136 N.W.2d 7 | Mich. | 1965
LEWIS
v.
POEL.
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Alphonse Lewis, Jr., in propria persona.
Frederick W. Poel, Jr., for defendants.
PER CURIAM:
Plaintiff's bill of complaint was filed in June of 1962. It was dismissed on motion of defendants. This appeal followed.
The bill states what at present this Court must accept as true. It proceeds with sufficient if not artful allegation that the primary defendants, some as fiduciaries, some as attorneys representing fiduciaries and some as parties in interest, cooperated for personal profit in the mismanagement of 3 estates, which estates according to the record thereof were probated and closed in Kent county; that such mismanagement was perpetrated secretly at expense of one or more of the estates and to the detriment of a then minor beneficiary of each estate; that the actions of the said defendants in such regard constituted an actionable fraud upon said minor beneficiary *169 and that said beneficiary, having attained majority age, duly assigned to plaintiff the right of action thus pleaded. The bill concludes with allegation, the charging part of the bill considered, that plaintiff is entitled to an accounting and to other specified relief as against the said defendants.
Defendants' motion to dismiss assigned estoppel, laches, waiver, former adjudication by virtue of final probate orders, and invalidity of plaintiff's pleaded assignment. As indicated above the motion was granted, principally on ground of laches.
The bill stated an equitable case. Laches, an affirmative defense which depends not on mere lapse of time but principally on the requisite of intervening circumstances which would render inequitable any grant of relief to the dilatory plaintiff (Kelley v. Hoogerhyde, 314 Mich 37; Plasger v. Leonard, 316 Mich 174), was not available as ground for dismissal thereof. Nor were any of the other assigned reasons for dismissal, save that of former adjudication. See former Court Rule 18, § 1(e).[1]
As for the defense of bar by former adjudication, no showing upon affidavit or otherwise was made in support per requirement of such former rule. So there is thus far nothing of record which might lead a court of equity to rule that plaintiff's assignor, then a minor, became bound by any order of the probate court barring the cause for actual or constructive fraud her assignee has pleaded. That probate orders may be attacked for fraud was settled as far back as Ewing v. Lamphere, 147 Mich 659, 663.[2]
We do not decide whether, under current court rules, a properly prepared, duly supported, and legally unmet motion for summary judgment should be granted as against this bill. As against defendants' said motion to dismiss, plaintiff was entitled *170 to a fair hearing of the merits; also of the affirmative defenses as pleaded.
Reversed and remanded for entry of order denying motion to dismiss. Costs on appeal to plaintiff.
T.M. KAVANAGH, C.J., and DETHMERS, KELLY, BLACK, SOURIS, SMITH, O'HARA, and ADAMS, JJ., concurred.
NOTES
[1] For current provision see GCR 1963, 116.1. REPORTER.
[2] For additional authorities, see Grigg v. Hanna, 283 Mich 443, 456.