Wendland v. Citizens Commercial & Savings Bank , 92 Mich. App. 250 ( 1979 )


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  • 92 Mich. App. 250 (1979)
    284 N.W.2d 776

    WENDLAND
    v.
    CITIZENS COMMERCIAL & SAVINGS BANK

    Docket No. 78-2365.

    Michigan Court of Appeals.

    Decided September 5, 1979.

    Cumings & Johnston, for plaintiff.

    Winegarden, Booth, Ricker, Shedd & Haley, for defendant.

    Before: DANHOF, C.J., and V.J. BRENNAN and H.R. CARROLL,[*] JJ.

    *252 DANHOF, C.J.

    This case presents a significant issue concerning the extent to which contractual disabilities of coverture stemming from our common-law legal heritage continue to restrict women under the married women's property act, MCL 557.1; MSA 26.161, and the cases interpreting that act.

    Plaintiff is the widow of Frederick Wendland, who was proprietor and sole stockholder of a now defunct chain of stores in Flint, Michigan, incorporated as Wendlands' Apparel, Inc. Plaintiff was the nominal vice-president of the corporation, but performed no corporate duties and allowed her husband to handle all of the couple's financial affairs until his death on June 23, 1976.

    Over the years, the Wendlands had borrowed in excess of $300,000 from defendant bank on jointly executed, personal unsecured notes. Defendant customarily deposited the proceeds of these loans directly into the account of Wendlands' Apparel, Inc. During the early 1970's, the business began consistently losing money and defendant eventually requested security for the Wendlands' debt. One of defendant's officers informed Mr. Wendland that unless he turned over possession of certain securities comprising the bulk of the Wendlands' net worth, defendant would call in the loans. These securities were actually plaintiff's sole and separate property.

    Mr. Wendland personally delivered the securities to defendant in two blocks, one in 1974 and one in 1975, each stock certificate being accompanied by a stock assignment executed in blank by plaintiff. Although this procedure was sufficient to absolutely transfer the securities to defendant, MCL 440.8309; MSA 19.8309, the parties do not dispute that the transfer was intended as a pledge *253 of plaintiff's stock to secure the Wendlands' joint debt.[1]

    In 1977, plaintiff instituted this action seeking cancellation and rescission of her stock assignments to defendant on the theories that her separate property could not be used as collateral for the jointly executed notes and that the circumstances surrounding plaintiff's execution of the stock assignments and promissory notes constituted a fraud upon her. After plaintiff and two of defendant's employees had been deposed, the trial court granted defendant's motion for summary judgment pursuant to GCR 1963, 117.2(1). Plaintiff appeals as of right.

    The pivotal legal issue is whether, under the married women's property act, MCL 557.1, a married woman may pledge her solely owned stock as security for a promissory note signed jointly by her and her husband, or whether the common-law disabilities of coverture still apply to render such a pledge of her separate property void ab initio and unenforceable.[2] If the latter proposition is true, plaintiff is entitled to the return of her stocks. If not, defendant has the right to satisfy any debt remaining on the Wendlands' jointly-executed promissory notes out of plaintiff's pledged securities, pending our secondary inquiry into whether a fraud was perpetrated on plaintiff by defendant or her husband.

    The roots of the instant controversy are mired in the common-law doctrine, formerly accepted in *254 Michigan, that marriage resulted in unity of person as between husband and wife, the husband alone controlling all of his and his wife's actions and property. By virtue of her married state, the wife "lost entirely all the legal incidents attaching to a person acting in her own right", including the right to separate ownership of property and the power to make personally binding contracts, Burdeno v Amperse, 14 Mich 90, 92 (1866); Tong v Marvin, 15 Mich 60, 66 (1866); Note, The Impact of Michigan's Common-Law Disabilities of Coverture on Married Women's Access to Credit, 74 Mich L Rev 76, 78-79 (1975).

    To remedy some of the injustices resulting from women's disabilities of coverture, the Michigan Legislature enacted a married women's property act. The key provision, unchanged since 1855, is today codified as MCL 557.1:

    "That the real and personal estate of every female, acquired before marriage, and all property, real and personal, to which she may afterwards become entitled by gift, grant, inheritance, devise, or in any other manner, shall be and remain the estate and property of such female, and shall not be liable for the debts, obligations and engagements of her husband and may be contracted, sold, transferred, mortgaged, conveyed, devised or bequeathed by her in the same manner and with the like effect as if she were unmarried."

