able buildings and improvements thereon of the value of' $3200, upon which there was an incumbrance of one hundred dollars, and it had also been leased for one year from' April, 1879, the rent to be paid in a share of the crops.

When the complainant and her husband at the house of defendants talked of selling, the defendant John F. offered to give them for their farm a mortgage held by his wife-upon a certain house and lot in the city of Jackson which defendants say the complainant and her husband were ready and willing to accept, and wished to have the necessary papers executed at once, but which defendants put off for a-couple of days to enable them to make an examination of’ complainant’s title to the farm. On making this examinar tion the next day, they for the first time ascertained that' there was an outstanding mortgage thereon for one hundred dollars, and they also, before the trade was consummated, learned that the farm had been leased for one year with the-privilege of an additional year.

The parties met the following day, and defendants say they did not then wish to make the exchange, yet the defendant John F. had procured the necessary blank form of conveyance, and after some little talk defendants then agreed to assign the mortgage referred to, and accept a conveyance of the farm subject to the mortgage thereon and give complainant a two years’ lease of the same, although no such-favorable terms were asked for by complainant: and the-trade was so made, defendant John F. drawing all the papers, and taking all the acknowledgments, his wife assigning the mortgage .and acknowledging the execution thereof before-him.

This mortgage bore date March 1st, 1872; was given by Julia A. Knowles to Sylvester McMichael to secure the payment of $951.49 in three years from the date thereof, with ten per cent, interest payable semi-annually, according to a certain bond bearing even date therewith.

Defendant John F. Drew had a second mortgage upon this same property which he foreclosed and bid in at the-sale, and afterwards his wife, at his request, took an assign[293]*293•ment of the Knowles-McMichael mortgage, the assignment bearing date December 17, 1873.

At the time of the assignment to Mrs. Drew, nothing had been paid upon this mortgage, and no payment of either principal or interest was made thereafter up to the time of the assignment to complainant. John F. Drew was the ■owner under his foreclosure proceedings of the mortgaged premises, receiving the rents and profits thereof.

At the time of the assignment thereof to complainant, defendants represented the amount due thereon at about .$1900. We suppose the computation was made under the .act of 1869, which allows interest on installments after due. Whatever the fact may have been however as to the amount claimed to be due and collectible thereon, the mortgaged premises were not c’onsidered-by the defendants as..sufficient •to, pay the mortgage: they were not indeed wdrth jnore •|fian-$1600, and would not bring near thatAFa public sale. It was tliSTtssignment of this mortgage that complainant .received for her farm, with a two years’ lease thereof.

There are some other peculiarities worth noting. Qorrtplainant’s farm was about seven miles from the residence of ■defendanls^ Some ten orNweive years previous to this trade, defendant John F. Drew “went down hunting on the marsh across that farm,” and at this time he did not know who was living on it. He had not been to the farm .after that, until a few days before the trade, when he went down to complainant’s house to see about hiiing_a_gid, and did not then look over the farm, as he then had no thought •of purchasing it. At the time he examined tfiaAifle. he inquired of the re.o-is.te.r-ef-deeds what kind_of_land-thjs.-wa_s, .and says “ I thought that his recommend and my memory ■corresponded.” This was the extent of defendant’s knowledge as to the kind or quality of the soil, or the improvements thereon or value thereof.

The mortgage which he assigned to complainant had been acquired by his wife after he became the owner of the mortgaged premises, and another peculiarity, although .according to the recitals in the mortgage, a bond purported [294]*294to have accompanied it, and to have been assigned to complainant according to the written assignment, yet neither complainant nor Mrs. Drew seems to have ever seen or possessed this bond. True it is, that complainant' did not. receive or have any personal obligation for the amount, represented by the mortgage assigned her or any part thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.W. 594, 49 Mich. 290, 1882 Mich. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooley-v-drew-mich-1882.