Gordon v. Guarantee Title & Trust Co.

28 Ohio Law. Abs. 249, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 966
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 13, 1938
DocketNo 2886
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 249 (Gordon v. Guarantee Title & Trust Co.) 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
Gordon v. Guarantee Title & Trust Co., 28 Ohio Law. Abs. 249, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 966 (Ohio Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

[250]*250OPINION

By HORNBECK, J.

• This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment in favor of the defendant.

It is the claim of the plaintiff that her action is at law for, the sum of $1257.54 and interest on a count for money had and received in assumpsit. The trial judge refused to take this view of the cause plead, denied plaintiff the right to a jury and held that the only remedy which she had the right to invoke under the pleadings was the equitable one of rescission. The court then tried the case and found as heretofore indicated.

. The pleadings are most voluminous, counsel having full appreciation of their import, it would serve no good purpose to set forth the multifarious recitals therein. As briefly as possible, the controversy arises over a purchase agreement between the Kessler-Patterson Company, known as the seller, and plaintiff, known as the purchaser made of date February 7, 1938, by the terms of which the plaintiff was to purchase lot No. 624 in the sub-division known as Colonial Hills Plat No. 2, for a consideration of $1080.00 and interest in monthly installments, together with all taxes and assessments due and payable on and after June 20, 1928. The seller was to cause the owner to execute and deliver to the purchaser a warranty deed for said premises, conveying to the purchaser, her heirs and assigns forever, the premises above described free and clear of incumbrances except taxes and assessments and any liens suffered or permitted to be placed upon said premises by the purchaser. The owner also at the same time was to deliver to the purchaser an abstract of title showing clear title to the premises, the deed to be subject to restrictions, limits, provisions and prohibitions contained on the back of the contract. There were nine such restrictions set forth.

The contract further provided that subject to its provisions it should be binding upon .and inure, to the benefit of the owner of the property, the seller, and their respective heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns.

The purchaser met all the obligations enjoined upon her under the contract, whereupon the defendant corporation, as trustee, executed and delivered a warranty deed to her, of date November 25, 1935. The covenant of warranty was in usual form, subject to nine specific exceptions set forth.

At the time of the delivery of the deed, defendant gave a title insurance policy covering the real estate deeded to the plaintiff. Thereafter, on the 25th day of November, 1935, the plaintiff filed her deed for record with the county recorder of Franklin County, Ohio. Later plaintiff observed that she had not received an abstract of title as provided in her contract, called upon the defendant therefor and on December 21, 1935, defendant delivered an abstract of title to the premises to her. On the 22nd day of May, 1936, the plaintiff by her attorney in a letter to defendant tendered a quit claim deed from herself to the defendant for the lot which she had agreed to purchase, stating that the consideration for the real estate had failed in that the deed given by the defendant to the plaintiff did not conform to the terms and conditions of the land contract and that the abstract of title showing title to the premises was not delivered as in the contract provided apd that the plaintiff had elected to rescind the contract and demanded repayment of ail sums theretofore paid under the contract.

Replying to this communication the defendant, on the 26th of May, 1936, said that it was acting as trustee 'for the owner of the division in which lot No. 624 was located and that if there were any errors in the deed or the abstract it would be glad to correct them. The deed was returned. The day succeeding the transmittal of this letter plaintiff instituted her action herein.

The amended petition recites the alleged infirmities of the defendant to make the deed; that it was not a deed of warranty and that it contains specifications in addition to and other than those appearing on the back of the land purchase contract and that the abstract of title does not show good merchantable title in the defendant in six particulars delineated. The answer recites in detail the character of defendant’s ownership of the premises in question; that it was a mortgagee in a. mortgage given by the Columbus Land Company, an Ohio corporation, of date September 6, 1927, on certain lands, including the Colonial Hills Plat No. 2 Addition, securing $100,000.00; that on or about June 1, 1928, the Columbus Land Company defaulted in its obligation, which default has been continuous thereafter; that on the aforesaid date the Columbus Land Company for valuable considerations conveyed the above described premises to the defendant [251]*251company, trustee, its successors, heirs and assigns, with full and complete authority and power to subdivide and plat the premises described * * * and to vest in the purchaser or purchasers title thereto in fee simple, free from any and all conditions under which said trustee may have the premises * * * full and complete authority to sell and convey said premises or any part thereof by deeds containing covenants of general warranty, binding the Columbus Land Company, its successors and assigns, and any deed of said trustee containing covenants of warranty with respect to said premises or any part thereof shall be held as the warranty of said' Columbus Land Company, its successors and assigns alone.

Other terms of the trust deed are recited. The amount of the money paid by the purchaser under her agreement is set forth, as $1257.54, which sum it is agreed in the reply was the correct amount.

It is admitted that at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed the Columbus Land Company was not in existence but it is averred that the Colonial Park Realty Company was the owner and holder of all the right, title and interest of the Columbus Land Company in and to said contract made between the Kessler-Patterson Company with the plaintiff and in and to the trust agreement made between the Columbus Land Company and defendant as trustee. This averment is substantially admitted in the original reply.

The answer is extended. We shall not quote from it further at length. It recites the status of the contracting parties and others in title and particularly avers that the defendant is and was at all times willing, ready and able to deliver title as provided in the contract and the abstract in conformity thereto and sets forth what it had done by way of adenda to the abstract and what it was willing further to do.

The original reply is extended and together with the petition and answer completely sets forth all of the material facts incident to the transactions between the parties. The evidence only elaborates in particulars and it is doubtful if it extends materially the facts as appearing in the original pleadings. However, the plaintiff did file a new reply to the answer to the amended petition upon which the cause went to trial.

After issue was originally drawn upon the pleadings counsel for plaintiff moved for judgment thereon, which was overruled and this is the predicate for the first and probably the principal claim of error. The further claims epitomized are that upon the theory upon which the trial court heard the cause -finding and' judgment should have been made for the plaintiff.

We have been favored with the written opinions of Judge Reynolds on the motion for judgment on the pleadings and on the merits, which we have carefully read.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ohio Law. Abs. 249, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-guarantee-title-trust-co-ohioctapp-1938.