Fulton v. Doty

6 Ohio N.P. 244
CourtLicking County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedSeptember 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. 244 (Fulton v. Doty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Licking 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
Fulton v. Doty, 6 Ohio N.P. 244 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

Wickham, J.

This is an action brought by the plaintiffs to enforce a lien on the furniture and other personal property situated in the hotel known as the [245]*245Doty House in Newark, against the ■defendants, who olaim to own the property, and that they are entitled to the possession as mortgagees of the former owner and proprietor of the Doty House, J. J. Doty.

On the filing of the petition, and an application being made by the plaintiffs, the court allowed a temporary injunction, restraining the defendants rom removing the property from the Doty House, and disposing of the same, and appointed a receiver to take charge of the property.

A motion was thereupon filed by the defendant — mortgagees — to discharge the receiver and dissolve the temporary injunction, heretofore allowed, on the grounds set out in the motion.

Some of the undisputed facts, are, that on February 1, 1897, the plaintiffs entered into a written agreement with the said Doty to rent to him the house and its appurtenances, known as the Doty House, for the period of five years, at a rental of eighteen hundred dollars fcr the first year, and nineteen hundred dollars per year for the remaining four years.

That about April 1, 1897, the said Doty went into possession of the premises, purchased a large amount of hotel furniture, consisting of all kinds of property necessary for use in a hotel; and ccntinued to conduct the house as a hotel until about October 2, 1897, when he abandoned the premises and left the country.

That the written agreement entered into between the plaintiffs and the said Doty was not attested by subscribing witnesses, nor acknowledged, as required by sec. 4106, Rev. Stat.

That th9 said written agreement was never filed for record in the recorder’s office of Licking county; but was kept in the possession of the plaintiffs until September 1, 1897,when an affidavit was written upon said agreement, stating that the lessors had a valid claim upon the said lessee, Doty, amounting to $895.00: that the said claim is just and unpaid, etc.

Whereupon, the written instrument was filed with the recorder of Licking county as a chattel mortgage, and placed on file by him among the chattel mortgages.

That on April 8, 1897, the said Doty executed a chattel mortgage on the greater part cf the property owned by him to the defendants, Lewis P. Schaus, Harry Swisher, John J. Carroll and Walter Scott, to secure the payment to them of the sum of $3,000.

That afterwards, on September, ,1897, the said Doty executed and delivered to the Newark Savings Bank Co., a chattel mortgage on all the goods located in said hotel and premises, to secure the sum of $1,322.58.

That afterwards, cn September 28th, the said Doty executed and delivered to the defendants, Walter Scott and J. J. Carroll, a chattel mortgage on all the property above mentioned to secure payment of the sum of $600.

That on or about October 2, 1897, the said Doty delivered ail of said property to the defendant mortgagees.

The plaintiffs claim a lien on the property, superior to the rights of the defendants as mortgagees, by virtue of a clause in the written instrument of lease, which clause reads as follows:

“It is further agreed, by and between the parties, that the parties of the first part are to have a lien on all the goods that are placed in the hotel by said party of the second part at the commencement of this lease, or that may be placed in said hotel during the continuance of this Jease, for the payment of the rent above stipulated. ”

The plaintiffs further claim that they have a lien, upon all the property claimed by the defendants, by virtue of the written instrument, as a chattel mortgage; it having been verified and filed as a chattel mortgage, with the recorder of Licking county, as above stated, on September 18, 1897.

The defendants claim that the lease Í3 absolutely void and of no effect either as a lease or chattel mortgage; and that therefore, the plaintiffs have no lien whatever upon the property claimed by them. And this question, we think, is the first to be considered by the court.

First: Have the plaintiffs a lien [246]*246upon the property claimed by the defendants, by virtue of the written instrument, and the clause therein purporting to convey a lien to the plaintiffs?

In Richardson v. Bates, 8 Ohio St., 257, which was an action brought to recover rent under a lease, substantially the same as the one in this case, the court say, at page 262:

“The instrument being neithor attested nor acknowledged, according to the provisions of the statute so governing its execution, is defective as a lease, and of no binding obligation.
“It has been frequently held that a deed for the conveyance of the title of lands, attested by only one witness, or otherwise not being in accordance with the provisions of the statute, was defective, and insufficient to convey title in this state.
“The same doctrine being equally applicable to the instrument before us, it follows that the indenture was, by this statute, utterly inoperative to convey the term as a lease. The lessees took nothing by the instrument as a lease. Indeed, the defective nature of the instrument in respect to the requisites prescribed by sec. 1 of said Act (4106) is conceded by plaintiff’s counsel.'”

And, on page 268, they say:

“The instrument being confessedly void by force of the first mentioned statute (4106), independent of the statute of frauds and perjuries, it must, if valid, derive its force and validity entirely froln this statute.”

The court then proceed to discuss the question whether ths lease was made valid under the statute of frauds by part performance; holding that this could not be so, but that it was absolutely void.

This case, so far as we have been able to discover, has never been disturbed by a subsequent decision of our Supreme Court; unless by the decision of our Supreme Court, in a case recently decided, entitled Baltimore & Ohio R. R. Co. v. West, 57 Ohio St.,

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-v-doty-ohctcompllickin-1897.