Dyzak v. Samman

191 N.E.2d 572, 119 Ohio App. 469, 92 Ohio Law. Abs. 262, 24 Ohio Op. 2d 221, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 752
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 1963
Docket26388
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 191 N.E.2d 572 (Dyzak v. Samman) 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
Dyzak v. Samman, 191 N.E.2d 572, 119 Ohio App. 469, 92 Ohio Law. Abs. 262, 24 Ohio Op. 2d 221, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 752 (Ohio Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

Skeel, C. J.

This appeal comes to this court on questions of law from a judgment entered for the defendants on defend *264 ants’ revised motion to dismiss the action. The motion was granted by the trial court on the ground that the cause of action stated, claimed by the defendants to be one for slander of title of plaintiff’s real property, had abated because of the plaintiff’s death during the pendency of the action.

The plaintiff’s amended petition recites that he, by a certificate of transfer of real estate executed by the Probate Court of Lorain County, became the owner in fee simple of a parcel of land described in the petition, which property is located in Cuyahoga County. The certificate of transfer was dated November 8, 1955. He alleges that when he became the owner of said property he had no knowledge of a purported uncancelled mortgage pretending to secure a written obligation in the sum of $4000.00. Plaintiff also alleges that from the date of plaintiff becoming the owner of said property in November of 1955 until November, 1959, no demand for payment was made upon the note executed by Roland T. Wood and made payable to the defendants, which obligation was secured by the mortgage now in controversy. The plaintiff first discovered the mortgage lien dated November 20, 1945, when a title search was made upon plaintiff’s application for a loan of $35,000.00 filed with the Cuyahoga Savings Association in November, 1959. Notice was then given to the mortgagees to cancel and note the satisfaction of the mortgage of record since the mortgage debt had been paid before its due date in August, 1946. The defendants refused such request. The petition alleges that the conduct of the defendants in demanding full payment with interest, an amount of almost $8000.00, when they knew they had been fully paid, was willful and malicious and that they acted with intent to damage plaintiff’s rights.

Plaintiff further alleges that in order to consummate the loan with the Cuyahoga Savings Association, he was compelled to leave with the association, as security against the lien of the mortgage, $8000.00 of the proceeds of the loan and that in consummating a sale of the property he was damaged in the sum of $15,000.00 which was the difference between what the true market value of the property was and its market value as affected by the lien of the mortgage of record which the defendants refused to satisfy after receiving payment in full in August *265 of 1946. The plaintiff also alleges that after he filed a declaratory action (July 20, 1960) seeking a declaration of his rights and to compel a satisfaction of the mortgage, the defendants then “knowing that their refusal to sign the satisfaction of the mortgage was malicious, wanton, willful, with disregard to plaintiff’s rights and knowing that plaintiff finally had succeeded in obtaining proof that payment had been made many years ago on August 2, 1946, finally signed the satisfaction of the mortgage.” An allegation seeking additional damage for attorney fees necessarily expended to protect plaintiff’s rights because of the defendants’ malicious, wanton and willful action is also set forth in the amended petition.

On August 9, 1962, defendant, Albert R. Wood, filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s amended petition claiming the action to be one for slander of title. On August 30, 1962, defendant, Leila W. Samman, joined her co-defendant in his demurrer and adopted it as her own.

The questions of law set out in the brief of the defendants in support of the demurrer are three in number. The first is as to which statute of limitations is involved. The defendants assume that the action is one for slander of title and conclude that Section 2305.11, Revised Code, is therefore applicable. This section provides that in an action for slander the action must be brought within one year of the time the cause of action accrues.

The plaintiff’s answer brief seems to agree that the action is one for slander of title. Counsel for plaintiff now, however, seeks to withdraw the statement in their brief dealing with defendants’ demurrer and since such statement is not contained in a pleading, and being a conclusion of law, we hold that they may do so. The character of the action is one, therefore, which must be determined from the facts pleaded.

The second question put forward is, at what date did the cause of action accrue? The conclusion contended for by the defendants, without citing authority, is that the cause of action, if one is stated, accrued on the day plaintiff alleges that the mortgage was fully paid, to wit: August 2, 1946. This conclusion is countered by the plaintiff claiming that the cause of action did not accrue until defendants maliciously refused plain *266 tiff’s request to cancel the mortgage, which according to the petition was December 22, 1959.

The third contention is that since the cause of action accrued on August 2, 1946, this action, as is shown on the face of the petition, is barred by the statute of limitations, Section 2305.11, Revised Code. As indicated, the plaintiff challenges this claim by insisting that until the defendants maliciously, wantonly and willfully refused to accede to plaintiff’s request to satisfy the lien of the mortgage no cause of action based on the facts pleaded was available to the plaintiff.

All of the questions of law presented by the demurrer were extensively briefed by the parties, but as is shown by the record no ruling was ever entered by the court.

While the demurrer was still pending, the defendants filed separate motions for summary judgment. One of said motions was filed on October 25,1962, the other on October 31,1962. The affidavit filed in support of the motion alleges that the plaintiff “is now deceased and this action has abated under Section 2311.21, Revised Code * * The plaintiff died October 18, 1962, and his executrix appointed by the Lorain County Probate Court was substituted and the action revived in her name as executrix on January 9, 1963. There can be no question that by the provisions of this section an action for libel or slander does not survive the death of the plaintiff. The court in ruling on the motion for summary judgment held that it would be considered as a “motion to dismiss rather than a motion for summary judgment * * *” and by journal entry dismissed plaintiff’s action on the ground that it had been abated because of the death of the plaintiff.

The question of the character of the action must therefore be determined. In the case of Buehrer v. Provident Mutual Life Insurance Co., 123 Ohio St., 264, 175 N. E., 25, the action was in partition. The Provident Mutual Insurance Company filed an answer setting forth its mortgage, asking foreclosure. The plaintiff, Buehrer, then filed a cross-petition to the answer of the insurance company which was challenged by demurrer. The cross-petition was based on an alleged slander of title by the insurance company in demanding in another action, seeking foreclosure of the same property by its cross-petition, interest *267 that had been paid and demanding full payment of the debt on such false claim of default.

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Bluebook (online)
191 N.E.2d 572, 119 Ohio App. 469, 92 Ohio Law. Abs. 262, 24 Ohio Op. 2d 221, 1963 Ohio App. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyzak-v-samman-ohioctapp-1963.