206 Mich. 116 | Mich. | 1919
Defendant Henry Sprague and his wife, Emeline, owned as tenants by the entireties 40
“The further consideration of this deed is that said second party is to care for and maintain said first party during his natural life and give him a good home on said premises, and said second party is to settle with L. Verna Simmons, and Glenn A. Sprague as agreed between the parties. It is agreed further that in case said premises are sold, second party shall give or furnish a good home for first party.”
The plaintiff filed a transcript of his judgment in the circuit court, issued execution thereon, caused a levy to be made on the premises, and filed this bill in aid of such execution. From a decree setting aside this conveyance as to plaintiff, defendants appeal.
It is undisputed that the affidavit for the transcript was prepared July 31, 1917, and that it was filed and sworn to before the justice on the next day, August 1st, and that on the latter date the transcript was filed in the circuit court and execution issued. The jurat to the affidavit is as follows:
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this........ ..........................day of July, A. D. 1917.
“Henry C. Clark, “Justice of the Peace.”
On behalf of defendants it is insisted that this defect, the omission of the date, is not amendable; that the affidavit is jurisdictional; that the affidavit must
In the early case of People, ex rel. Dickinson, v. Simondson, 25 Mich. 113, the affidavit for appeal was not signed by the party and the jurat was not signed by the justice. It was held that the appeal was not invalid, that the justice might sign the jurat nunc pro tunc or a further return might be required to establish whether the affidavit had in fact been sworn to, and the distinction was recognized between affidavits sworn to before some other officer and those sworn to before the justice. As to the former it was held that the jurat must be signed; as to the latter it was said:
“But when the appellant has sworn to it before the justice himself, he has done all that can be required of him in respect to the affidavit, and the neglect of the justice to perform his duty, by signing a proper jurat, ought not to prejudice the rights of the appellant.”
This case was followed in Merrick v. Mayhue, 40 Mich. 196, where the proceedings involved were the filing of a transcript of a judgment of a justice of the peace, the same proceedings here under consideration.
Defendant Henry Sprague was in ill health at the time of the trial and was not called as a witness. Nor was his testimony taken by deposition. Defendant Gail H. Sprague and others of the family were called. The theory of the defense in the court below was and here is that defendant Gail H. had remained with his parents after reaching the age of 21, some ten years; that the conveyance in question as to that portion of the premises above the mortgage and homestead exemptions was in payment for past services, and as to the homestead was to pay for future care and support, anything remaining therefrom to be divided between the children of Henry at his death. There was testimony in defendant’s case that he was to have the 40 for his services to his parents; that there was due him at the time of the conveyance an amount equal to the value of the premises above the mortgage, figuring his wages at $25 per month, which in one part of his testimony he says was the agreed price, and there was testimony to support his claim. He admitted that his needs, have been provided from the farm, admitted the receipt of a horse from his father but claims it w;as given to him. The trial judge who heard and saw the witnesses did not give credence to his claim that he had earned and had coming to him the value of the premises above the mortgage and exemptions, but concluded that the con
“After being furnished with very studiously prepared briefs in the case I can come to no other conclusion than that the conveyance in this case, so far as the plaintiff in this case is concerned, was fraudulent.' The defendant has not made out a harmonious defense, and I am led to believe the case should be governed by the case in the 52d Michigan, page 7, and the 106th Michigan, page 25.
“The relief sought by the plaintiff in this case should be granted, and decree will be drawn accordingly.”
While this court hears the case de novo we must recognize the advantage possessed by the trial judge who saw the witnesses, heard their testimony, noted their demeanor on the stand, their candor or want of candor, and was thus able to measure their credibility. Peets v. Peets, 156 Mich. 87; Thompson v. Hurson, 201 Mich. 685; Crampton v. Crampton, 205 Mich. 233. A careful reading of all the testimony offered on behalf of defendants fails to convince us that the trial judge incorrectly weighed and measured their claims. The judgment involved was the renewal of a former judgment; the indebtedness was an old one. For many years during its existence defendant Henry Sprague was execution proof due to the title to the farm being held by him and his wife. Upon her death the title vested in him by right of survivorship. Before he buried his dead, he and other members of the family bestirred themselves so that the title was again placed where he was execution proof. While it was competent to prove by the attorney, who acted as scrivener, the circumstances of the transaction, what was told him by the parties is not evidence of the facts stated by them. We are disinclined to disturb
The decree of the court below should therefore be modified so as to exclude from its operation, and to relieve from the levy, the homestead as to the value of $1,500. As so modified it will be affirmed. No costs of this court will be allowed.