(for remand with instructions).
The profession knows generally that calendared appeals brought here are precedently and rotatively assigned to the respective Justices; also that it is the initial responsibility of each such assignee to draft and distribute to the Justices a proposed opinion of each appeal thus assigned to him. With respect to that system, it has been my regular practice since
*255
1959 to submit to the Brethren old-fashioned hacklesmoothers headed “Per Curiam”, each struck off with steady employment of the plural pronoun “we”. Usually, but far from always, this soothing procedure has worked out with majority satisfaction.
Carman
v.
Secretary of State
(1971),
The ensuing opinion — in form
per curiam
and presented in unitary grammatics — was submitted to the Justices May 14 last. With it went a somewhat lengthy memorandum explaining why I felt no need for reference to
Beacon Theatres
v.
Westover
(1959),
“In preparing the opinion I decided purposely to omit reference to these cases [Beacon et al.], figuring that the profession already comprehends fully the difference between the congressionally controlled jurisdiction of the lower courts of the Federal system (under art 3, US Const) and the jurisdiction which, by our Constitution, has from 1850 beginning been vested with what we know today as Michigan’s ‘one Court of Justice’. All this last appears with clarity, both in the opinion of the Brown Case [75 Mich 274 ] and in the lengthy opinion on application for rehearing of the Blodgett Case [115 Mich 160 , 169].
“The Supreme Court in the Beacon Theatres Case dealt with rights under the Federal declaratory judgment act and, most recently (Ross v. Bernhard,396 US 531 ,24 L Ed 2d 729 ), with the right to a demanded jury trial of a stockholder’s derivative action — both under the 7th Amendment.
“If three or four members of the Court deem it needful that these fundamentals require expatiation, *256 I will be glad to add a pedantic paragraph, providing many interesting illustrations of professorial theory gone mad in the face of the people’s grant of and duty to exercise the judicial power which, starting definitely with the Brown Case, has been known pretty well.” 1
Sadly however, I find that the May 14 draft has stimulated no paeans or hosannahs. That being the present state of Wolf's affairs, I have amended the May 14 draft so as to switch pronouns and structure into the area of the first person singular, and to submit the new draft as a separate contribution to the collection plate. This should prod the writing of whatever opinion may be desired by our majority, thereupon bringing this May-submitted cause to due decision.
My new and now individual opinion of Wolf v. Walch follows. It is submitted to the Brethren this 3rd day of July, 1971.
Plaintiff instituted this action to foreclose a real estate mortgage and a chattel mortgage, both executed by defendants to secure payment of a running-account owing for merchandise sold and delivered to defendants’ retail stores. The complaint alleged a balance owing of approximately $61,000. Defendants answered with allegation that the mortgages sought to be foreclosed had been paid in full and, by counterclaim alleging fraud, breach of contract and “willful and wrongful interference with defendants’ just rights and business”, sought damages against plaintiff in the sum of $200,000. With their answer and counterclaim defendants filed a general and all-inclusive demand for jury trial.
*257 Plaintiff moved promptly to strike the demand. That motion was denied at pretrial; “there is a jury question in regard to the counterclaim at least.” 2 Trial of all issues presented by the pleadings went ahead before the jury. The jury was told to bring in a general verdict only, for the plaintiff, or for the defendants, or that “neither one of them is entitled to anything”. Its verdict was “no cause for action as to both the claim and counterclaim”. Plaintiff thereupon moved to “vacate the purported jury verdict of no cause for action as to the claim of the plaintiff against the defendant”, and for entry of a decretal judgment of foreclosure against defendants with judicial finding of a secured balance owing it in the sum of $55,421.42. Its primary reason offered in support was:
“The issues raised by the amended foreclosure complaint and the amended answer thereto are equitable in nature (MSA 27 A.3180) and are for non-jury determination by the court. The jury was permitted to hear evidence concerning the amended complaint for foreclosure along with defendants’ evidence as to the amended counterclaim only as a matter of convenience, subject to objection of plaintiff and plaintiff’s motion for separate non-jury trial thereof. Said verdict is not binding on the court or plaintiff under Rule 509.4 because plaintiff did not consent to jury trial as to the complaint for foreclosure.”
For further factual and procedural details see the opinion of Division 3, resulting in reversal and
*258
remand for new trial (
First: The original edition of Pomeroy’s “Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence” was published in 1881. The author at that time warned the profession forcefully that what then was termed the “Reformed Procedure” (recognized loosely today as the “union of law and equity”, the “blended procedure”, or the “procedural merger”) would unless controlled result inevitably in the gradual suppression and final disappearance of equitable principles and doctrines and the supplanting thereof “by the more inflexible and arbitrary rules of the law; until in time equity would practically cease to be a distinctive part of the national jurisprudence.” 4
*259
It cannot be doubted that Pomeroy’s then newly heralded alert came to the attention of this Court when, in 1889
(Brown
v.
