Miller v. Childs
Miller v. Childs
Opinion of the Court
The complainants foreclosed a mortgage which their testatrix received under the following circumstances :• Grace Church, in Menominee, contemplated the erection of a rectory, and had negotiations with the Church Association of Michigan in relation thereto. Both are corporations. At a meeting of the parish, the vestry submitted a report that it had arranged to purchase two lots for church and rectory; that the Church Association' had signified its willingness to advance such an amount of money, up to the amount of $3,300, as was necessary to complete the payment for the lots and erect a rectory, provided the property should be deeded to that association in trust for the parish, and that interest at 7 per cent, should be paid on the money advanced, and the principal should be paid in $100 installments. The meeting authorized the vestry to carry out the arrangement. Thereupon the deed was made by Grace Church to the Church Association, and a note was given for $900, which was paid, upon the purchase, by the Church Association, which gave its guaranty for payment of the balance of the purchase price. Subsequently the church gave the association another note for $1,300, being the balance of the loan of $3,300, which it received. This money was used in building the rectory. Some weeks after the giving of the second note, at a meeting of the vestry, a communication
“$2,200. Detroit, Michigan, 1st January, 1889.
“For value received, we, the undersigned, vestry of Grace Church, Menominee, Michigan, promise to pay to the order of Helen L. Frue, of Detroit, Michigan, the principal sum of twenty-two hundred dollars, on or before the first day of January, eighteen hundred and ninety - four, without grace, with interest at the rate of seven per centum per annum, payable on the first day of J uly next, and semi-annually thereafter, until the whole of said principal sum is paid; both principal and interest being payable at the office of the Detroit Savings Bank, in Detroit.
‘‘ This note is secured by a certain real-estate mortgage, of even date herewith, made by the Church Association of Michigan to said Helen L. Frue, and collateral thereto, the terms and conditions of which are made a part hereto.”
It was sent to the secretary, and the Church Association thereupon executed to Helen L. Frue a mortgage for $2,200 upon the premises to secure this note. A deed was thereupon executed and delivered by the Church Association to Grace Church, and was accepted by its vestry, and it continued to occupy the premises for 10 years or more.
No opposition was made to the entry of a decree of foreclosure, but Grace Church contended that it is not liable for any deficiency. A decree for foreclosure and sale was made, but the court refused to hold Grace Church liable for a deficiency, and held that it was not so liable, and the complainants have appealed. It is contended that the parish did not authorize the giving of any note by the vestry, and that there is no evidence that it knew of the giving of the note to Helen L. Frue.
The testimony shows that Grace Church, at a parish meeting, directed its vestry to make a loan from the Church Association of $2,200, at 7 per cent., and to deed to the association, in trust, the lots which it had bought.
We are justified in assuming that the church expected the vestry to give some evidence of indebtedness, and it appears to have done so. Whatever we may think of the last question, the fact remains that Grace Church borrowed $2,200 of the Church Association, and gave its trust deed, i. e., mortgage, and two notes, to secure its payment. If no other writing had been made, on foreclosure of such trust deed Grace Church would be liable for the debt; and the fact that another note was after-wards substituted for them, which was unauthorized and void, as the defendant Grace Church contends, would not release the church from the duty of paying the debt, or its liability for the deficiency on foreclosure of the trust deed.
It may be said that the notes originally given were not in conformity to the resolution, which accepted a proposition to have them payable in $100 installments. This point is not made in the brief in behalf of Grace Church, and our attention is not called to any proof that they were not so made payable. The point is made that the resolution did not authorize the giving of any note; but we think otherwise, as already stated.
The Church Association had a right to assign its mort
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- MILLER v. CHILDS
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