City of Cincinnati v. Fox

49 N.E.2d 69, 71 Ohio App. 233, 38 Ohio Law. Abs. 59, 26 Ohio Op. 61, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 750
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 25, 1943
Docket6194
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 49 N.E.2d 69 (City of Cincinnati v. Fox) 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
City of Cincinnati v. Fox, 49 N.E.2d 69, 71 Ohio App. 233, 38 Ohio Law. Abs. 59, 26 Ohio Op. 61, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 750 (Ohio Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

*61 OPINION

By MATTHEWS, PJ.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment rendered on an instructed verdict in favor of the City of Cincinnati for $1947.24 against each of the appellees, as reimbursement for an amount which the City of Cincinnati was required to pay on a judgment in favor of the heirs of Wm. O. Mashburn, deceased, for their interest in a certain tract of real estate located on the south side of Fifth Street in the City of Cincinnati.

In 1928, the City of Cincinnati filed an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, to appropriate property for the widening of East Fifth Street. Owing to inclusion in the proceeding of more than it was intended to use in the widening, a controversy arose as to the right of the City to appropriate this excess which delayed the proceeding until the Supreme Court of the United States decided the issue adversely to the City of Cincinnati in the case of Vester v Cincinnati, 281 U. S. 439. Thereafter, the City filed an amended petition on September 19th, 1931, so as to eliminate the excess and to seek an appropriation of a strip twenty-five feet wide actually intended for the widening of the street.

On January 22nd, 1932, a verdict of a jury was returned assessing the compensation to be paid to the owners of this property at $30,000.00. The original defendants, all of whom were duly served with summons, were Wm. O. Mashburn and Jesse McClain, owners of a perpetual lease with option of purchase, and the' appellants herein and Wm. F. Fox, now deceased, co-owners of the reversion. Wm. O. Mashburn had died before the verdict was returned and there never was any revivor of the action against his heirs or personal representatives.

It is conceded that the verdict was returned as the result of an agreement between the City, on the one hand, and the defendant McClain and the administrators of the estate of Wm. O. Mash-burn, on the other hand.

It is also conceded that the appellants and Wm. F. Fox had no notice of the hearing at which the verdict was returned and knew nothing of the negotiations that had preceded it until afterwards and that as soon as they' received the information,' they notified the City that they would not be bound by the verdict and wanted the amount of their compensation judicially determined. As a result of this notice, the City arranged for a hearing before the Court at which Wm. F. Fox, Attorney, representing himself and the appellants herein, the City Solicitor, Mr. Wesselman as attorney for the Administrators of the estate of Wm. O. Mashburn, and Jesse McClain, were present. This was on June 30th, 1932. Nothing was *62 presented to the Court, but Mr. Fox stated that he would be satisfied if the entire $30,000.00 was paid to the reversioners, and, as a result of the negotiations thereby instituted, an agreement was reached at a meeting on August 1st, 1932, whereby $30,000.00 was paid to Mr. Fox, as attorney for the reversioners, who thereupon delivered to the City Solicitor a deed conveying the premises containing covenants of general warranty, with an exception made upon the insistence of Mr. Fox of “Any claim arising under or/and through lease from grantors to Harry S. Leyman recorded in Lease Book 185, page 13 of the Hamilton County, Ohio, Land Records”, which lease had been transferred to Wm. O. Mashburn and Jesse McClain. There is no doubt that the City accepted the deed with this exception with full knowledge it did not purport to convey the leasehold, and, thereupon, at the same meeting accepted a special warranty deed executed by Wm. O. Mashburn, Jr., and John C. Mashburn, Administrators of the estate of Wm. O. Mashburn, purporting to convey these same premises and warranting the title against the lawful claims of all persons claiming by, through, or under them. Undoubtedly, the City was under the impression that it had thereby acquired the unencumbered fee simple title to the premises. There is no claim that the reversioners assumed any obligation to see that the City did acquire such a title or had anything to do with the preparation of the deed from the Mashburn Administrators. The City prepared both deeds.

At the same meeting Wm. F. Fox, for himself and the other reversioners and Mr. Wesselman, as attorney for McClain a,nd the Administrators of the estate of Wm. O. Mashburn, signed an entry to be made in the appropriation proceeding setting forth the terms under which the $30,000.00 had been paid to the reversioners. The City Solicitor knew of this but conceiving that the matter was of no interest to the City did- notvsign the .entry. This entry was as follows:

“This cause coming on for hearing on motion of W. F. Fox, a defendant herein, to have confirmed, an agreement between the parties interested in parcel four (4), as described in the petition;, as to the distribution of .the Thirty Thousand ($30,000.00) Dollars, heretofore found by the Jury as the condemnation price to be paid by the City of Cincinnati for the north twenty-five- (25) feet of said tract, taken for the widening of East Fifth Street.

“First, To W. F. Fox, Mary A. Fox, Bertha F. Wolking, Joseph Fox, May Fox and Edna A. Fox, or their attorney, W. F. Fox, the sum of Twenty-six Thousand ($26,000.00) Dollars, which amount will also be a credit upon the sum of-Ninety Thousand ($90,000.00) Dollars purchase price in the event the lessee elects to purchase under the terms of the lease recorded in Lease Book 185, page 13, of the Hamilton County Land Records.

“Second, To the above named parties, or to W. F. Fox, Attorney, Four Thousand ($4,000.00) Dollars, to be held in trust, to be used *63 by the lessee or his assigns, in reconstructing or repairing the part remaining of the building now on said parcel, after the north part thereof is removed under the within proceedings.

“If, however, the present building is not repaired or reconstructed, within six months, or is torn down, then the Four Thousand ($4,000.00) Dollars is to be distributed as provided in paragraph First above.”

The verdict remained undisturbed, but no judgment was rendered upon it.

The City took possession at some time after the verdict was returned; demolished a part of the building and incorporated the space into the widened East Fifth Street. And thus the matter rested until October 24th, 1935, when Lucia Emily Mashburn, asserting an undivided title to the leasehold, as one of the three heirs of Wm. O. Mashburn, filed a petition in the appropriation proceeding seeking to have the verdict and all other proceedings therein after-the death of WTm. O. Mashburn, set aside, and that the value of her inteiest in the leasehold be determined, on the ground that neither she nor the other heirs or next of kin had been parties to the action. W. O. Mashburn, Jr., and John Cromer Mashburn, who were the other children of Wm. O. Mashburn, filed answers and cross-petitions in which they made similar allegations and prayed that the value of their interests be assessed, and that they be given all other relief to which they might be found entitled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.E.2d 69, 71 Ohio App. 233, 38 Ohio Law. Abs. 59, 26 Ohio Op. 61, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cincinnati-v-fox-ohioctapp-1943.