Broughton v. Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc.

143 N.E.2d 597, 104 Ohio App. 479, 5 Ohio Op. 2d 224, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 945
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 1957
Docket8190 and 8195
StatusPublished

This text of 143 N.E.2d 597 (Broughton v. Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc.) 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
Broughton v. Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc., 143 N.E.2d 597, 104 Ohio App. 479, 5 Ohio Op. 2d 224, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 945 (Ohio Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Matthews, J.

This action was commenced by the filing of a petition for the foreclosure of a mortgage and marshaling of liens. There were seven persons named as defendants, as having, or claiming interests in the described real estate. On March 8,1955, the plaintiff dismissed his action, without prejudice. In *480 the meantime, however, two of the defendants, Bite-D-Lite, Inc., and Colerain & Springdale, Inc., had filed cross-petitions, and the trial which resulted in the judgment in favor of the plaintiff was of the issues raised by those cross-petitions and the pleadings thereto. These appeals on questions of law and fact are by the aforesaid cross-petitioners.

The mortgage which the plaintiff sought to have foreclosed covered almost 80 acres. The owner of the fee, and the mortgagor, at the time the mortgage was executed was the defendant Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc. The mortgagee was Edward Hoover, as trustee, and there is no dispute that the plaintiff is the successor'in title and is now the owner of the mortgage and the note which it secures. The note was for $50,000, upon which a payment of $5,000 was made. At all times material to this case, the mortgagor had been in default. The note was long overdue.

In its cross-petition against the plaintiff and the defendants Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc., and Colerain & Springdale, Inc., King-Bee Leasing, Inc., and Mrs. E. T. Jordan, the defendant Bite-D-Lite, Inc., alleges that on April 19, 1952, the mortgagor, Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc., while still the owner of the premises subject to the mortgage, leased a part of the premises covered by the mortgage to it with a privilege of purchase of a free and unencumbered title for $22,500; that it had complied with all conditions and was entitled to exercise the option, but that Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc., had failed and refused to convey such title to it.

Bite-D-Lite, Inc., alleges also that on May 28, 1954, the mortgagor, Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc., sold and conveyed the entire tract covered by the mortgage to the defendant Colerain & Springdale, Inc., and that it, Bite-D-Lite, Inc., had notified Colerain & Springdale, Inc., of its desire to exercise the option, but that it had refused to meet, convey the property, or receive the purchase price.

Bite-D-Lite, Inc., alleges also that when the plaintiff became the owner of the mortgage he had full knowledge of its lease and of its desire to exercise the option to purchase.

There are other allegations in Bite-D-Lite, Inc.’s, cross- *481 petition of fraud and bad faitb, which we do not deem necessary to consider in reaching a conclusion in this case.

Bite-D-Lite, Inc., prays for specific performance of its privilege of purchase.

In the cross-petition of Colerain & Springdale, Inc., it questions the validity of the lease to Bite-D-Lite, Inc., and also the lease of another portion with privilege of purchase to defendant, King-Bee Leasing, Inc., and prays that the court determine the equities of the parties and instruct it as to its duty.

The record made at the trial of the issues in the Common Pleas Court has been submitted to this court. No additional evidence was introduced.

There was no issue made as to the execution of the note and mortgage sued upon or that the plaintiff was an assignee of the mortgage and note and that there is an unpaid balance on the note, which was long overdue when this action was filed. There is no dispute as to the execution of the lease to Bite-D-Lite, Inc., and the date thereof, and that it contained the privilege of purchase and that Bite-D-Lite, Inc., had performed all conditions precedent to the exercise of the privilege of purchase. It has paid the option price—$22,500—to the Clerk of Courts to abide the decree in this case.

There is no doubt that all the parties hereto had prior knowledge of the interests of the various parties in the premises and the dates of their acquisition.

After the execution of the lease to Bite-D-Lite, Inc., the owner of the fee leased a portion of the premises to King-Bee Leasing, Inc., and gave a second mortgage on the residue of the-premises, not embraced in the leases, to Mrs. E. T. Jordan, and, thereafter, that is on August 1, 1955, the plaintiff released the portion of the premises embraced within the Jordan mortgage from the lien of his mortgage.

The portion of the premises leased to Bite-D-Lite, Inc., has never been released from the operation of the mortgage and remains in full vigor except to the extent that it has been affected by the dealings of the mortgagor and mortgagee in relation to the residue of the mortgaged premises.

It will be observed that after the mortgagor leased a portion of the premises to Bite-D-Lite, Inc., it leased another por *482 tion to King-Bee Leasing, Inc., and then gave a second mortgage on the part not leased; and that the mortgagee then released that portion from the operation of his lien. The problem we are called upon to solve arises out of these dealings by the mortgagor and mortgagee after the execution of the mortgage sued upon. What effect, if any, do the acts of a mortgagor in conveying away parts of mortgaged premises to different grantees have upon the rights of a prior grantee of another part of those premises? And, what effect, if any, does the act of the mortgagee in releasing the residue of the premises from the operation of the mortgage have upon the rights of a prior grantee of another portion of the mortgaged premises? Is the grantee of a portion of mortgaged premises entitled to have maintained the status quo at the time he acquired his partial interest, so that each portion will bear its share of the common burden?

It is manifest that this situation calls, in almost equal measure, for the application of the closely related equitable doctrines of contribution and indemnity. 11 Ohio Jurisprudence (2d), 563, Section 2. Where two or more persons or their property are charged with a burden and between them, one or more should, in justice and equity, ultimately relieve one or more or their property from the whole or a part of the burden, equity supplies a remedy to require the burden to be discharged by the primary obligor, or if the secondary obligor has already discharged the burden, to require reimbursement.

In this case, the mortgagor, Mt. Healthy Flying Service, Inc., is primary obligor, bound by the plaintiff’s note and mortgage, and every portion of the real estate embraced within the mortgage was equally burdened with the debt. No part could be relieved of the burden without the consent of the mortgagee. When the mortgagor leased a part of the mortgaged premises to Bite-D-Lite, Inc., and, later, another part to King-Bee Leasing, Inc., those transfers had no effect whatever upon the right of the mortgagee to have the entire premises, including the portions leased, subjected to the payment of the mortgage debt. It did create a situation where adjustment might be necessary in order to protect both the mortgagee and the lessees in their respective rights. Equity early conceived the idea that justice *483

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Bluebook (online)
143 N.E.2d 597, 104 Ohio App. 479, 5 Ohio Op. 2d 224, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broughton-v-mt-healthy-flying-service-inc-ohioctapp-1957.