    This provision granted married women significant control over their separate property and the concomitant power to contract with regard to that property. Michigan courts, however, early established that the forerunner of MCL 557.1 had not conferred upon married women a "general capacity to contract". West v Laraway, 28 Mich 464, 465 (1874). The purpose of the statute was primarily to protect the wife in the enjoyment and disposal of *255 her property for her benefit and that of her family free from her husband's potentially pernicious control. De Vries v Conklin, 22 Mich 255 (1871), Artman v Ferguson, 73 Mich 146; 40 NW 907 (1888). The remedial legislative design was to remove a married woman's contractual disabilities only insofar as they might operate unjustly and oppressively to subject her separate property to dissipation by her husband or another. De Vries, supra.[3]

    In keeping with this protective, limited interpretation of statutory intent, Michigan courts have consistently held that a married woman may not contract to become personally liable on a debt except where the contract is related to her separate ownership of property nor can she act as surety for the debt of another. For example, in De Vries, supra, a creditor brought an action in assumpsit against a husband and wife on a promissory note jointly executed in consideration for the creditor's discontinuance of a suit against the husband alone. The Court held:

    "[The] statute neither in terms authorizes a married woman to make herself liable personally for the debt of another, nor where no consideration moves to her can it *256 be presumptively for her benefit. It was no part of the design of the statute to relieve her of common law disabilities for any such purpose." 22 Mich at 259.

    Then, in West, supra, plaintiff sued husband and wife jointly upon their joint promissory note, which had been given to obtain an extension of time on the husband's debt. The Court upheld the wife's defense that her separate estate was not bound by the note, emphasizing that a married woman only had limited statutory capacity to contract.

    "* * * She can only make such contracts as relate to her own property, while in regard to that she has very full powers. She may purchase property and bind herself for the purchase money * * * But she cannot become personally liable except on account of her own matters; and cannot enter into an undertaking jointly with her husband as his surety. De Vries v Conklin, 22 Mich 255. And she can never be held without affirmative proof that the contract is her own and within her powers * * *." 28 Mich at 465.

    The principles enunciated in West and De Vries, that a married woman cannot be held personally liable on any contract unless some consideration flows directly to her separate estate and that she cannot act as surety for another, have proven remarkably hardy through the years. See, e.g., Kitchell v Mudgett, 37 Mich 81 (1877), Johnson v Sutherland, 39 Mich 579 (1878), Koengeter v Holzbaugh, 332 Mich 280, 283-285; 50 NW2d 778 (1952), National Bank of Rochester v Meadowbrook Heights, Inc, 80 Mich App 777, 782; 265 NW2d 43 (1978). Also compare Kirby v Orloff, 226 Mich 413; 197 NW 371 (1924), with Monroe State Savings Bank v Orloff, 232 Mich 486, 205 NW 596 (1925).

    *257 Nevertheless, beginning with Watson v Thurber, 11 Mich 457, 469 (1863), Michigan courts have also recognized the principle that "[there] is no legal objection to the making by a wife of a mortgage to secure her husband's debts". Watson accordingly allowed foreclosure on a wife's mortgage of her sole property given to secure her husband's preexisting debt. See also Marx v Bellel, 114 Mich 631, 633; 72 NW 620 (1897), where the Court seems to rule that a wife may create a lien upon her separate estate for her husband's debt. Numerous other decisions have similarly held that a married woman may mortgage or convey her separate property as security for her husband's or another's debt. See, e.g., Damon v Deeves, 57 Mich 247; 23 NW 798 (1885), Lewis v Doyle, 182 Mich 141; 148 NW 407 (1914), Peoples Wayne County Bank v Wesolowska, 256 Mich 45; 239 NW 367 (1931), Shepard v Bestar, 271 Mich 219; 259 NW 895 (1935), Collateral Liquidation, Inc v Manning, 287 Mich 568; 283 NW 691 (1939).

    Moreover, even the Courts in De Vries, supra, and West, supra, distinguished a married woman's conveyance by mortgage to secure another's debt, which they found permissible under the married women's property act on the authority of Watson, from a contract making her personally liable without reference to her separate estate, which they ruled the act did not authorize. Their analysis logically implies a crucial distinction between a married woman's assignment of a specific interest in an identifiable part of her separate property, which is enforceable whether or not her property derives any direct benefit, and her contract for personal liability, which is only valid if it directly concerns her property.

