Wright v. Kaynor

113 N.W. 779, 150 Mich. 7, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 747
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1907
DocketDocket No. 53
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 113 N.W. 779 (Wright v. Kaynor) 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
Wright v. Kaynor, 113 N.W. 779, 150 Mich. 7, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 747 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

Grant, J.

{after stating the facts). Ansel Kaynor evidently acted upon the belief that he and Augusta owned this land as tenants in entirety. The deed to them did [11]*11not describe them as husband and wife. The conveyance was to Ansel Kaynor and Augusta Kaynor as grantees, and to their heirs and assigns. The habendum clause was the same. While they went through a ceremony of marriage and lived together as husband and wife, they were not so in fact, as Ansel had been previously married and by a decree of divorce or separation by the proper court in the State of New York, where he resided, he was prohibited from marrying again.

The conveyance by Ansel and Levina to a third party and by that third party to them as tenants by the entirety, conveyed only one-half interest in the land, which Ansel held as tenant in common with the heirs of Augusta, the defendants so named above. The questions therefore raised must be determined upon the basis of a tenancy in common.

1. The option for renewal of the lease and for the purchase of the land is valid. It formed a part of the inducement for the execution of the lease, and constituted a sufficient consideration, although it is unilateral in the sense that the lessee was under no obligation to renew the lease or purchase the land. Waters v. Bew, 52 N. J. Eq. 787; Hawralty v. Warren, 18 N. J. Eq. 126; 18 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.), p. 631.

2. Did the possession or occupancy of Mr. Allen amount to an election to renew the lease for the additional term of ten years, under the case of Delashman v. Berry, 20 Mich. 292 ? This necessarily involves the examination of the testimony of the complainant as to the character of the occupancy of the premises. The testimony upon which he relies is as follows: One Griswold testified that he had charge of the Allendale property in 1899, and also of the Kaynor property in connection with it. There was a hotel on the Allendale property, but nothing on the Kaynor. He testified:

“From the time Allen purchased it the first year my father ran it; the next year I think Mr. Ford had it, that is he ran the hotel; the next year it was closed. The re[12]*12sort was not open at all, a barbed wire fence around it everywhere. I think it was in 1900 that it was closed.
“During the year I was there Mr. Allen had access to this Kaynor ground. The year the resort was closed there was a sign up on the property, ‘No Trespassing.’ We kept the property cleaned up and the brush and dead trees taken out, and some land leased for tents I believe.
“ I don’t know of anybody who did not have access to the property during the year I was there. There were two young men in one tent on the Kaynor property. They did not occupy all of the property. * * *
“ I knew just about the location. I did not have possession of. the whole Kaynor farm. There was a strip of ground the year I was there that was not cultivated. The land I had possession of practically ran to that where it was cultivated. That was in the open field just beyond the grove. In that field was principally weeds. I don’t know what was cultivated on the Kaynor part. * * * Where it was plowed there was a grass plat between the row of trees and practically Mr. Allen’s line. I cannot tell you how far back that grass plat was from the lake shore. * * *
“ I can’t say if that strip along the lake front had been open and not cultivated all of the time that Mr. Allen 'owned it. Mr. Allen never cultivated it, nor anybody for him that I know of. If anybody cultivated it, I suppose Mr. Kaynor.
CIQ. Then if Mr. Kaynor cultivated this particular strip at any time in any season, then during that season Mr. Allen did not have possession of it, did he ?
“A. I understand Mr. Kaynor did not cultivate this strip.
“Q. So far as you know the only line indicating occupancy by Mr. Allen to these premises was the fact that it was not cultivated, as I understand you.
“A. Why, not necessarily; as I take it that was an imaginary line, perhaps.
“Q. I am not asking you what you take it.
“A. I had no information particularly on the subject outside of Mr. Allen owned that Kaynor property.”

And witness further testified in reply to a question asking what else was done to hold possession:

“ Mr. Allen paid the lease on it. We were not cultivating ground; we were not doing anything especially [13]*13with it. * * * We had persons employed there to take care of all the hotel property, not of' this Kaynor property particularly.”

Where the barbed wire fence was located does not appear. Where the sign “No Trespassing” was located also does not appear. Where the brush and dead trees were taken up and the land leased for tents is equally uncertain. It is, however, a fair inference, from Mr. Gris-wold’s testimony, that whatever possession there was was very shadowy.

Another witness (Waldorf) testified:

“During the last four years there has been nothing done with that field in the way of farming from the brow of the hill to the lake, unless they cut the grass off of it. I do not know that that has been done, but the field has not been plowed. It has undoubtedly been pastured. There is no fence there. I have not done anything to take possession of that property, that field, more than to trim the trees that stand there and clean it up. I trimmed some tre,es that stand right by the shore of the lake this spring. I never did that before to any extent. I have a little, but not to give them much of a trim. I picked up the dead limbs that were in the grove and used them for firewood. I did not make any arrangement about plowing the field. He asked me why I did not do it. He said he thought it might as well he plowed to get something off of it. Then he says to me well, I will give you half of the corn. I told him I would rather it had not been plowed. I did not think it ought to have been plowed. I don’t think of any other acts of ownership or possession Mr. Allen has done since I have been there.”

I think it clear from this testimony that this 15f acres was vacant and unenclosed, and to all appearances it remained as a part of the farm of Ansel Kaynor. There was no such possession as would give notice to any one that the lessee, Mr. Allen, was in possession, claiming under the lease of under any title. There was no pedis possessio as in Delashman v. Berry, supra, and similar cases, wherein it is held that continued possession [14]*14and occupancy after the expiration of the lease constituted a sufficient election to accept a new term. The land had not been enclosed and made a part of the hotel enclosure. In the language of the witness, any one had access to it. It was uncultivated. A part of it, but how much does not appear, was covered with trees and brush. Mr. Allen did not use this land for any purpose. He undoubtedly obtained this lease and the option to buy in the expectation that at some future time he could use it in connection with his summer hotel. That time had not arrived when the lease expired.

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Bluebook (online)
113 N.W. 779, 150 Mich. 7, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-kaynor-mich-1907.