Bender v. Vaughan

153 N.E.2d 778, 106 Ohio App. 136, 6 Ohio Op. 2d 403, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 790
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1958
Docket828 and 829
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 153 N.E.2d 778 (Bender v. Vaughan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bender v. Vaughan, 153 N.E.2d 778, 106 Ohio App. 136, 6 Ohio Op. 2d 403, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 790 (Ohio Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

Fess, J.

Appeal in case No. 828 is taken by defendant Ray B. Vaughan on questions of law and fact (reduced to appeal on questions of law only) from a judgment entered on behalf of the defendant Dorothy G. Vaughan. Appeal in case No. 829 is taken by Dorothy G. Vaughan on questions of law from a judgment entered in favor of the defendant Ray B. Vaughan reforming a former judgment entered on May 16, 1956, granting the plaintiff a divorce and making a division of property between the parties and awarding permanent alimony to plaintiff.

In 1949, Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan entered into a verbal contract with one E. R. Haines, a contractor, to remodel their residence upon a sixty-acre tract of land jointly owned by them. Upon the failure of the Vaughans to pay his account for such services, on June 19, 1950, Mr. Haines recorded an affidavit for mechanic’s lien in the sum of $9,060.16. Although the work pursuant to the contract was completed on or about June 4, 1949. under the mistaken conception that he could keep his right to a lien alive, Haines undertook to make more or less minor or cur *138 sory repairs to the premises every sixty days after completion of his contract without making any additional charge therefor on the account. In addition to the failure of Haines to file his affidavit for lien within sixty days, the lien was wholly defective in other respects, and the court properly found and determined that it was invalid.

Subsequent to the recording of the alleged lion, the defendant Ray Vaughan made the following payments to Haines on the account:

December 8, 1950 ............$1,750.00

May 12, 1955 ................. 2,500.00

May 17, 1955 ................ 1,000.00

October 14, 1955 .............. 1,250.00

thereby reducing the account to a balance of $5,203.13. 1

Mrs. Vaughan filed her action for divorce on September 19, 1955. The judgment in the divorce case entered May 16, 1956, awarded the north forty acres of the real estate, together with certain personal property, to the husband subject to his payment of certain specified obligations and awarded to the wife the south twenty acres of the tract upon which the residence was situated, the applicable portion of the judgment reciting:

“On careful consideration the court does award to plaintiff, as alimony, the undivided one-half (V2) interest of the defendant, Ray B. Vaughan, in and to the south twenty (20) acres of the south sixty (60) acres of the west one-half (V2) of the south west quarter (14) of Section 29, Township 5 North, Range 11 East, Center Township, Wood County, Ohio, to be hers absolutely and in fee simple, subject to the liability of the plaintiff for payment by the plaintiff of the following liens of record, to wit:

“Mortgage of record of The Bank of Wood County Company in the amount of $2,000.00: mechanic’s lien of record of E. R. Haines in the amount of $5,203.13; personal property tax lien of record in the amount of $1,096.12; and taxes and assessments on said tract of 20 acres for the year 1955. It is further ordered that plaintiff retain her right, title and interest in and *139 to the other undivided one-half (%) interest in said described property now owned by her, as her own property in fee simple. It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the plaintiff be awarded as alimony all of the buildings, outbuildings and structures on said tract of 20 acres, together with all hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging and plaintiff is awarded the immediate and exclusive possession thereof and plaintiff shall have, own and possess all of said described property in fee simple, free from any and all right, title or interest of the defendant therein.”

On February 16, 1956, for value received, Haines assigned of record the balance due upon his purported mechanic’s lien, $5,203.13, to Henry Bender, and on February 28, 1956, Bender filed the instant action upon the account and for foreclosure of the lien against Ray B. Vaughan and Dorothy G. Vaughan, also joining as parties defendant the Bank of Wood County and the Ohio Tax Commission. On January 5, 1957, Ray Vaughan filed a motion reciting that the mechanic’s lien sued upon had been assigned by the plaintiff to Ray Vaughan who in turn had deposited the same with the Cygnet Savings Bank as collateral for a loan at said bank and moved for an order substituting Ray Vaughan as plaintiff in the action. No action was had upon this motion.

Mrs. Vaughan interposed three defenses to the action:

1. That the purported mechanic’s lien was void.

2. That the assignment of the balance due on the account by Haines to Bender had not been recorded as provided by the provisions of Section 1325.01 et seq., Revised Code, and that under the provisions of Section 1325.04 (A), Revised Code, the assignment was void as against all persons (including Mrs. Vaughan) other than Haines. 2

3. That the action is barred by the statute of limitations, not *140 having been brought within six years after the cause therefor accrued. Section 2305.07, Revised Code.

We agree with the finding and conclusion of the trial court that the purported mechanic’s lien is void and unenforceable. Crandall v. Irwin, 139 Ohio St., 253, 39 N. E. (2d), 608, 139 A. L. R., 895.

We recognize that a literal interpretation of the provisions of Chapter 1325 of the Revised Code would lead to the conclusion that the failure of Haines, Bender and Vaughan to record their respective assignments of the account receivable would make it unenforceable even as against the account debtor. But we doubt whether it was the intention of the General Assembly to relieve the account debtor of his liability to his creditor or the latter’s assignee.

Chapter 1325 of the Ohio Revised Code is of comparatively recent origin. The financing of accounts receivable on a non-notification basis developed in response to need for working capital incident to the performance of contracts. In the employment of this method of financing, accounts were frequently assigned as security for loans upon the mutual understanding between the assignor and the assignee that the account debtor would not be notified of the assignment. Usually, the borrower was entrusted with the collection of the accounts assigned by him. But secrecy as between the assignor and assignee entailed certain risks, including the possibility of duplicate subsequent assignments.

The uncertainties of the rights among successive assignees of the same accounts became acute as a result of the enactment of the 1938 amendment to the Bankruptcy Act, Section 96 (a), Title 11, U. S. Code, defining the protection of transfers in relation to their perfection against rights of bona fide purchasers.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.E.2d 778, 106 Ohio App. 136, 6 Ohio Op. 2d 403, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bender-v-vaughan-ohioctapp-1958.