Conklin v. Tyler

13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 441
CourtWood County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedSeptember 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 441 (Conklin v. Tyler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wood County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conklin v. Tyler, 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 441 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

Tbe plaintiff brings her action to recover judgment on several promissory notes and to foreclose two mortgages given to secure the notes. A jury being waived by the parties, the cause was submitted to the court. The pleadings raise several issues of fact, but the evidence adduced discloses little or no disputed fact. The ease must turn on the solution of questions of law, [442]*442to determine which of two innocent parties must suffer a loss occasioned by a fraud practiced by another party. The facts so far as necessary to a presentation of the question are as follows:

On and prior to April 7, 1906, the defendant, Sibert, was the owner in fee of the twenty acres of land in Milton township described in the petition. On that day he sold and conveyed the land to James Williams, who made a small cash payment and gave to Sibert the note and mortgage for $1,600 set forth in the first and second causes of action in the petition. The mortgage was duly filed for record on April 12, and was recorded April 18, 1906. On June 22, 1906, Sibert endorsed the Williams $1,-600 note in this manner, “F. M. Gf. Sibert. This note is held as collateral security for a certain note of $1,200 dated June 22, 1906, and due in 6 mos. 8 per cent.,” and delivered the same with the mortgage to Singer & Henderson. Sibert executed an assignment on the back of the mortgage in these words: “I hereby transfer my interest in the within mortgage to Singer & Henderson. F. M. Sibert.” This assignment was not witnessed or acknowledged. At the time of said assignment and transfer, Sibert was indebted to Singer & Henderson in the sum of $1,200, which indebtedness was at that time put in form of a promissory note made payable six months hence and bearing 8 per cent, interest, and the assignment of the Williams note and mortgage by Sibert to Singer & Henderson was made as collateral security for the payment of said $1,200 note. The assignment of the Williams mortgage from Sibert to Singer & Henderson was not recorded until November 21, 1911, at which time it was recorded on the margin of the record of the mortgage.

Williams doubting his ability to meet the deferred payment on the land, negotiated with Sibert to take the land back, and on September 3, 1906, Williams by deed of general warranty reconveyed the land to Sibert in consideration that Sibert would surrender up the $1,600 purchase money note and mortgage for cancellation and also to give to him, Williams, a note for $300. Sibert then gave the $300 note and received the conveyance, but represented .that the $1,600 note and mortgage was in a deposit box at some bank and he could not produce them [443]*443that day but that he would get them and send them to Williams. This Sibert failed to do.

Sibert thus having the legal title to the land, with the mortgage given by Williams to him,- appearing of record uncanceled and unassigned, on January 14, 1908, sold and conveyed the land by general warranty deed to the defendants,-Rozell Tyler and wife, who purchased the land in good faith for full value, having no notice or knowledge that the Williams mortgage had been assigned by Sibert. Upon purchasing the land, the Tylers entered into immediate possession, which they still retain.

On February 17, 1912, Singer & Henderson transferred the Williams note and mortgage to the plaintiff, making this assignment on the back of the mortgage:

“We hereby transfer our interest in the within mortgage to Electa Conklin. Feby, 17-1912.
“Singer & Henderson.”

This assignment was not witnessed or acknowledged and was recorded on margin of mortgage record, September 14, 1912.

The only evidence touching this assignment is the testimony of the plaintiff. She says she bought this Williams note and 'mortgage from Singer & Henderson, and paid them $1,250 therefor. She does not claim to have purchased the $1,200 note given by Sibert to Singer & Henderson, but only the collateral security. This transfer was made at private sale, and there is no proof that Sibert had any knowledge of the sale, or that he consented thereto.

The $1,200 note given by Sibert to Singer & Henderson secured by the collateral remains unpaid.

Upon these facts the plaintiff contends that she is the owner and holder of the Williams note and mortgage, and is entitled to recover thereon the principal sum of $1,600 and interest, and that the same is a lien upon the lands, described in the petition; while the defendants contend that plaintiff has no lien whatsoever on the lands.

Defendants argue that their contention is sustained upon either or all of three different grounds.

First, that the reconveyance of the land by Williams to Sibert effected a merger of the Williams mortgage,

[444]*444If the question of merger depended solely on the facts of the transaction of reconveyance by Williams to Sibert, or upon the state of record in the recorder’s office, there could be no doubt that as between Williams and Sibert the mortgage was extinguished or merged in the higher title. But the doctrine does not depend solely upon those conditions, indeed it is unaffected by compliance or non-compliance with recording acts. The first and most essential requisite of a merger is that the greater and lesser estate shall coincide and meet in one and the same person, in the same right and without any intermediate estate. In this case that element is lacking, because at the time Sibert received the reconveyance from Williams, he had assigned and pledged the mortgage to Singer & Plenderson as collateral, and though he then had the legal title to the mortgage, which as between him and Williams was extinguished under the terms of reconveyance, the equitable right of Singer & Henderson as pledgees of the mortgage, Sibert did not possess, hence that equitable right- — that interest, could not merge in the higher title, or be extinguished, at least so far as concerns third parties.

The view is fully sustained by the holding in Bell v. Tenny, 29 O. S., 240, which is quite decisive of this proposition. See also Bank v. Mourm, 22 Atl., 555.

The second ground advanced by defendants is, that because of the failure to record the assignment of the Williams mortgage before the Tylers acquired their title to the lands, the assignees lost their lien as against the purchasers.

Prior to the amendment' of the recording act in 1888, no provision was.made for recording assignments of mortgages, but by that amendment, now Section 8546, General Code, such assignments are recordable instruments. There was some purpose in making this change in the statute. The only one perceivable is that it was to afford notice, either actual or constructive, to intending purchasers as to the holder of the encumbrance — a recognition of an assignment of a mortgage as an instrument affecting title, and one necessary to be disclosed by the record if the assignee would protect his right and title to the mortgage security against subsequent bona fide purchasers and encumbrancers. It seems to me that such an assignment falls properly [445]*445within the category of an “instrument in writing for the incumbrance of lands. ’ ’ True it is not an instrument creating the lien, but it is an instrument which supplies a necessary element to a valid mortgage lien, viz., a mortgagee in whom the lien is vested.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conklin-v-tyler-ohctcomplwood-1912.