Stockmeyer v. Bleakley
Stockmeyer v. Bleakley
Opinion of the Court
John W. Bleakley,- executor of the estate of Lizzie Bleakley, deceased, defendant and appellee herein, for some time had made futile efforts to sell a 140-acre tract of land situated at the intersection of the 13-mile road and Stephenson-highway in the township of Royal Oak, Oakland county, Michigan. It is not very far distant from- the. city of Detroit, It had been purchased by the estate at foreclosure sale many years ago for $36,000 and-taxes or approximately $40,000. There was an increase in value because of the development of the surrounding area and, as the probate judge stated, the value of the property had been steadily increasing for a year or so. The very fact that the bids for the property exceeded $500 an acre indicates its value.
The plaintiff has appealed to this Court from the ■order of dismissal. Notwithstanding a most careful and thorough analysis of the statutes by plaintiff, we agree with the circuit court in affirming the action •of the probate court. CL 1948, § 701.36 (Stat Ann 1943 Rev § 27.3178[36]), provides:
“Sec. 36. In all cases not specifically prohibited by statute, any person aggrieved by any order, sentence, decree or denial of the judge of probate, may appeal therefrom to the circuit court for the same ■county, by filing a notice thereof with the judge of probate, within 20 days from the date of the order, ■sentence or denial appealed from, giving the reason for such appeal, together with such bond as is required in section 39 of this chapter.”
In Schultz v. Kent Probate Judge, 313 Mich 323, we stated:
“It should be noted that this order only authorized a sale by the administratrix ‘subject to later confirmation by this court;’ and also that the administratrix’s acceptance of plaintiff’s written offer to purchase was ‘subject to approval and authority from Kent county probate court in the matter of the estate of Otto Thum, deceased.’ Hence, it would seem almost too clear for argument that no one could •obtain vested rights incident to the contemplated probate court sale until such time as the administratrix reported the sale to the probate court and obtained confirmation thereof.”
To same effect see In re Farwell’s Estate, 315 Mich 526. The sale of the property, until confirmed, remained fully under the jurisdiction of the probate ■court. It has been always so considered, notwith
“Sometimes a hid less than 10% greater than the reported sale is received before the expiration of the 8-day period, and sometimes the order confirming sale is not entered promptly at the expiration of the 8-day period and a higher hid is received in the meantime.
“The matter is always open until the confirmation order is actually entered for the court may find that the hid reported is ‘disproportionate to the value of the property sold,’ this being a discretionary finding and a higher hid being fairly good reason for such finding. At all events such finding would he conducive to the statutory purpose of obtaining the largest return to the estate.”
This is further stated on pages 56 and 57 of the 1949 pocket supplement to the same hook, following the decision In re Farwell’s Estate, supra, as follows:
“This leaves it still in doubt whether the increased hid of 10% must he made within the 8-day precon*208 •firmation period. The statute actually states that the order of confirmation shall not be made, ‘until at least 8 days after filing such report.’ * * *
“So, the statute does not state that the increased bid must be made within the 8-day period, and as a matter of practice the hearing on confirmation will always be held at least 9 days or more after the report of sale.
“Thus it would seem that if the unsuccessful bidder in the Farwell estate case had actually tendered a 10% higher bid at any time prior to confirmation the court would have been required to vacate such reported sale and direct another to be had; or the court might in its discretion have received a report in writing from the fiduciary of the subsequent bid.”
The order of the circuit court dismissing plaintiffs appeal is affirmed, with costs to defendant.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.