Cromwell v. Brinton

4 Ohio C.C. 261
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio C.C. 261 (Cromwell v. Brinton) 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
Cromwell v. Brinton, 4 Ohio C.C. 261 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The following facts appear from the bill of exceptions':

1st. That John Kebler, on, and for some months prior to July 26, 1877, was the agent of the parties tp this litigation (both of whom were non-residents of, and absent from this state), for the purpose of investing for them, severally, money placed in his hands by them respectively, for'that purpose.

2d. On the 26th day of July,.1877, one Wm. Rankin executed and delivered to Kebler, a mortgage on certain real estate in this city, to secure the payment of two notes made by him to Kebler, one of which was dated Feb. 14, 1877, due in two years after its date and calling for $2,975.50, with interest from date at 8 per cent, per annum, payable annually, and the other for $3,200, dated July 2, 1877, due in two years after its date, with interest at 8 per .cent, payablé annually. Both were made payable to the order of Kebler.

3d.. On July 2,' 1877, as is shown by a letter of Kebler, dated July 26, 1877 (the day on which the mortgage was executed), addressed to Miss Cromwell, and which contained a statement of his account with -her brought down to July'2, 1877,-there was then in his hands of money of hér’s a balance of $3,231.50. In this letter he notifies her that he had invested for her, $3,200 in the Rankin note and mortgage of that amount as of July 2; 1887. There is no statement-when -that investment was made, but it müst be considered from all the circumstances that it was done at least as early as July 26, 1877, and it may be that it should date as of July 2,1877,; but th.ere is nothing definite to show that such was the case. He appears [263]*263to have retained this note in his possession until January 2, 1883, when he wrote to her a letter enclosing the note, in which he advised her that interest had been paid to her annually thereon in full up to July 2,1882 and says, “ I enclose that note duly endorsed to you.” It was endorsed when received by her as follows — “ Property of Miss Margaret Cromwell. Interest paid in full to July 2d, 1882. Pay Margaret Cromwell or order. John Kebler.” There is nothing to show when either of these endorsements was made.

4th. In December, 1876, Mrs. Brinton had placed in Kebler’s hands for investment over $8,500. He had invested a part thereof for her prior to Feb. 14,1877, and on that day ought to have held for her, as appears from his written statement after-wards made, about $2,975.50, which was the amount of the Rankin note of that date, and which, with the $3,200 note before mentioned, was afterward secured by the Rankin mortgage of July 26, 1877- On Dec. 24, 1877 he sent to her this note of $2,975.50, indorsed to her without recourse, stating that it had been made payable to his order for convenience. There is no direct evidence as to the time when the investment in this note was made for her; but if the note in question was executed on the day it bears date, there is strong reason to suppose that it was done at that time, for it was for th,e exact sum that should have been in his hands, and it not being a round sum, the coincidence between the two amounts and the fact that it was afterwards turned over to her, strongly tend to show that the investment was then made.

Supposing this to be so, it' then presents a case where Kebler having money in his hands to be invested for Mrs. Brinton, does so invest it on Feb. 14, 1877, in this note due in two years from that day, and having money of Miss Cromwell in his hands for á like purpose, invests that, either on July 2d, or July 26th, in the $3,200 note, on which last day a mortgage is given by the maker thereof to Kebler to secure both of the notes, and after this the mortgagee and payee turns over the notes to the parties for whom they were respectively purchased. And the mortgaged premises having been sold, and' the proceeds being insufficient to pay both of them in full, the question is, how shall the purchase money be applied as between the holders of the two notes.

[264]*264We think it entirely clear that if Kebler had been himself the owner of these notes in his own right, at the time the mortgage was made, and had thereafter transferred them to these persons, that Mrs. Brinton, as the owner and holder of the note which was first to mature, was entitled to be first paid, and this without regard to the order of assignment.

The ground upon which the doctrine of our state, “that different.debts secured by the same mortgage are to be' paid from the mortgage fund in the order in which they fall due,” rests, is this (as stated by Judge Lane in the decision of the Bank v. Covert, 13 Ohio, 240), that the obligation to pay the first, may be enforced against the property before any default in the later payments.” Jones in his work on Mortgages, sec. 1699, says substantially the same thing.' “ The rule rests upon the fact that the holder of the note first maturing, may foreclose upon non-payment without waiting for the succeeding notes to mature.” It is conceded that this order may be changed by the agreement of the parties interested, as by a statement in the mortgage, or a stipulation in the’notes themselves, or by some other arrangement, or perhaps by facts or circumstances which would show that the intention of the parties or mortgagee was that this presumption of the law should not apply. But is is expressly held in the Covert case, that the order of assignment of the notes does not change this rule of priority, and in the case of Bushfield v. Myers, 10 Ohio St. 338, our court goes still farther, and contrary to the doctrine of some other courts holds, that even where the mortgagee and payee assigns some of the notes, retaining others, if all of them fall due at the same time, he is entitled to share prorata 'with those assigned', in the mortgage fund; and it would seem to follow, that if the mortgagee retained the note first falling due, he would have priority. See also 11 Ohio St. 616, and 33 Ohio St. 250. And therefore, if Kebler had transferred the $3200 note to Miss Cromwell, before he transferred the other to Mrs. Brinton, we think this would not alter the general rule that the note first maturing'has priority.

Does the fact, then, that Kebler was acting as the' agent of both of these ladies, and actually had invested their money in these notes before the execution of the mortgage, if this be [265]*265so, entitle Miss Cromwell to share pro rata in these proceeds? This is strongly urged by her counsel, and as stoutly denied by the counsel for Mrs Brinton,, and presents a question concerning which we know of no case in Ohio, though it is claimed that decisions of. the Supreme Court of Indiana favor the doctrine claimed by counsel for plaintiff in error.

The general rule of that state is the same as that of Ohio. Judge Woods, in deciding the case of Shaw v. Neusome, 78 Ind. 335, says, “It is the well settled law of this state, that, if a mortgage be given to secure successive installments of a debt evidenced by promissory notes maturing at different times, the transfer of the notes operates as an assignment pro tanto of the mortgage, and the holde s of the several notes have priority of lien in the order in which their respective demands become due.”

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio C.C. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cromwell-v-brinton-ohiocirct-1889.