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Principal And Agent - Liability Of Agent To Third Party For Contract Made Without Authority, Walter Probst Jr.
Principal And Agent - Liability Of Agent To Third Party For Contract Made Without Authority, Walter Probst Jr.
Michigan Law Review
The defendant conducted a real estate agency and had been requested from time to time to find a purchaser for a certain tract of land. The defendant negotiated to sell this land to the plaintiffs, who knew the defendant was acting as an agent. The land had before the time of this negotiation been conveyed to a third party by the principal. It was found that the defendant was acting in good faith. Held, that the defendant was not personally liable for the loss and damage sustained by the plaintiffs. King v. Russell, 278 Mich. 529, 270 N. …
Purchaser's Remedies For Absence Of Marketable Title, Lawrence Linville
Purchaser's Remedies For Absence Of Marketable Title, Lawrence Linville
Michigan Law Review
"Where a person takes upon himself to contract for the sale of an estate, and is not the absolute owner of it, nor has it in his power by the ordinary course of law or equity to make himself so; though the owner offer to make the seller a title, yet equity will not force the buyer to take it, for every seller ought to be a bona fide contractor: and it would lead to infinite mischief if one man were permitted to speculate upon the sale of another's estate."
The apprehensions of Sugden were not groundless, as three quarters …
Wills - Executors And Administrators -Titles - Effect Of The Revocation Of Probate Decrees On The Title To Realty Acquired By Bona Fide Purchase From Heir Or Devisee, Victor P. Kayser
Michigan Law Review
There are probably few chains of title to realty that do not contain at least one link consisting of a conveyance from one who claimed as heir or devisee of a decedent. The ability of the granter to convey resulted from the fact that he was heir of an intestate or was a devisee under the last will of his testator. Sometimes it has occurred that the grantee has purchased for value and with no knowledge or suspicion of an impending attack on his grantor's title, only to have it subsequently determined in a judicial proceeding that his grantor's ancestor …
Mortgages - Deed In Lieu Of Foreclosure - Validity, Elbridge D. Phelps
Mortgages - Deed In Lieu Of Foreclosure - Validity, Elbridge D. Phelps
Michigan Law Review
Depression years have brought to the fore a question much controverted in the early law, but now said to have become settled. That question regards the effect and efficacy of a conveyance of the mortgaged land, or a transfer of the equity of redemption, by the mortgagor to his mortgagee. It seems to have been cheerfully assumed by some lawyers, and by laymen in general, that in the absence of liens subsequent to the mortgage, the procedure is perfectly safe and proper in every case. It is the purpose of this discussion, however, to point out certain dangers inherent in …
Mortgages - Subrogation Of One Whose Loan Is Used To Pay A Senior Mortgage, Theodore R. Vogt
Mortgages - Subrogation Of One Whose Loan Is Used To Pay A Senior Mortgage, Theodore R. Vogt
Michigan Law Review
S mortgaged the property in question to U, then conveyed the land and certain water rights to H, who gave a second mortgage on the land to M. Thereafter H conveyed the land and water rights to F, who borrowed from Z funds to retire the first mortgage, giving to Z a mortgage which it was agreed between F and Z should be a first mortgage, and transferring to Z the water rights as additional security. In an action by M to foreclose, held, Z was entitled to subrogation to the position of first mortgagee …