Chittenden v. Chittenden

22 Ohio C.C. 498, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 526
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. 498 (Chittenden v. Chittenden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chittenden v. Chittenden, 22 Ohio C.C. 498, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 526 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinions

Hum,, J.

Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Lucas county.

This action was heard in this court on appeal from the judgment of the court of common pleas. The plaintiff Edwin S. Chittenden commenced his action to foreclose certain mortgages of which he claimed to be the owner, and which had been executed by Herbert J. Chittenden and Mary S. Chittenden, his wife. Three of these mortgages bore date July i, 1896, and they purported to secure two notes of $1,000 each, and one note of $2,455, all running for the period of five years. The other mortgage bore date April 18, 1900, and purported to secure a note of $6,500.

The petition is in the ordinary form for the foreclosure of mortgages and for personal judgment upon the notes against Herbert J. Chittenden, one of the defendants. Herbert J. Chittenden and Mary S. Chittenden are husband and wife, and Edwin S. Chittenden, the plaintiff, is the father of Herbert J. Chittenden.

Mary S. Chittenden filed her separate answer to this petition, and she admits therein the execution by Herbert J. Chittenden of the notes set forth in the petition, and denies all other allegations. And she alleges by way of defense that the three notes which bear date July 1, 1896, were given by Herbert J. Chittenden to Isaac S. Baldwin, without consideration, and that he thereafter assigned them to Edwin S. Chittenden. (I will say that all these notes and mortgages were given originally to Isaac S. Baldwin, and assigned to the plaintiff Edwin S. Chittenden). And she avers that Herbert J. Chittenden received nothing from the said Isaac S. Baldwin or any other person for the execution of said notes or any of them “and all the mortgages securing the same were executed by said Herbert J. Chittenden for the purpose of apparently incumbering his property for motives and reasons unknown to this defendant.” In her third defense she answers the petition as to the last note and mortgage — the one bearing date April 18, 1900, for $6,500, and she avers that that also was executed by Herbert J. Chittenden without any consideration, and that nothing passed from Baldwin to him therefor, or from any other person. She alleges further as to this note and mortgage:

[500]*500“That at the time of the execution of said note, the said Herbert J. Chittenden was planning and contemplating the abandonment of his lawful wife, this defendant, Mary S. Chittenden, and said note and mortgage 'were executed by him to prevent this defendant from collecting any alimony and defrauding her in the premises. That said Herbert J. Chittenden procured the signature of this defendant to said mortgage by representing to her that the same was a mortgage to secure $3,000 to another person, and without the knowledge of this defendant procured her signature to the said mortgage to the said Isaac S. Baldwin, without her knowing that it was a mortgage to him.”

She avers in her fourth defense that she did not acknowledge or sign or execute the $6,500 mortgage before any notary public or other officer, and that it was not witnessed in the presence of two witnesses. She alleges that this mortgage is not a lien upon the premises therein described.

A reply is filed denying these allegations that are set out in the answer by way of defenses.

Herbert J. Chittenden and Mary S. Chittenden were married on the 30th of July, 1896. The three notes, one for $1,000, another for $1,000, and one for $2,455, eacb secured by mortgage, were executed on the xst day of July, 1896, about 30 days before the marriage of Herbert and. Mary S. Chittenden. At the time of the execution of the last note and mortgage, for $6,500, they had been married about four years. The issue here is entirely between Mary S. Chittenden, and Herbert Chittenden and Edwin S. Chittenden, the plaintiff, the defendant Herbert Chittenden admitting, the allegations of the petition. He is in default for answer. The defendant Mary S. Chittenden claims that all these notes and mortgages were made by Herbert J. Chittenden to his father without any consideration whatever; and as she says in hex petition, the first three were made for purposes unknown to her. She claims as to the $6,500 note, made in July, 1900, it was made for the purpose of defrauding- her in her claim for alimony and for support against her husband, and that therefore, so far as she is concerned, this mortgage is void; and she claims that the property of Herbert J. Chittenden should be divested of this $6,500 mortgage, and relieved of it, so far as any claim that she may have for alimony, is con[501]*501cerned, if the court should find that she was entitled to alimony or had such a claim.

The defendant Herbert J. Chittenden and his father, the plaintiff, deny all fraud in the transaction, and claim that the notes and mortgages were made upon the dates alleged in the pleadings. The first three notes — the two for $1,000 each and the one for $2,455 — were made about 30 days before the marriage of Herbert J. and Mary S. Chittenden; they had been engaged to be married for perhaps three or four years prior to-their marriage. They lived happily together, until April, 1900. There was no trouble of any kind between them. Herbert J. made no complaint to her or to any one as to the conduct of his-wife, and she had no reason to suppose that he was unhappy in his marriage relation with her, or dissatisfied, or that he contemplated a separation from her. A day or two before April 18, 1900 — the date of the $6,500 note and mortgage — Herbert told his wife that it was necessary for him to borrow about $3,000, to raise money to satisfy a claim of an estate for which he had been acting as administrator, and that he could borrow this money of his father, and that it would be necessary for' him to give a mortgage to secure this and other indebtedness to his father. She demurred some to signing a mortgage. However, she went to his office soon thereafter, and a paper was drawn, as she testifies, ready for her to sign, which was in fact a deed of all of his real estate to his father. She objected to signing this, and asked him what there would be for her if he. transferred his property to his father, in case he died, and he assured her-that there was life insurance for her support. But she insisted that a mortgage should be given instead of a deed, if it was necessary to raise this money. ' So the deed was destroyed and a mortgage drawn, as she supposed, to Edwin S. Chittenden, the father of Herbert. She signed the paper, and it was acknowledged before a notary, and witnessed. The mortgage turned out afterwards to have been given to Isaac S. Baldwin, the brother-in-law of E. S. Chittenden, and in June following it was assigned by him to Edwin S. Chittenden. According to the testimony of Baldwin, Edward S. Chittenden and Herbert Chittenden had- talked with Baldwin before this, and procured His permission to make notes and mortgages hr [502]*502his name, and have them transferred to Edwin S. Chittenden. Herbert J. Chittenden claims to have been indebted to his father at this time in this amóunt. His father was apparently a suret}^ for him on a note, but had not been required to pay it at that time. Edwin S. Chittenden, the father, came to Toledo some years ago from Seneca county — Republic, Seneca county • — where he Ead been engaged in business. Selling out there, he came here, and claimed to have had some money which he turned over to Herbert from time to time, and he invested it in real estate, and it is claimed that father and son were to divide the profits. I will come back to their business relations further along.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. 498, 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chittenden-v-chittenden-ohiocirct-1901.