136 Mich. 85 | Mich. | 1904
This is a suit in equity to set aside a conveyance made by said Samuel P. Bray in his lifetime, on the ground that such conveyance was a fraud on creditors of the grantor. While there is some conflict in the testimony, the material facts are as follows: The land in controversy consists of 62-|- acres, situated in the county of
It is obvious that this bill cannot be maintained unless the conveyance of the equity of redemption was fraudulent as to the creditors of Samuel P. Bray. The land transferred was worth less than $3,500. If the mortgage thereon was a valid lien to the amount of $2,500, the equity transferred was worth less than $1,000. In this view the interest transferred to Bert H. Bray was only a homestead interest, and creditors have no right to complain. Nash v. Geraghty, 105 Mich. 382 (63 N. W. 437).
Complainant contends that the mortgage was not a valid lien for $2,500. He contends that the indebtedness secured
Complainant contends that, so far as the mortgage secured money to be paid to the mortgagor’s children, it was void, because there was no privity between them and the mortgagor. In support of this contention complainant relies upon Pipp v. Reynolds, 20 Mich. 88, in which it was decided that a contract could not be enforced at law by one who was not a party to the contract; and other Michigan cases which announce the same principle. See Turner v. McCarty, 22 Mich. 265; Hicks v. McGarry, 38 Mich. 667; Hunt v. Strew, 39 Mich. 368; Hidden v. Chappel, 48 Mich. 527 (12 N. W. 687); Edwards v. Clement, 81 Mich. 513 (45 N. W. 1107); Linneman v. Morass’ Estate, 98 Mich. 178 (57 N. W. 103, 39 Am. St. Rep. 528). That principle has no application to this case, for several reasons. In this case, though the consideration (which was entirely adequate ) was furnished by Betsey Doolittle, the mortgagor’s promise to pay the principal was made to his children. They were not, therefore, strangers to the contract. On the contrary, they were parties to the contract. The cases relied on are not authority for the proposition that one may not enforce at law a promise made directly to himself on a consideration furnished by a third person, and it has been distinctly held that he may. See Clark v. Clark, 134 Mich. 602 (96 N. W. 924); Rorabacher v. Lee, 16 Mich. 169. If it were true that the mortgagor’s children could not enforce the mortgage because the promise was made to Betsey Doolittle, their aunt, and not to them, she could enforce it, and it would be none the less a valid lien for the indebtedness secured. Moreover, the principle of those cases is confined to actions at law. It has been repeatedly held by this court that in a suit in ’equity a person for whose benefit a promise is made may enforce it in his own name. See Corning v. Burton, 102 Mich., at page 95 (62 N. W. 1040).
Complainant claims that the foreclosure of the Betsey Doolittle mortgage terminated the title of Bert H. Bray, acquired by the conveyance in question, and the title of all the defendants, acquired by the $2,500 mortgage under consideration; and he claims, as we understand his oral argument, a right, in redeeming from said mortgage foreclosure, to disregard these titles, and to acquire the property by the payment of the amount secured to Betsey Doolittle by the mortgage. The recent case of Walsh v. Robinson, 135 Mich. 16 (97 N. W. 55, 99 N. W. 282), is opposed to this claim. It may also be said that complainant has no right whatever to redeem unless the deed to defendant Bert H. Bray was void as to creditors; and, as we have already indicated, it was not void as to them.
Complainant argues that, though the aggregate of the mortgage and homestead interest exceeds the value of the property, he, as the representative of the creditors, has a right to obtain the property on a payment of this aggregate. In other words, he contends that he has a right in this instance to pay, if he chooses, $4,000 for property worth $3,500. If any such abstract right existed, it can scarcely be expected that a court of equity would assist a trustee, like complainant, in a project to thus waste trust funds. But it is not true that any such abstract right does exist. When one’s interest in property occupied as a’ homestead is worth less than $1,500, he has a right to occupy that property, to dispose of it as he chooses, and creditors have no right to take it from him. See Nash v. Geraghty, 105 Mich. 382 (63 N. W. 437); Burkhardt v. James Walker & Son, 132 Mich. 93 (92 N. W. 778). And it follows that they have not that right, even though they offer to pay him $1,500 for his interest.