Kalamazoo Circuit Judge,
“Juries cannot devise specific remedies, or safely deal with complicated interests, or with relief given in successive stages, or adjusted to varying conditions. Theory amounts to nothing in the history of jurisprudence. The system of chancery jurisprudence has been developed as carefully and as judiciously as any part of the legal system, and the judicial power includes it, and always must include it. Any change which transfers the power that belongs to a judge to a jury, or to any other person or body, is as plain a violation of the Constitution as one which should give the courts executive or legislative power vested elsewhere. The cognizance of equitable questions belongs to the judiciary as a part of the judicial power, and under our Constitution must remain vested where it always has been vested heretofore.”
Leser
v.
Smith
(1920),
“This court hears chancery cases de novo, aided but not controlled by the findings of fact of the trial judge, who may in turn be aided but not controlled by the findings of a jury on pure questions of fact. In the case of Brown v. Kalamazoo Circuit Judge [1889],75 Mich 274 (5 L.R.A. 226 ,13 Am.St.Rep. 438 ), this court in holding an act invalid which provided for a trial by jury in chancery cases as matter of right, and making’ the verdict a finality, pointed out quite fully the rights of party litigants in equity cases. It was there said:
“ ‘The right to have equity controversies dealt with by equitable methods is as sacred as the right of trial by jury. Whatever may be the machinery for gathering testimony or enforcing decrees, the facts and the law must be decided together; and when a chancellor desires to have the aid of a jury to find out how facts appear to such unprofessional men, it can only be done by submitting single issues of pure fact, and they cannot foreclose him in his conclusions unless they convince his judgment.’
“As has already been noted, single questions of pure fact were not submitted to the jury, nor has the chancellor expressed his personal views upon the facts aided or unaided by the verdict. The proceedings are irregular, but the testimony is all before us, and as the final triers of the facts in chancery cases we shall proceed to dispose of the case giving such weight to the verdict of the jury as under all the circumstances it is entitled to. By so doing we are not to be understood as approving the method of procedure in the instant case or making it a guide for future cases.”
*261 The writer, recalling personal participation in the early meetings and deliberations of the Joint Committee on Civil Procedure of 1958-1962, has yet in mind Pomeroy’s warning. Honigman and Hawkins have recorded the fact and the point thereof in their Michigan Court Rules Annotated (vol 1, pp 9,11):
“These rules are written to abolish, as far as possible, the procedural distinctions between law and equity. No attempt has been made to alter the substantive differences between law and equity. However, Professor Pomeroy observed, in the preface to the first edition of Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (1881), that under such unified procedure ‘The tendency * * * has plainly and steadily been towards the giving an undue prominence and superiority to purely legal rules, and the ignoring, forgetting, or suppression of equitable notions.’ The adoption of these rules is not to be construed as approving of this tendency. On the contrary, Professor Pomeroy’s words are to be taken as a warning so that we may avoid the consequences he describes. Only procedural distinctions are abolished or minimized by this set of rules.
# # #
“(1) Most important, the distinctions between law and equity must continue to be recognized for the purpose of preserving constitutional rights to trial by jury in legal matters and trial by court in equity matters. Brown v. Kalamazoo Circuit Judge, (1889),75 Mich 274 ,42 NW 827 .
“(2) The substantive elements of the cause of action — that is, the facts which must be proved to establish a claim or defense — and the kind of remedy the court can give must still be determined by reference to the substantive law of the actions in law and equity as they previously existed(Last emphasis supplied by present writer.)
*262 As the deliberations of the Joint Committee progressed, the advisability of uniting law and equity procedure came to debate. Accessory thereto was the alleged and denied right to a jury trial of a specific issue or issues of fact where, in a typical chancery action, the court must retain the invoked jurisdiction for the purpose of performing equity’s traditional aim, that of granting complete relief by adjudging in one action the rights and duties of all of the parties which really groiv out of or are connected with the subject matter of that action. 5
As the described debate proceeded the equity action of
Sokel
v.
Nickoli
came to second review (
“In regard to appellants’ complaint that the lower court denied them a jury trial, we call attention to the statute (CL 1948, § 618.21 [Stat Ann § 27.1001]) providing that the court shall decide whether a jury is necessary, and, we believe, the following, as stated in Chamberlain v. Eddy [1908],154 Mich 593 , 604, 605, applies:
“ ‘We are not impressed with the importance of a jury to decide any question in the case. A chancellor can do it as well. Where the jurisdiction of equity is clear, as in this case, there is no obligation to send questions of fact to the jury.’ ”
The significance of the stated distinction between the purposeful substance of law and equity cannot be overstressed, most certainly in the context of this business of verdicts advisory. As early as
Dunn
v.
Dunn
(1863),
“The reason for this difference is, that in an action at law the jury are the sole judges of questions of fact, while in a court of equity there is no process by which the Chancellor can substitute the conscience or belief of a jury for his own; and he must find the facts on his own responsibility. * * * And there is no authority which I have discovered which renders it incumbent on any court of Chancery, or even proper, to follow a verdict which is not calculated to aid the conscience of the court, in solving questions of fact otherwise doubtful.” 6
Second: In Brown v. Kalamazoo Circuit Judge, supra, the Court acknowledged the dilemma of the chancellor; whether under the questioned statute of 1887 he should have entered his decree on strength of the special verdicts of the jury, or should “exercise his own judgment in the case”, (p 276.) There as here the presented question was whether a demand for jury trial, made timely in the course of an equitable action, must be honored as of right. Here as in Brown the “question has been raised in several parts of the State, and needs to he settled in order to procure uniformity of practice”. (Brown at 276.)
