Bateman v. Morris

4 Ohio N.P. 397
CourtClarke County Probate Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 397 (Bateman v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clarke County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bateman v. Morris, 4 Ohio N.P. 397 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

ROCKEL, J.

Henry E. Bateman, administrator of Wm. H. Morris, tiled his petition in this court to sell the real estate therein described, to pay debts of decedent and costs of administration, etc.

He alleges in his petition that there are debts due from said Morris, amounting to above §7200.00, funeral, etc., expenses $200.00 ;costs of administration,$300 ¡widow’s allowance, $1000; making a total of about $8700, and that the total value of personal property is about $3100.00. Said administrator therefore asks for an order to sell said real estate.

The defendants, John and Andrew Nicholson, have a mortgage claim on the real estate amounting to about $7000.00, the widow and all the heirs at law of said William H. Morris have been made defendants in this cause, as well as the said John and Andrew Nicholson. All of the defendants have either entered their appearance herein or have been legally served with summons. Tc this petition the said Nicholson’s filed an answer, in which they allege that before the filing of the petition herein, they had filed their petition in the Court of Common Pleas of Clark county, Ohio, setting forth their mortgage referred to in said petition herein, and praying for a fore.losure of same and sale of said premises, to pay same, but not asking any personal judgment. That all the heir3 at law of said Morris, deceased, and his widow, are parties defendant in the proceeding in the Common Pleas Court; that there is more personal property in the hands of said administrator than is sufficient to pay all the debts, funeral expenses, costs of administration, etc., not including the said claim secured by motgage on said premises; that the order prayed for in the petition is wholly unnecessary, and ask that the petition be dismissed.

To this answer a general demurrer is filed. The action brought by the Nicholson’s in the Court of Common Pleas to foreclose their mortgage, while not specifically so stated, from the fact that the widow and heirs were made parties, it is presumed, and such is the admitted fact, was brought after the death of the mortgagor, Wm. H. Morris. It [398]*398is also presumed and an admitted fact, that they did not make H. E. Batetnan, the administrator, a party to said action.

There is also but little doubt that over the matter in issue, the Probate Court and the Court of Common Pleas, have concurrent jurisdiciton. The principle therefore, upon which it is sought by the answer to dismiss the petition is: “When different courts have concurrent jurisdiction, the one before whom proceedings may be first had, and whose jurisdiction first attaches, must, necessarily, have authority paramount to the other courts, or rather, the action commenced shall not be abated by an action commenced between the same parties, in relation to the same subject in the same or any other court.” (Quoted by J. Gholson, in Spinning, etc. v. O. L. I. T. Co., 2 D. 345, from Stearns v. Stearns, 16 Mars., 167-171.)

The question therefore rises, was there an action commenced between the same parties, in relation to the same subject, in the Court of Common Pleas at the time the petition was filed in this court? it is admitted that the administrator is not a party to the action brought in .the Court of Common Pleas, but ■it is claimed that he is not a necessary party to that action, and therefore the Common Pleas Court could have acquired complete jurisdiction without his being made a party and summons issued for him. Whether or not an executor or administrator of a deceased mortgagor should be made a party in a suit in foreclosure, is passed upon in but one reported decision in Ohio. That is found in 1 Dis., 36, in the case of Hall v. Musler, in the Superior Court of Cincinnati, where that court consisted of those eminent, able and learned lawyers, Wm. G. Gholson, Oliver M. Spencer, and Bellamy Storer.

Here the question was directly passed upon, the court holding that such executor or administrator is a necessary party in a suit to foreclose a mortgage given by a deceased mortgagor. In the opinion Storer, J., says: “As there can be a judgment recovered on a bond or a note secured by the mortgage, against the personal representatives, if the payor is dead, and as the decree, when a foreclosure is asked, is for the sale of the property, there would seem to be every reason why the executor or administrator should be made a party. They alone, are supposed to know the state of the accounts between the original parties, as they have the custody of the decedent’s papers; and as any balance, remaining due after the sale, must be paid from the general fund in their hands, they ought to be permitted to litigate the whole matter, as in any other case when a money demand is set up against the estate. The right of a mortgagee is to enforce a lien, not to recover an estate; to subject property to the payment of a debt— n it to effect a title to land. * * *. In Ohio, the executor or administrator, by law is required to pay off the mortgage debts of decedent, whom they represent according to priorities, and are therefore directly interested, as the English rule states it, in taking the account, as well as redeeming the estate; and it seems to me upon every proper principle, they should be made parties. ”

It is a well settled rule that in all actions seeking to enforce the personal contracts of a deceased person, that the administrator is a necessary party. In Evans v. Beaver, 3 O. C., 55, after quoting from 4 Ohio St. p. 612; 14 Ohio St. 212, and 36 Ohio St. 447, it is said: “These quotations would

seem to indicate that the foreclosure of a mortgage in the enforcement of a personal contract, and which contract is executory. ”

This case was confirmed by the Supreme Court, 50 Ohio St. 29 Bull. 2L4, where the court says: “It is well settled that a mortgage is only a security for the performance of some obligation. ” If the foreclosure of a mortgage is the enforcement of a personal contract, the conclusion is irresistible that the administrator of W. H. Morris was a necessary party in the action commenced by the mortgagees in the Court of Common Pleas. There is another reason to my mind why the administrator should be made a party in a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage. The heir has a right to have the procesds uf the personal property of the deceased first applied in payment of this debt. It is the duty of the administrator to so apply it. It is also the right of the heir and the duty of the administrator to see that only so much land be sold as is sufficient to pay the debts. These are rights which can be properly enforced or protected by the administrator being a party to the suit, and seems to me that he is not only a proper, but a necessary party to a suit in foreclosure.

It is argued however, that even if the administrator be a necessary party, the Court of Common Pleas may still bring him in, order him to be made a party, and thus, the rights of all the parties be there determined. This no doubt is true. But if he is ordered to be made a party by the Court of Common Pleas, the action as to him can only date from the time summons is issued for him in obedience to such order, and therefore at the time the action was commenced in this court, no action was commenced as to him in the Court of Common Pleas.

The test of jurisdiction of a court has been said to be the right to begin the inquiry. When a court has jurisdicton of the subject matter of the parties, the bringing •a suit or action in that cuurt must be regarded as the beginning of the inquiry into the matter in controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bateman-v-morris-ohprobctclarke-1897.