Bardshar v. Hortzman

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 174
CourtOttawa Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 174 (Bardshar v. Hortzman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ottawa Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bardshar v. Hortzman, 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 174 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Scribner, J.

On March 6, 1893, the plaintiff, Amelia Bardshar, as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Solomon Bardshar, instituted, proceedings in the court of common pleas of this county upon a note and mortgage, executed to her deceased husband, during his lifetime, on November 9,1887, by the defendants, John and Joseph Holtzman. The mortgage to secure the same was executed by the defendant, John Holtzman, alone; the note was signed by John Holtzman alone, and the mortgage also appears to be signed Dy John Holtzman alone. Somewhere in the course of thé proceeding, Joseph Holtzman’s name appears in connection with the transaction. The mortgage was executed by John Holtzman upon certain property, described in the proceeding as twenty-two and one-half acres, lying in the south half of the north half of lot 13, Catawba Island township, except five acres in the west end of the twenty-two and one-half acre tract, now owned by John Burgdorfer.

The petition charges the-payment to the executor and avers there is now due to the administratrix of Solomon Bardshar, $452.70, with interest from 1893; that the mortgage was filed on November 15, 1888, and that Joseph Holtzman, Henry Ritter and Phoebe J. Schemoneck, defendants, have or claim some interest by way of mortgage on the premises. The petition avers that whatever interest the said Phoebe Schemoneck had, has been fully satisfied and that whatever interest said Ritter or Joseph Holtzman had was subordinate to the plaintiff’s lien. The interest of Phoebe Schemoneck does not appear.

John Holtzman filed an answer and cross-petition on April 25, 1893, and he says that on March 5, 1892, he sought to convey to one Edward Roehrs, eight acres of land, before described, covered by the mortgage, and also the right of way along the line of the said twenty-two and one-half acre tract. He avers that Roehrs is a necessary party; that as a part of the consideration of said sale to him, said Roehrs assumed and agreed to pay the note and mortgage set forth in the petition. He further avers that at that time, to-wit, March 5, 1892, Geo. E. St. John was the authorized agent of Bardshar, since deceased, authorized to collect the mortgage money for the recovery of which the action is'brought; that on March 5, 1892, Roehrs paid Bardshar through St. John, the sum of $400 in full of the amount then due. The answer and cross-petition of Holtzman then proceeds: “John Holtzman, this defendant, claims a lien upon said real estate in the sum [175]*175of $400, as a part of the purchase money thereof and prays judgment accordingly. ’'

Edward Roehrs, to whom Holtzman says he conveyed the eight acres, and whom, as Holtzman insists, was to pay the mortgage debt of Bardshar’s, answers-on November 22, 1893, and he says that on or about March 5, 1892, he paid to Bardshar, through Geo. E. St. John, who was then his agent, the full amount of the promissory note sued upon and accrued interest. Bardshar’s administratrix, replies to this on May 15,1893, and denies that St. John was the agent of Bardshar, to collect the amount due upon the note and mortgage, and set up in the petition, and denies that on March 5, 1892, or at any other time, Roehrs paid Bardshar through St. John, the sum of $500, as the full amount of the principal and interest then due on said note or any other sum whatever, at any time to apply on or toíelease said mortgage; denies all knowledge of the sale of Holtzman to Roehrs, or that Roehrs agreed to pay said note and mortgage, or that Bardshar was in any manner a party to said agreement, or that any part of said note and mortgage has been paid. And Bardshar, as administrator, also replies to the answer of Edward Roehrs, December 14, 1893, and denies each and every allegation therein contained.

It appears by the testimony bearing upon this branch of the case as between Bardshar’s estate and Holtzman and Roehrs, that some negotiations were carried on by and between St. John and Bardshar, then in full life, by which St. John was endeavoring to secure a purchaser to make a purchase and secure a transfer of the Bardshar note for $420, and it further appears in the testimony uncontradicted in the case, that Roehrs had, as a point of fact, by some arrangement, placed in St. John’s hands $400, with which to take up that note.

According to St. John’s testimony, which is confirmed by Cashier Zollinger, of Sandusky, St. John met Zollinger at the Third National Bank of Sandusky some few months before Bardshar’s death, and a considerable discussion took place between them upon the subject of the sale or the surrender of the note to St. John for the sum of $400. According to the testimony, there was a good deal of hesitancy on the part of Bradshar and a good deal of disinclination on his part to accept less than the sum of $420 — the interest making the $420, there being some arrears of interest accumulated on it; but the testimony shows that Bardshar finally agreed to accept the $400; he had the note with him, but he didn’t have the mortgage, and St. John refused to pay the money or accept the note until the mortgage was also placed in the hands of the cashier of the bank, or in his hands. In order to complete the transaction, Bardshar, it would seem, finally consented to^ look up the mortgage and bring it in and deposit it with Zollinger, and when he had done so, Zollinger was to deliver him Mr. St. John’s check for $400. The check and note were pinned together and placed in charge of Zollinger. But Bardshar never brought in the mortgage, never consummated the transaction. The note and mortgage executed by St. John remained in the bank for perhaps two or three months and finally, the transaction never being completed, Mr. St. John went to the bank and lifted his check and destroyed it, leaving the note there without asking to control it or claiming any right or interest in it. It seems by correspondence produced that after the death of Bardshar, St. John renewed his application for the note and mortgage. The letters were addressed to Mrs. Bardshar, administratrix, requesting the papers to be produced, but no attention was ever paid to this request, and the note and mortgage remained in her hands as administratrix, after the death of her husband, and it is upon this that this suit is brought by her.

Now, regarding the transaction detailed by the testimony as to the sale of the note and mortgage to Mr. St. John, neither Mr. Bardshar nor his representatives were entitled to the check for $400 until he or they produced the mortgage and the transaction was not complete or consummated until the mortgage was produced. Bardshar had no right, was not authorized to lift the check until he thought proper to produce the mortgage, and we cannot view the transaction as otherwise than incomplete and not consummated, and that at the death of Mr. [176]*176Bardshar under the conditions then existing, he must be regarded and his representatives must now be regarded as entitled to the note and mortgage and that neither St. John or Mr. Roehrs, who, it seems, he was acting for, have any right to interpose in the matter.

Another issue is made between the estate of Bardshar and one Henry Ritter. He files his answer and cross-petition in the case on March 10, 1893, and says that on January 20, 1888, John and Joseph Holtzman executed and delivered to Geo. B. St. John, their promissory note of that date for $2,000, at three years after said date, .with interest at seven per cent, per annum payable annually, the note being payable to the order of Mr. St. John. That, on the same date, to secure the payment of the note, the defendant, John Holtzman, executed and delivered to said St.

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4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bardshar-v-hortzman-ohcirctottawa-1894.