Judge Van Domelen, perceivably in doubt as the record shows with respect to the substance as well as the procedure which was or may have been effected in 1963, instructed the jury in detail with respect to what upon factual test became a complex accounting action; an action which, being essentially
*264
equitable
(Second Michigan Cooperative Housing Association
v.
First Michigan Cooperative Housing Association
[1959],
The proof for and against payment of the two mortgages, and of the claimed legal merger of one with the other, was sharply conflicting. Plaintiff claimed and defendants denied that the parties had arrived at an account stated, each arguing upon the facts the legal questions Division 3 considered (
Today’s difficulty is that we have before us no independent opinion of the trial judge upon the facts, and no finding or determination by him beyond this disposition of plaintiff’s motion to vacate the jury’s verdict and enter a judgment of foreclosure:
“This court adopts the verdict of the jury as advisory so as to erase any doubts as to its efficacy.
“If the accounts between plaintiff and defendants are evenly balanced, then it follows that there is *265 nothing due on the real estate mortgage. The court finds that the chattel mortgage was merged in the real estate mortgage and was extinguished so there would be nothing due under the chattel mortgage and that should be discharged. Both mortgages were based upon the sale of goods and merchandise to defendants by plaintiff, and if there is nothing owed to the plaintiff by defendant as determined By the verdict, the mortgages must be treated as paid in full.”
Third:
Refer to
Beacon Theatres
v.
Westover, supra,
at p 255 and
Dairy Queen
v.
Wood
(1962),
I cannot agree with counsel in such regard. So long as the
Brown
case stands as it does — and should — on our books, the right and duty of the trial court to hear and determine this equity case to decretal judgment, with or without an advisory jury, is constitutionally sound law in our State. In Michigan, unlike the Federal practice with its involvement of specific acts of Congress and the Seventh Amendment,
7
we determine properly under
*266
our Constitution the extent of equity’s jurisdiction, duties and powers. Our practice is governed by the rule set forth in
Vaughan
v.
Wayne Circuit Judge
(1908),
To conclude:
I believe it unwise to undertake decisional review of this decretal judgment without an opinion of the chancellor wherein he has found the facts and dealt with such legal questions as are requisite to determination of the case. In this instance the chancellor has not “expressed his personal views of the facts either as aided by the finding of the jury or independent thereof”. (Leser, supra at 561.) And the profession knows that, upon de novo review of an equitable action, this Court depends much upon the opinion of the chancellor. I think we need such help, for the judge was “there” when the witnesses testified.
The situation being what it is, and the trial judge having heard all of the testimony given before the jury, I would remand specially rather than order a new trial or determine the case now. That the Court did in Leser decide finally is not to be taken as precedent, as Justice Fellows advised pointedly in our quotation of Leser, ante at p 260.
This plaintiff is entitled to that which, but for the defendants’ demand for jury trial, it would have obtained as a matter of course, namely, an opportunity to argue the facts independently before Judge Van Domelen in effort to persuade him that — irrespective of the jury’s general and advisory verdict— *267 the proof did not preponderate in favor of defendants’ affirmative defenses. Therefore the Court of Appeals’ order for reversal and remand for new trial should be vacated.
The record should be remanded for reargument of the cause before the trial judge, for preparation by him of an independent opinion, and for entry of a new decretal judgment which, consistent with the foregoing procedural views, should decide the merits of plaintiff’s claimed right of foreclosure and defendants’ denial thereof.
I suggest further that, if either or both of the contenders be dissatisfied with such new result, they be accorded right to have the trial court’s new opinion and judgment certified to this Court for further consideration, all in conjunction with the present testimonial record and the received exhibits.
The issue of costs should abide the final result.
Notes
I have now added Division “Third” to the previous draft, fulfilling in part the promise of such a “pedantic paragraph”. It appears post at p 265.
The trial judge explained his ruling, the jury being absent, at the beginning of the trial:
“Therefore, it’s the opinion of the court that the expeditious administration of justice requires that this matter be tried before the jury in its entirety and before the matter goes to the jury the court will sort out the legal issues and retain those for decision of the court and the factual issues which are properly for the jury will be presented to the jury for decision.”
These sections are but reinforcers of equity jurisdiction.
Section 3101 reads: “The circuit courts have jurisdiction to foreclose mortgages on real estate and land contracts.”
Section 3180 reads: “Actions under this chapter are equitable in nature.”
See the second and succeeding paragraphs of the first preface of Pomeroy, appearing as it does in all editions, and note his reference to the manner in which Parliament guarded (and yet guards) against the domination of equity by law. In
Spoon-Shacket Company, Inc.,
v.
Oakland County
(1959),
See recent exemplification of this in
Sternberg
v.
Baxter
(1964),
The reader may with profit study the Court’s unusually forceful emphasis of these words when, upon application for rehearing of
Detroit National Bank
v.
Blodgett
(1897),
“In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.”
