Court Opinion

ID: 1350849
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 05:43:16.716263+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:01:25.494346
License: Public Domain

336 Mich. 22 (1953)
57 N.W.2d 314
SPENCER
v.
HILL.
Docket No. 37, Calendar No. 45,634.
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Decided March 10, 1953.
*23 Earl J. Demel, for plaintiff.
Dunbar Davis, for defendant.
BOYLES, J.
This is an appeal by defendant LaVerne T. Hill from a decree setting aside an assignment of a land contract to her from the plaintiff, and for an accounting.
Plaintiff is an elderly woman and the defendant-appellant LaVerne T. Hill is her daughter. In 1947 they purchased on land contract a house and lot in Plymouth, as joint tenants with right to survivor. The plaintiff invested $2,000, her life savings, in the contract. Appellant LaVerne T. Hill put in $1,000. The place was purchased as a home for the plaintiff, her said daughter and said daughter's small child. They moved into the home and lived together there. Both earned by doing some outside work, plaintiff contributed her earnings, they rented some rooms in the house, the daughter contributed her war widow's pension from the United States government, and, also, $36 per month from her social security. They "pooled" their interests, kept up the payments on the land contract, made expenses and accumulated about $450 in a joint bank account. The daughter was a war widow with a small child, her former husband (Pluff) having been killed in military service. In 1948 the daughter induced her mother to assign to her the mother's interest in the land contract. In return, the daughter gave plaintiff a promissory note for $2,000, payable on or before 10 years, with interest after maturity. Thereafter they carried on as before, residing in the home, *24 pooling their earnings and income and making the payments, until on July 17, 1951, the daughter caused to be served on the plaintiff a 2-day notice to vacate and surrender up possession of the land contract premises, stating her intention to carry on removal proceedings. In the meantime, the daughter had married Harry Hill, who was made a defendant in this case but dismissed during the trial.
Two days later, on July 19th, plaintiff filed this bill of complaint asking that the defendant be compelled to reconvey to her her proportionate interest in the property, account for her interest in the joint bank account which the defendant had withdrawn, and that the defendant be enjoined from disposing of the land contract or the property, or from evicting the plaintiff from the premises. Issue was joined and, after a hearing during which the plaintiff was sworn and testified as the only witness in the case, the court granted plaintiff the relief prayed for. The defendant LaVerne T. Hill appeals.
The only question involved is whether the trial court erred in granting plaintiff the relief prayed for, under the established facts in the case. Plaintiff testified that the defendant suggested that the plaintiff "sign off so she [defendant] could get a tax exemption as a war widow;" that she [plaintiff] did not understand she was conveying away her interest in the property when she executed the assignment; that she understood that "in case of her death, I would get the property. * * * That note was made out so in case of her death, I would still have a home. I was made legal guardian of her little son;" that her daughter suggested giving to her the $2,000 promissory note. Her testimony, not controverted, was that appellant suggested that "she would give me a note, so I would have protection in case she died." When questioned by the court, she testified:
*25 "Q. As I gather it, when you made this assignment, did you think or understand that you were conveying away your interest in that property?
"A. No, sir.
"Q. You were just doing that, so she could get the benefit of a widow's exemption on taxes; is that it?
"A. Yes, your Honor.
"Q. But you still understood that you had the same interest in the place that you had?
"A. Yes, your Honor."
She further testified that they had a joint bank account "built up to $475 from the money brought in by the parties in varying amounts after payment of household expenses, bills and land contract payments." It was stipulated by counsel that $450 had been withdrawn by defendant-appellant.
Her testimony was not rebutted or disputed. No other testimony was taken.
The court entered a decree setting aside the assignment, cancelling the promissory note, restoring plaintiff's interest in the land contract and property, and requiring the defendant-appellant to pay plaintiff $212.50 withdrawn from the joint bank account. The decree is fully supported by the proofs.
While each case of this nature must depend on varying facts and circumstances, the controlling principles of equity found in the following cases apply here:
"That the presumptions are against transactions of this nature and they are critically scrutinized by the courts, putting the burden of proof upon those seeking to sustain them, requires no citation of authority. In view of plaintiff's age, their kinship, and the confidential relations shown to exist between them at the time, it was incumbent upon defendants to show that the agreement with their father was not to his disadvantage, was fair to him and of his own free will, that no advantage was taken by them *26 of his age, mental condition, or confidence in them, that they have fulfilled the terms of their agreement, in letter and spirit, so far as permitted by him, and are ready and willing to continue so to do." Williams v. Williams, 198 Mich 1.
"But where a child sustains confidential relations with the parent as this record discloses Annie sustained to her mother, and such parent strips himself or herself of all his or her property and means of support by a conveyance to the child, some duty devolves upon the grantee or those claiming under such grantee to show the validity of the transaction." Lewandowski v. Nadolny, 214 Mich 350.
"In tranactions involving transfer of property interests from aged parents to children for alleged insufficient or totally absent consideration, the matter of consideration is not of decisive importance.
"Conveyances of interest in property from aged parents to their child should be scrutinized with vigilance since courts of equity regard them with suspicion.
"Burden of proving validity and fairness of contract to elderly parents who conveyed vendors' interest in land contract to their son and his wife for slightly more than half of balance due from vendee, consideration from son to be payable monthly, is upon son and wife. * * *
"Contract whereby elderly parents sold to son and wife their vendors' interest in a land contract in which balance due from vendee was $3,746.90 for $2,000 to be paid from moneys parents were already entitled to receive from vendee and possibly cancellation of a $50 debt owed son held, so unconscionable as to be void because of grossly inadequate consideration although fraud and undue influence may be lacking." Platt v. Platzki (syllabi), 277 Mich 700.
"In Tompkins v. Hollister, 60 Mich 470, 480, the Court said:
"`Where one relies upon another, and has a right so to rely, and the persons relied upon omits to state *27 a most material legal consideration within his knowledge, of which the other is ignorant, affecting his rights, and the person thus ignorant acts under this misplaced confidence and is misled by it, a court of equity will afford relief, especially if such action is to the advantage of the person whose advice is taken, even though no fraud was intended.' See authorities there cited.
"Equity will not aid an avaricious, 66-year-old, active, aggressive son to deprive his 85-year-old father of his home under the circumstances disclosed in this case. Platt v. Platzki, 277 Mich 700. See, also, Williams v. Williams, 198 Mich 1, and authorities cited in Beattie v. Bower, 290 Mich 517, p 526 et seq." Walter v. Walter, 297 Mich 26.
Affirmed. Costs to appellee.
DETHMERS, C.J., and ADAMS, BUTZEL, CARR, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, and REID, JJ., concurred.