Condorodis v. Kling

169 N.E. 836, 33 Ohio App. 452, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 457
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 836 (Condorodis v. Kling) 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
Condorodis v. Kling, 169 N.E. 836, 33 Ohio App. 452, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 457 (Ohio Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mills, J.

This case is here on appeal from the court of common pleas, where the plaintiffs, John Condorodis and Sam Condorodis, sued, on April 21, 1927, to enforce specific performance of a certain contract, whereby defendant, Meyer Kling, had agreed to purchase from plaintiffs certain real estate in Cincinnati, Hamilton county, Ohio.

The contract sued on was dated March 11, 1927, and consisted of defendant’s written offer to purchase and the plaintiffs’ written acceptance thereof.

This contract stipulated $15,000 as the purchase price, payable in cash “upon transfer of the property,” with the further provision that title to the property was to be transferred on or before 30 days from March 11, 1927, “by deed of general warranty with release of dower, clear, free, and unincumbered,” except as to certain claims for unpaid taxes.

*455 The contract further recited that defendant had deposited $500 with plaintiffs “as earnest money to apply on the purchase price, same to be refunded * # * if the title of the above is found defective and cannot be remedied. Balance of the purchase price to be paid * * * cash upon transfer of property.”

In the contract the plaintiffs guaranteed that no part of the premises was under lease, and that there were no building or health orders against the property.

On March 31, 1927, a certain suit was filed and duly docketed in the court of common pleas of Hamilton county, Ohio, against John Condorodis and Sam Condorodis, seeking a money judgment against them in excess of $10,000, as damages for alleged malicious prosecution. That suit remained untried until May 20, 1927, when a verdict was returned by a jury in favor of the defendants therein; thereafter the suit remained further undisposed of until June 13,1927, when a final judgment was entered in favor of Condorodis and Condorodis.

On April 6 the defendant notified plaintiffs that the pending suit for damages constituted a defect in the title.

Plaintiffs concede that from April 6 to April 11 defendant was ready, willing, and able to pay the purchase price, and to accept a deed for the property in question, on the sole condition that the pending suit for damages be first dismissed, or otherwise finally disposed of, and that the defendant not only notified plaintiffs to such effect, but also demanded that plaintiffs carry out their contract by conveying to him a title that was clear, free, and unincumbered, *456 Defendant conceded that plaintiffs were from April 6 to April 11 ready, able, and willing to convey said property clear, free, and unincumbered, except for the pendency of the suit for damages.

It is further conceded that on April 20 the plaintiffs tendered to defendant a properly executed and acknowledged deed for the property, but that defendant refused to accept the deed.

Plaintiffs contend that, notwithstanding the pend-ency of the action for money damages against the owners, the real estate was “nevertheless clear, free, and unincumberred. ’ ’

Section 11655, General Code, reads as follows:

“Lands and tenements, including vested legal interests therein, permanent leasehold estates renewable forever, and goods and chattels, not exempt by law, shall be subject to the payment of debts, and liable to be taken on execution and sold as hereinafter provided.”

Section 11656, General Code, which was in force until August 1, 1927, applies to this case, and provides as follows:

“Such lands and tenements within the county where the judgment is entered shall be found for its satisfaction from the first day of the term at which it is rendered, except that judgment by confession and judgments rendered at the same term at which the action is begun, shall bind such lands only from the day on which such judgments are rendered. All other lands as well as goods and chattels of the debtor, shall be bound from the time they are seized in execution. ’ ’

Section 1555 reads as follows:

“The regular terms of the court of common pleas *457 in and for the county of Hamilton shall begin on the first Monday of January, the first Monday of April, the first Monday of July, and the first Monday of October, in each year. ’ ’

It cannot be denied that any judgment that might have been rendered against Condorodis and Condorodis between April 4, 1927, and July 4,1927, in the action for damages instituted March 31, would have been a lien upon the real estate in question, even if the title thereto had been at any time within the last-mentioned period, conveyed to the defendant herein.

It cannot be denied that during said period of time this property, even after its purchase within that period by the defendant herein, would have been liable to eventual sale on execution to satisfy any such judgment as might have been, within that period of time, rendered against the present plaintiffs in said action for damages.

Was the property clear, free, and unincumbered during that period?

Among the classified definitions of the word “clear” in the Oxford (Unabridged) Dictionary we find the following:

“Clear. Of free, unincumbered condition. Free from all limitation, qualification, question or shortcoming; absolute, complete, entire, free, sure, sheer.”

The title could scarcely be called free from all question or shortcoming, so long as it was liable to be taken and sold on execution to satisfy a possible judgment.

The lexicographers say also that the word “clear,” when used in the phrase “clear from,” is often equivalent to the phrase “free from.” And *458 in Roberts v. Bassett, 105 Mass., 409, it is said that the term “clear title,” as used in a contract to convey land, requires that it he conveyed with “no incumbrance thereon.”

The words “clear, free, and unincumbered” may therefore be interpreted as a mere redundancy for “free from incumbrances.” “Incumbrance” is a broader term than “lien.” First Church of Christ v. Cox, 47 Ind. App., 536, 538, 94 N. E., 1048.

An incumbrance on land has been defined to be any right to or interest in the land that may subsist in any person other than the owner to the diminution of the value of the estate, though consistent with the conveyance of the fee. People’s Savings Bank Co. v. Parisette, 68 Ohio St., 450, 459, 67 N. E., 896, 96 Am. St. Rep., 672; Huyck, Admr., v. Andrews, 113 N. Y., 81, 85, 20 N. E., 581, 3 L. R. A., 789, 10 Am. St. Rep., 432. Rawle on Covenants (5th Ed.), Section 75.

"We hold that the pending suit for damages was an incumbrance from April 2 to June 13, and that the land in question was therefore not clear, free, and unincumbered during that period.

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.E. 836, 33 Ohio App. 452, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condorodis-v-kling-ohioctapp-1928.