Kern v. Kern

15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 279
CourtPickaway Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 279 (Kern v. Kern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pickaway Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kern v. Kern, 15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 279 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Philip Kern, a resident of this county, died in 1910, intestate. ITe was twice married. Before his marriage to his second wife he had given two several mortgages. He intermarried with his second wife, now his widow, Rilla J. Kern, in 1909. There were no children of such marriage. At the time of his marriage the mortgages given upon the land in question were due and unpaid. [280]*280After his death proceedings were instituted in the probate court to sell the land for the payment of debts; the widow was made a party by answer, and comes in and waives the setting off of her dower by metes and bounds, and elects to take the value of the same out of the proceeds of the sale. The widow claims she should be endowed as of the whole proceeds of the sale; the heirs claim that she should be endowed only out of the surplus that may remain after the payment of the mortgages.

The sole question presented to this court is, as to whether or not the widow’s dower should be calculated on the whole of the purchase money, or only upon the surplus that may be left after the payment of the mortgages.

This question has arisen in different ways and in different forms and phases, in the Supreme Court of the state, in different cases. It is claimed on behalf of the widow, in the first place, that the husband was seized of such an estate at the time of marriage and during the coverture, that she is entitled to dower in the whole premises. It seems to this court that a good deal of attention should be paid to the principles governing the assignment of dower, and the kind of an estate that the husband must have before the widow is entitled to dower, and it will shed a great deal of light upon the solution of this question. It has been already stated that at the time the widow married Philip Kern, that these mortgages were resting upon this land, and that they were due. The effect of that matter is to transfer the legal title in the premises from the mortgagor to the mortgagee and the mortgagee has a deed, not an absolute, but a conditional deed to the premises.

Philip and his first wife executed this conditional deed to convey absolute title to the mortgagees in this ease, conditioned, however, upon the fact that they pay the money as stipulated in the conditional clause, and in case they do not pay the debt as it is written in the mortgage deed, and in the conditional clause, that then the title to the premises shall become absolute. The effect of that deed of mortgage, and the condition in the deed is such that our Supreme Court has decided several times, [281]*281and it is the law in Ohio, that when any condition in a mortgage is broken that the legal title to the mortgaged premises passes from the mortgagor to the mortgagee; in other words, the condition having been broken, the conditional clause in the mortgage or in that' absolute part of the deed then become operative, and the conditions not having been complied with, the deed passes the legal title over to the mortgagee. Now that is the condition of affairs at the time the widow here married Philip Kern. The mortgagees in this instance owned the fee simple title to the real estate; the legal title by the conditions having been broken passed to the mortgagees. Philip Kern then retained only an equity in these premises, viz., the right to redeem by paying the mortgages.'

The Supreme Court has decided that the legal title passes so effectively from the mortgagor to the mortgagee when the condition is broken, that the mortgagee may maintain an action in ejectment against the mortgagor and recover the possession of the premises; in order to maintain an action in ejectment the person seeking possession of the premises must have the legal title thereto. Therefore, at the time the widow here married Philip Kern, the condition of the mortgage having become broken, and the deed having become absolute, and the legal title having passed from Philip Kern to the mortgagee, the wife was endowed at the time of the marriage of an inchoate right in whatever interest Philip had in these premises, and he had, as I said before, at that time only an equitable interest, a right to redeem.

The statute in reference to dower is that the husband must have been seized during coverture of an estate of inheritance, or he must have been seized of an equitable estate at the time of his death. Philip Kern had no legal estate at the time of his death, nor was he seized of an estate of inheritance in this land at any time during coverture; he was only seized or had the title to or ownership in an equitable interest in this farm, a right to redeem. That being so, it would seem to appear from the very language of the statute, and from the very condition of the title to this land, that the wife could only take such interest in the husband’s property at the time of marriage or during coverture [282]*282as lie had. Her rights could not rise any higher than his. He only having an equitable estate in the land at the time of marriage, and at the time of his death, his widow could only take such dower in such land as he had a benefical interest in. That is the measure. When' we come to look at the authorities, there does not seem to be any conflict in the authorities in Ohio on the subject. Possibly some judge in delivering an opinion has made a statement that would seem to be in conflict with some other cases decided by our Supreme Court, but when you apply the facts of the particular cases, to the statements made by the judge in the opinion, and look at the underlying principle that must be observed, we can not see that there is any particular conflict in the cases, 'especially since the Supreme Court has overruled the ease of Bank v. Hinton. The ease of Rand v. Kendall has never been overruled or modified in any particular. It was decided in 1846, and is reported in the 15 Ohio Reports, page 671. The syllabus is as follows:

“Where land is mortgaged by the husband and the condition is broken before the marriage, and the equity of redemption is released by the mortgagor during coverture, his widow is not entitled to dower, after his decease.
“To entitle the widow to dower, her husband must have been seized of a legal estate of inheritance during the coverture, or of an equitable interest at the time of his death.”

It is claimed that in the 2d Ohio, the Supreme Court said that rule only applied between mortgagor and mortgagee, but in this ease the court is of the opinion that it carries further, that is, to all parties, that the legal title is vested, in the mortgagee.

As late as 1881, the case in the 36 O. S., page 605, the ease of Abbot v. Bosworth, it was held in the second syllabus:

“To entitle a widow to dower in an equitable estate of her husband he must have owned said estate at the time of his decease. ’ ’

That is exactly like the syllabus in the Rand case which I just read a moment ago, and they approve it and follow it. In the Rand case, the mortgage had become absolute, and they decided [283]*283therefore, that he did not in that case have an estate of inheritance at the time of marriage, and he did not die seized of an equitable estate, and in that case, therefore, she couldn’t have dower at all. In this case, Philip Kern died seized of an equity, a right to redeem.

It is claimed that the cases of Kling v. Ballentine, Mandel v. McClave, and a case in the 6th C.C. (N.S.), page 381, Hickey v. Conine,

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kern-v-kern-ohcirctpickaway-1911.