Forest Park Properties, Inc. v. Pine

224 N.E.2d 763, 9 Ohio App. 2d 348, 38 Ohio Op. 2d 427, 1966 Ohio App. LEXIS 362
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 1966
Docket3070
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 224 N.E.2d 763 (Forest Park Properties, Inc. v. Pine) 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
Forest Park Properties, Inc. v. Pine, 224 N.E.2d 763, 9 Ohio App. 2d 348, 38 Ohio Op. 2d 427, 1966 Ohio App. LEXIS 362 (Ohio Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

Crawford, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law and fact from orders of the Court of Common Pleas sustaining plaintiff-appellee’s motion to affirm, and overruling defendantsappellauts’ motion to set aside a majority report of commissioners in partition.

The majority report by two commissioners found that the interests of the parties in the real property involved, as holders of the fee simple title and as lessors under a 99-year lease, cannot be equitably separated through a partition by metes and bounds without manifest injury to the value of the whole; and the report appraised the value of the property involved at $800,000.

The minority report of the third commissioner proposed a division of the property by metes and bounds into two tracts, one to plaintiff, the other to the defendants as a group in the same proportions as their original interests in the whole; this report was in accordance with the prayer of defendants’ answer.

The defendants, appellants herein, contend that the property, consisting of a tract of 43.134 acres, can and should be divided by metes and bounds. There was some challenge to the formula used in appraisal, questioning what if any consideration should be given to buildings and improvements owned and used by lessee, hut counsel for defendants stated that, if the property cannot be physically apportioned, the appraisal may stand.

Questions had arisen earlier in the case relative to the procedures followed by the commissioners respecting their oaths and their failure to meet together. However, these problems, were resolved, and it is agreed that the procedures followed in preparing to make the report which was ultimately approved by the court, and now before us, were regular.

The first question to be determined is the nature of the property sought to be partitioned. Plaintiff contends that the *350 parties are the owners in fee simple of the premises, subject to the 99-year lease.

Defendants argue that inasmuch as the rents are now being divided according to the respective proportions of ownership, there has already been an agreed partition or division of their only interests as lessors, so that all that now remains to be partitioned or divided among them are their shares in what they designate as the “reversion”; and that an actual partition of the land in which this reversion exists can be made equitably by metes and bounds between plaintiff and defendants without injury to the value either of the whole or of the separate parts.

If the only interest of the parties were a reversion, it alone could not be partitioned and the prayers of both the petition and the answer would have to be denied. 41 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 569, Partition, Section 27; Freeman on Cotenancy & Partition, 3d Ed., 582, Section 440. Only those in possession are entitled to partition. 41 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 556, Partition, Section 18; Tabler v. Wiseman (1853), 2 Ohio St. 207; Freeman on Cotenancy & Partition, 3d Ed., 594, Section 447. For this purpose the physical possession of a lessee is the possession of the lessor. Rawson v. Brown (1922), 104 Ohio St. 537.

The division of the rents in proportion to the respective ownership interests is not a partition. It does not in any way change the nature or extent of the present ownership; it simply recognizes it.

The premises were previously owned by Markey-Swallow Land Co., a corporation, in which these parties all owned stock. On October 1, 1959, the corporation, as lessor, executed a 99-year lease, with option to purchase, to Park Plaza, Inc., lessee, which now operates a shopping center on the premises, with accompanying mall, walks, parking area, common entrances and exits, and a common utility system, including sewer and water.

On October 8, 1964, in preparation for dissolution of the Markey-Swallow Land Co., that corporation conveyed the property, subject to leases, etc., of record, by separate individual deeds to each of the parties, conveying to each of them an undivided interest proportionate to his or its share or shares of stock in the corporation, as follows:

To plaintiff Forest Park Plaza, Inc. — 84/168
To defendant Saul Feltzin — 38/168
*351 To defendant John P. Naas — 19/168
To defendant Robert L. Pine — 19/168
To defendant Thomas G. Kennedy — 8/168.

Also on October 8, 1964, the same day the foregoing deeds were executed, the Markey-Swallow Land Co. assigned its interest as lessor of the premises in the 99-year lease to these same parties, specifying their respective interests therein to be in the same proportions as the division of ownership reflected in the deeds.

The case of Rawson v. Brown (1922), 104 Ohio St. 537, involved partition of real estate upon which there was a lease for 99 years, renewable forever, with an option to purchase after 25 years. The Supreme Court there laid down the principles which have continued to govern such situations, in the following language:

“1. A permanent leasehold estate renewable forever is not a fee simple although under the Ohio statutes it has many of the incidents thereof. The fee simple remains in the lessor, his heirs, devisees or assigns.
“2. Where possession of real estate has been given to a lessee under the provisions of a lease, the lessee holds for the lessor; the possession of the former is the possession of the latter.
“3. The heirs and devisees of a lessor who are entitled to the rents accruing from time to time under a lease for 99 years renewable forever, are entitled to partition under the statutes of Ohio. An option to purchase after 25 years which is included in the lease is no obstacle to that right until the option is exercised.”

In our present case, where the lease is not renewable forever, the rights of the owners are surely no less than those in the Rawson case.

Certain other cases not involving partition, but concerned primarily with dower interests in and taxability of 99-year or permanent leaseholds, contain language which emphasizes those incidents of fee simple which are found in a permanent leasehold. But these cases have never, so far as we can learn, been held to affect the principles laid down in the Rawson case, which in the first paragraph of the syllabus also recognizes these incidents of a permanent leasehold. See Ralston Car Co. v. Ral *352 ston (1925), 112 Ohio St. 306, 39 A. L. R. 334; Carney, Aud., v. Cleveland City School District Public Library (1959), 169 Ohio St. 65; Welfare Federation of Cleveland v. Glander, Tax Commr. (1945), 146 Ohio St. 146.

Careful examination of the present lease discloses it to be in the fullest sense a lease from the owner of the fee as lessor.

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.E.2d 763, 9 Ohio App. 2d 348, 38 Ohio Op. 2d 427, 1966 Ohio App. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forest-park-properties-inc-v-pine-ohioctapp-1966.