Court Opinion

ID: 3502277
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:09:06.694172+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:54:33.747183
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff Peter Frank and his wife took a lease of a hotel in Flint and purchased furniture and other chattels therein. They conducted the business for nearly nine years. Both worked hard. Perhaps Mrs. Frank was more active in management. Both received and handled money and had access to the books and the funds. The profit for the time was nearly $45,000, of which when Mrs. Frank died there had been deposited in the names of both (payable it is said to either or survivor) nearly $17,000, and in a joint account of herself and her sister, the defendant, nearly $4,500. Mrs. Frank also had purchased a lot, paying therefor nearly $700, and taking title in the name of her sister. Plaintiff, it is said, did not know of the account of Mrs. Frank and her sister nor of the purchase of the lot until after Mrs. Frank's death.
Plaintiff filed this bill praying accounting, that defendant be decreed to hold the deposit and the lot in trust and that plaintiff have the money and the lot. The theory of his bill is fraudulent violation of the wife's trust obligation to handle their joint resources in the interest of both. Plaintiff had decree. Defendant has appealed.
It is argued that the lease, the furniture, and the business were owned by entireties, and that funds or profits from the business were likewise entirety *Page 559 
property, and that all passed by law to the husband survivor on the death of the wife. If the premise were correct the conclusion might be sustained. George v. Dutton's Estate,94 Vt. 76 (108 A. 515, 8 A.L.R. 1014).
The lease is not in the record. Perhaps it was held by entireties. 30 L.R.A. 319. On the record we cannot say that the furniture was or was not entirety property. It has not been held in this State that a conveyance of goods and chattels such as these to husband and wife thereby and without more creates a holding by entireties. See Act No. 212, Pub. Acts 1927. The rule of Lober v. Dorgan, 215 Mich. 62, and later cases, is that such property may be so held when the parties so intend and agree. See Detroit  Security Trust Co. v. Kramer, 247 Mich. 468
. There is no competent evidence of agreement between Mr. and Mrs. Frank that the business and all profits therefrom were to be owned by entireties. But the precise nature of the relation between Mr. and Mrs. Frank in this business is not very important. In any event, as between themselves, they were together in the venture.
A necessary basis for raising a constructive trust in favor of plaintiff is fraud, actual or constructive, including acts or omissions in violation of fiduciary obligations.Ridky v. Ridky, 226 Mich. 459. Both Mr. and Mrs. Frank rightfully withdrew money from the business. Mrs. Frank received and had money to plaintiff's knowledge. How much she received and when she received it the record does not disclose. That she received and had the money in violation of any agreement or relation with plaintiff is not established.
Plaintiff has failed to prove, as against his deceased wife, in respect of her having the money in *Page 560 
question, fraud necessary to sustain his claim of constructive trust.
The money being her own, she might and did do with it as she pleased.
Reversed. Bill dismissed. Costs to defendant.
WIEST, C.J., and BUTZEL, McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, and FEAD, JJ., concurred.