Eagle Savings & Loan Ass'n v. West

50 N.E.2d 352, 71 Ohio App. 485, 26 Ohio Op. 396, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 607
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 28, 1942
Docket6181
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 N.E.2d 352 (Eagle Savings & Loan Ass'n v. West) 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
Eagle Savings & Loan Ass'n v. West, 50 N.E.2d 352, 71 Ohio App. 485, 26 Ohio Op. 396, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 607 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Matthews, P.. J.

This action was instituted in 1932 by a first mortgagee against the mortgagor, a second mortgagee and several successive grantees of the mortgaged premises to foreclose the mortgage and to recover a personal judgment against the mortgagor upon the note secured by the mortgage and against the grantees upon provisions in their respective deeds, *486 •whereby they assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage debt.

The first mortgage has been foreclosed, the property sold, and the debt due plaintiff paid and satisfied. The plaintiff has no interest in the result of this appeal. ‘The issue is between codefendants.

On January 21, 1933, the defendant Sophia Hucke filed an answer and cross-petition. In her cross-petition, she set forth that her codefendants Edward L. Raisbeek, J. Clarence Raisbeek and The Penker Realty Company were subsequent grantees of the mortgaged premises and that in the deeds to them respectively they had separately agreed to assume and pay the ■second mortgage of which she was the owner. The ■agreement of The Penker Realty Company to assume was alleged to have been contained in the deed of Edward L. Raisbeek to it.

In March 1933, Edward L. Raisbeek filed an answer ■■and cross-petition and, not denying the assumption by him, prayed as against The Penker Realty Company that it be required to indemnify him against loss on account of his agreement to assume the Hucke mortgage. And in the same month The Penker Realty Company filed its answer to these pleadings. It was ■after issue was joined by these pleadings that the cause was heard and the foreclosure of the first mortgage was decreed and the property sold. However, the issues between the codefendants were reserved for future consideration and determination.

Early in 1942, the case was set for trial of these issues between the second mortgagee and the grantees. The defendant The Penker Realty Company thereupon obtained leave to and filed an amended answer and cross-petition to the pleadings of its codefendants. In this amended answer and cross-petition seven separate and enumerated items, each captioned as a *487 “defense,” were set forth. In the “second defense,”' The Penker Realty Company alleged that there was. no consideration for its assumption of the second mortgage. In the “third defense,” it alleged that:

“This answering defendant, The Penker Realty Company, says that it acquired the property described in plaintiff’s petition and in defendant Sophia Hucke’s cross-petition pursuant to a contract made, between this answering defendant and Edward L.. Raisbeck, under which said The Penker Realty Company was to lease with privilege of purchase to said. Edward L. Raisbeck certain real estate then owned by this answering defendant, and in payment of said, lease with privilege of purchase, said Edward L. Raisbeck was to make certain payments to this defendant,, and in part payment thereof transfer to this answering-defendant said Edward L. Raisbeck’s equity in the-property described in plaintiff’s petition and in defendant Sophia Hucke’s cross-petition; that said premises were to be conveyed to this answering defendant subject to the mortgages thereon, and that this answering defendant was not to assume or agree to pay any of such mortgages.

“This answering defendant says that if hi the deed' to said premises language was used casting upon this answering defendant the obligation of assuming and agreeing to pay any mortgages on said premises, then such language was included therein by mutual mistake, and was not the true intention of the parties.

“Wherefore, this answering defendant asks the-court to reform said language to express the true intention of the parties, which was that this answering-defendant was to take said property only subject to the mortgages but not to assume or agree to pay any of' them.”

The amended answer and cross-petition closed with a prayer for the dismissal of the cross-petitions against: *488 it and that it go hence without day with its costs.

On April 10, 1942, the defendants Edward L. Baisbeek and J. Clarence Raisbeck demurred to the second and third defenses. This demurrer does not set forth the grounds of the demurrer, but the authorities cited in the footnote to the demurrer show that the intention was to raise the issue of whether the statute of limitations did not preclude The Penker Realty Company from asserting whatever right it might otherwise have had based on the allegations of these defenses.

The court sustained this demurrer.

The entry does not show the ground or grounds upon which the court acted. The entry does recite that The Penker Realty Company declined to plead further, and that, thereupon, the court ordered “That the claim of The Penker Realty Company for reformation set forth in said third defense is hereby dismissed, and judgment is hereby rendered in favor of said demurrants against said The Penker Realty Company on said claim for reformation.”

Within twenty days thereafter, The Penker Realty Company filed a notice of appeal to this court.

The second mortgagee filed a motion to dismiss this appeal on the ground that the order appealed from was not a judgment or final order, and that, therefore, this court has no jurisdiction to pass upon its validity at this time. Upon this motion being called for hearing, it was agreed that both the jurisdictional question and the merits should be presented, so that in the event we should determine that we had jurisdiction, we could proceed to determine the merits of the appeal.

Is the order appealed from a final order? As this strikes at the power of the court to proceed, it is not material how • or by whom the question was raised. If the litigants did not raise it, the court would sun sponte.

*489 It is not contended that the order in so far as it sustains the demurrer to the “second defense” is a finality and a predicate for jurisdiction of this court, but. it is asserted with confidence that in so far as it sustains the demurrer to the “third defense” it does have.that quality. It is said that while the pleader has. captioned these allegations as a “third defense,” they state a cause of action for the reformation of a written instrument, and that they end with a prayer for that affirmative relief, and that, therefore, the court was right in rendering judgment thereon on the refusal of The Penker Realty Company to plead further.

On the other hand, it is pointed out that -the matter-alleged relates to a part of the very transaction upon which liability of The Penker Realty Company is asserted and the sole purpose of the “third defense” is to defeat that liability and that therefore it accurately fits the description of a defense.

There is no doubt that under the old systems the-parties would have been bound by the written integration of their agreement. In an action at common law,, the second mortgagee could have declared upon the-contract as written and could have successfully resisted all attempts of the defendant to prove that the-writing did not express the actual agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E.2d 352, 71 Ohio App. 485, 26 Ohio Op. 396, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-savings-loan-assn-v-west-ohioctapp-1942.