    The narrower question before us is whether a *258 pledge of a wife's sole property to secure an obligation jointly incurred with her husband falls within the holding of De Vries and West or within that of Watson.

    We first note some language in West which, while subject to attack as dictum, nevertheless supports the contention that a married woman's pledge of her separate property is enforceable:

    "Those who deal with her [a married woman] on her personal responsibility must be prepared to show that she has acted within her legal powers. Those who desire to obtain security on her property must obtain it as they would if she were unmarried, — that is, by some instrument describing the property and defining their rights in it, or by some pledge or transfer which is equivalent." 28 Mich at 470-471. (Emphasis supplied.)

    However, in Russel v Peoples Savings Bank, 39 Mich 671 (1878), the Court refused to enforce a transaction which otherwise appears to be a married woman's assignment or pledge of a specific portion of her separate property. The woman, who was a stockholder in a corporation, endorsed over and delivered to the creditor bank her solely held note from another corporation as collateral for an overdue note of the corporation in which she owned stock. The Court labeled the transaction a contract of suretyship which was unenforceable because the married woman's separate estate had not benefited by the contract.[4] See also Mutual *259 Benefit Life Ins Co v Wayne County Savings Bank, 68 Mich 116; 35 NW 853 (1888), where the Court held void a married woman's assignment to a bank of her beneficial interest in two life insurance policies as security for a debt jointly incurred with her husband. The opinion emphasized both that her separate estate had received no consideration and that she was basically ignorant of the import of her signature when her husband obtained it.

    In contrast is the holding of Just v State Savings Bank of Ionia, 132 Mich 600; 94 NW 200 (1903), a case with facts very similar to those of the instant situation. Mr. Just validly transferred to his wife several certificates of stock of the Ionia County Savings Bank. Mr. Just subsequently borrowed $2,000 from defendant bank, gave his sole note for the debt and delivered two of his wife's stock certificates as collateral for the note along with his wife's written consent to the pledge. The Court held:

    "While a married woman may not become a surety for her husband, and thereby incur a personal obligation, she may pledge her property to secure his debt. This she seems to have been willing to do, and is now estopped from disputing the validity of the pledge." 132 Mich at 605. See also Probst v Massachusetts Bonding & Ins Co, 230 Mich 543; 202 NW 974 (1925).

    Apart from Mrs. Wendland's further allegations of fraud, the only difference between the instant case and Just, supra, is that Mrs. Wendland pledged her stock to secure a joint debt rather than her husband's sole debt. This difference is by itself statutorily insignificant. According to the *260 applicable precedent, the important factor is the relationship between the liability incurred by the married woman on the debt and her separate estate, not merely the nature of the underlying debt.

    We resolve any ambivalence in the case law in favor of following the Just ruling. Very early in the history of statutory interpretation of MCL 557.1, Michigan courts drew a logical distinction for purposes of validity between married women's contracts for personal liability on a debt in the nature of suretyship and their contracts assigning a particular interest in their separate property as security for a debt. A pledge of stocks falls in the latter category and is thus enforceable.

    Regarding the secondary issue of fraud, plaintiff alleged below that her property was delivered to defendant without her knowledge or consent, and that if she signed any forms assigning her stock to defendant she only did so in the belief that her signatures were necessary to allow her husband's business to expand. The trial court found no genuine issues of material fact. It also concluded as a matter of law that neither defendant nor plaintiff's husband had defrauded plaintiff and that, absent any fraud, she was estopped from denying the validity of her stock assignments where she had signed the requisite documents at her husband's request.

    We first note that, because of the factual record developed below, summary judgment, if appropriate at all, should have been awarded pursuant to GCR 1963, 117.2(3) and not under GCR 1963, 117.2(1). As for the undisputed factual basis of plaintiff's claim of fraud, she testified at her deposition that she recognized her signature on the stock assignments but said that she did not recall *261 signing them because she habitually signed all documents presented to her by her husband without reading the contents or inquiring into them. She also stated that she had not been consulted when her stocks were pledged as security nor was she aware that the certificates had been delivered to defendant. Plaintiff did not allege any fraudulent intent on the part of her husband or defendant.

