On February 21, 1921, plaintiffs, for an expressed consideration of "one dollar and other valuable considerations," assigned to defendant their interest as vendees in a land contract entered into by them on August 2, 1920, for the purchase of certain *Page 542 real estate in Detroit. It is their claim that this assignment was made as security for a loan of $500 then made to them by defendant. Alleging that this sum has been repaid and that defendant refuses to re-assign the contract to them, they bring this suit to compel him to do so. The defendant, answering, avers that he made an absolute and unconditional purchase of plaintiffs' interest in the contract. The trial court entered a decree dismissing the bill, from which plaintiffs appeal.
"The burden of proof is upon a plaintiff who asserts that a deed absolute upon its face is in fact a mortgage to establish his claim by clear, irrefragable and most convincing proof."Brennan v. Finn, 217 Mich. 584, 585.
Had the real consideration for this assignment been expressed therein instead of one dollar, etc., this suit would doubtless have been avoided. There is proof tending to support plaintiffs' claim, but it is met by seemingly stronger proof opposing it. Two witnesses accompanied defendant to plaintiffs' home at the time the assignment was executed. The conversation was carried on in the Russian language, with which all the parties were familiar. Alexander Barnett, one of the witnesses, testified that he explained the nature of the writing to plaintiffs.
"I told them that they are signing this paper, it means assigning the contract to Mr. Vebb. * * * They said, we know."
Both he and Abraham Friedman, the other witness, testify that nothing was there said about a $500 loan or anything to indicate that the assignment was being taken as a security. The contract property consisted of a parcel of land, on which was erected a block of stores, with a public hall in the second story. Defendant had theretofore been collecting the rentals on this property for plaintiffs under a lease agreement *Page 543 made between them. The checks therefor were as a rule made payable to plaintiffs. One of the tenants, Arthur Storm, testified that he made his check for the payment due February 1st to plaintiffs, but that "previous to March" Polokoff "came and introduced Mr. Vebb as my new landlord. * * * He told me to make checks to Mr. Vebb." Extensions of leases were thereafter granted and new leases made by defendant, with plaintiffs' knowledge, if not assent.
The contract price was $33,600, of which $3,000 was paid in cash and an equity in other property accepted as payment of $5,700. The balance was to be paid "in quarter annual installments of six hundred dollars ($600) or more each." Plaintiffs, three days after their purchase, sold fixtures and merchandise included therein for the sum of $3,000. It is undisputed that the butcher business plaintiffs were conducting was not profitable after they made this purchase. This is clearly indicated by the fact that when the assignment was made the payments due under the contract had not been paid. There were also taxes due and unpaid. It is defendant's claim that plaintiffs then owed him for money loaned them $2,757. For this sum he held plaintiffs' written acknowledgments; that he then paid plaintiffs $500 and these sums were accepted as full payment for plaintiffs' interest in the contract. The payment of the $500 was evidenced by a check, which plaintiffs admit they received. It also appears that defendant, after securing the assignment, made improvements on the property; that in June, 1922, defendant left for Europe and was gone for four months, during which time plaintiffs had nothing to do with the property, although, as they claim, they had paid up the loan which the assignment secured in the fall of 1921. The bill of complaint herein was not filed until February 2, 1923.
Plaintiffs' claim rests largely upon the fact that at the time the dealings were had between them defendant *Page 544 was an inmate of their home, that he was familiar with business matters and they were not, that they trusted him, and that a somewhat fiduciary relation existed between them. We have no doubt that plaintiffs sought advice from defendant and relied on that given them. While admitting the loans made to them by defendant, it is their claim that these moneys had all been repaid, and that their only indebtedness to defendant at the time the assignment was executed was the loan then made of $500. They offer no supporting proof to show repayment of the sums admittedly borrowed. The notes were retained by defendant. It appears that plaintiffs kept a bank account during at least a part of 1919 and 1920, but on June 22, 1920, the small balance to their credit was withdrawn and the account closed. The sums they claim to have paid defendant may have been paid in cash, but it would seem that there should have been available at least some entry or memorandum tending to support their claim that such payments had been made.
We have reviewed the proofs as disclosed by the record at some length, because we were impressed at the argument and from a casual reading of the record that an advantage had been taken of plaintiffs by defendant. While not clearly convinced to the contrary, we are persuaded that, on the record as presented, the plaintiffs have failed to produce sufficient proof to justify a court in holding that this assignment is other than it purports to be, an absolute transfer of their interest in this contract to defendant.
The decree is affirmed, with costs to appellee.
CLARK, C.J., and McDONALD, BIRD, MOORE, STEERE, FELLOWS, and WIEST, JJ., concurred. *Page 545