Brigel v. Creed

8 Ohio N.P. 456
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 456 (Brigel v. Creed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brigel v. Creed, 8 Ohio N.P. 456 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Smith, J.

These two cases, entitled the same, may .properly be considered together.

Leo A. Brigel and Catherine Brigel his wife -executed their joint and several note for •$15,000.00 to Jerome D. Creed and pledged ■as collateral security for the payment of the same 735% shares of the capital stock of the Jackson Brewing Company. The note was not paid at maturity. Subsequently Mr. Creed brought an action in forclosure to sell the ■collateral security. It was an equitable action purely and the relief asked was the sale •of the collateral security. No personal judgment was asked.

The court refused the demand of a trial 'by jury and after hearing the evidence in the case and the arguments of counsel, found •that there was due the plaintiff the fulih .amount of the note with interest and ordered a sale of the property provided the indebtedness was not paid before a certain date. The decree concluded as follows:

“It is further considered that if the proceeds •of the sale of said stock shall not be sufficient to pay the costs and the amount heretofore found due to the plaintiff, the plaintiff ■shall have execution for any deficiency against the defendants, Leo A. Brigel and Catherine M. Brigel, to all of which defendants except.”

The action of the court in refusing a trial ■by jury was correct. The action was purely ■ equitable — the foreclosure of a mortgage with incidental relief — and it is elementary law that in such an action the parties are .not • e-.titled to a trial by jury.

The right to insert in the decree the part just quoted, in which it is provided that if •the proceeds of the sale shall not be sufficint to pay the costs and the amount heretofore found due to plaintiff, the plaintiff shall have an execution for the deficiency is so well settled in this state that we are not called upon to concern ourselves with the rule in any other state.

Giddings v. Barney, 31 Ohio St., 83; Hamilton v. Jefferson, 13 Ohio St., 427; Myers v. Hewett, 16 Ohio St., 456; Moore v. Stark, 1 Ohio St., 373; Maholm v. Marshall, 29 Ohio St., 615.

The decree in the foreclosure suit should 'be affirmed.

Before the decree in the foreclosure suit was entered, the same plaintiff brought another action on this note, in which he sought •a personal judgment against the defendants. The same defenses were set up in the second action as in the former. Upon the trial of 'that case, in order to prove the indebtedness •of the defendants to him, he introduced the record in the other case in which appears the finding of the amount due on the nóte.

The court allowed the introduction of the record and held it to be conclusive on the question of the amount due. Judgment was therefore entered against defendants for such amount. It is contended that this action of tne court was erroneous.

We think not. The amount due between the same parties was an issue in the former case and the finding made it res adjudicata. -lie circumstances that in the former trial the parties were nor entitled to a trial by jury although if the issue had been tried in the second case the parties would have been entitled to a trial by jury does not detract from the force of the finding as res adjudicata.

It may be urged, however, that if the question at issue in the action on the note was res adjudicata by reason of the finding in the foreclosure suit, that the second action could not be maintained.

Passing by the question whether this issue was made by the pleadings in the second case and assuming for the sake of- argument that it was, nevertheless it is not true that the finding in the first case was a bar to the action in the second case.

The right to maintain two separate actions, one on the mortgage for a strict foreclosure of the same and the other on the note secured by mortgage for a personal judgment, was upheld and the reason for the right explained in Spence v. Insurance Company, 40 Ohio St., 518.

In that case the Union Central Life Insurance Company commenced an action in the court of common pleas of Clark countjyi against George Spence and his wife upon a promissory note secured by a mortgage of lands in which the relief demanded was a finding ol the amount due on the promissory note and a decree for the sale of the property described in the mortgage to pay the amount due on the note. No personal judgment was asked on the note.

While this action was pending the insurance company commenced an action in the superior court of Cincinnati against Spence, in which it demanded a personal judgment against him upon the promissory note. The defendant answered the pendency of the action in Clark county.

In deciding that such an answer was not good, the court said: “At common law three upon a debt secured by mortgage — an action to foreclose a personal action on the debt, and an action in ejectment to recover possession of the mortgaged property. Dunkley v. Van Buren, 3 Johns. Ch., 330; Delahey v. Clement, [458]*4583 Ill., 201; Joslyn v. Millspaugh, 27 Michi. 517; 2 Dan. Ch. Pr., 813.

“The section of the code, Revised Statutes, section 3021, which provides that in an action to foreclose, a mortgage a personal judgment may be asked for, recognizes the right to unite two of these actions, a right which existed without this provision. In an action for a foreclosure and for a personal judgment, the plaintiff may have both forms of judgment at the same time.

■ “This section of the code does not require the two remedies to be demanded in the same action, it is only permissive; separate actions may therefore be maintained, one to foreclose and the other for a personal judgment in the same court at the same time. I'f they may be maintained in the same court at the same time, and judgment in one action is no defense in the other, then the same consequences follow if the different actions are in different courts. The two actions are essentially different, one exhausts the mortgage security, the other affords a personal remedy;, one may be maintained without personal service and the other may not. From this fact alone both actions at the same time in different courts may be necessary to furnish a complete remedy.

“It is' urged by counsel for plaintiff in error that the second suit was not necessary, and therefore could not be maintained. The reason why a second action cannot be maintained for the same cause at the same time is, that it is not necessary. This, however, is where the object sought in both cases is the same. The actions here were for different purposes and different relief. In a case situated as this one was, the only way in which it could be shown that the second suit was not necessary, would be to show that the cause of action alleged in the second suit, by reason of the proceedings had in the* first suit, had been satisfied, or a state of fact equivalent to a satisfacción. The pendency only of another action for the same cause was not enough-In this case the pendency only of the suit on the mortgage security of the debt was pleaded as a defense.” ,

If any doubt remained upon this question after the decision' in Spence v. Insurance Co., supra, it has been entirely dispelled by the recent decision of the Supreme Court in Doyle v. West, 60

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Related

Dunkley v. Van Buren
3 Johns. Ch. 330 (New York Court of Chancery, 1818)
Hamilton v. Jefferson, Cooke & Tallmadge
13 Ohio St. 427 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1844)
Maholm v. Marshall
29 Ohio St. 611 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brigel-v-creed-ohsuperctcinci-1900.