    Plaintiff's allegations are insufficient to establish a traditional claim of fraud. See 12 Michigan Law & Practice, Fraud, §§ 1-11, pp 390-411. Plaintiff, however, relies on Peters v Burt D Howe Co, 237 Mich 261; 211 NW 639 (1927). In Peters, the Court apparently found that a wife had been induced to assign her sole interest in a land contract to her husband's creditor on the strength of her husband's representation that he would thereby obtain additional funds for his business. The Court held that where the purpose of the wife's assignment was actually to secure her husband's preexisting debt, she had been the victim of fraud.

    There is a parallel between Peters and the present case in that, along with her stock assignments, plaintiff signed a Federal Reserve document indicating that the stock was being assigned to obtain a working capital loan rather than to secure the Wendland's preexisting joint debt. But the plaintiff stated that she did not read what she signed nor did she ask about the significance of any document. Her signature of the stock assignments was hardly induced by any misrepresentation in the Federal Reserve form. In short, plaintiff has not established that she received any inducement or acted under any fraudulently promoted misapprehension of the circumstances surrounding her signature. The fact that plaintiff paid *262 no attention whatsoever is not sufficient to raise a claim of fraud.

    We recognize the harsh effect of our decision on plaintiff in this case. In many instances, the contractual restrictions sanctioned by the married women's property act may today operate as an anachronistic reminder to capable women of their lingering common-law legal inferiority. Plaintiff, however, professed no interest in or aptitude for financial matters and now invokes the underlying protective intent of the act. Despite our sympathy for plaintiff's situation, we do not believe it commensurate with either the weight of principled authority or with present legislative policy regarding the equal legal status of women to relieve plaintiff of the consequences of her act by finding her contractually disabled.[5]

    Affirmed, costs to defendant.

    NOTES

    [*] Former circuit judge, sitting on the Court of Appeals by assignment pursuant to Const 1963, art 6, § 23 as amended in 1968.

    [1] According to the deposition testimony of defendant's credit analyst, defendant's records revealed that the Wendlands received no further loans at the time of the stock certificate deliveries. Defendant did, however, subsequently loan the Wendlands more money.

    [2] See 41 Am Jur 2d, Husband and Wife, §§ 213-226, pp 183-193, and 41 CJS, Husband and Wife, §§ 343-360, pp 828-843 for general background information on this problem.

    [3] In Isabella Bank & Trust v Pappas, 79 Mich App 274, 279; 261 NW2d 558 (1977), the Court noted that "it should be readily apparent to one and all that the married women's property act serves as a shield to familial security and protection of the innocent * * *". See City Finance Co v Kloostra, 47 Mich App 276, 282-289; 209 NW2d 498 (1973), for an analysis of the history and intent of the married women's property act together with a review of the reasons motivating the drafters of the 1963 Michigan Constitution to include a provision purportedly abolishing all disabilities of coverture in this state. Const 1963, art 10, § 1. This Court concluded in City Finance Co, supra, that the constitutional provision was not intended to supersede the married women's property act, and that any contractual disabilities of coverture not abrogated by that act still remain. See also generally, Note, The Impact of Michigan's Common-Law Disabilities of Coverture on Married Women's Access to Credit, 74 Mich L Rev 76-96 (1975).

    [4] The Russel Court reasoned that, even though Mrs. Russel was a stockholder of the corporation which she sought to aid, a contract for the benefit of the corporation was clearly distinguishable from a contract for the benefit of her own property. While her attempt to contractually ensure the corporate well-being might in turn benefit her personal estate, the result was too indirect and incidental to render her contract enforceable. See also Koengeter v Holzbaugh, 332 Mich 280; 50 NW2d 778 (1952), where the Court used the same reasoning in holding that a wife's separate estate was not sufficiently benefited to hold her severally liable on a promissory note jointly executed with her husband, although the proceeds of the loan obtained in exchange for the note provided working capital for a corporation of which the wife was the sole stockholder.

    [5] In particular, the Michigan Legislature recently ratified the Equal Rights Amendment and made it illegal to discriminate on the basis of, inter alia, sex and marital status in extending credit or granting a loan. See MCL 750.147a; MSA 28.344(1).

    We hazard no opinion regarding the result in a case where remaining common-law contractual disabilities would directly conflict with recent statutory guarantees of their equal legal rights. But see Note, Married Women's Access to Credit, supra, fn 2 at 101-105.