Kerr v. Lydecker

51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 240
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 240 (Kerr v. Lydecker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerr v. Lydecker, 51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 240 (Ohio 1894).

Opinion

Burket, J.

The principal error relied upon is, that the circuit court erred in sustaining the demurrer to so much of the answer as pleads the fifteen years statute of limitations, and in overruling the demurrer to the petition.

[247]*247The first and second causes of demurrer were not well taken, and were properly overruled. A court in this state cannot take judicial notice of the laws or courts of another state. If there is no such court as the surrogate court of New York City, having jurisdiction of probate matters, such fact should be made to appear by answer. Upon demurrer, the facts in that behalf set up in the petition must be taken as true.

■ The demurrer as to the statute of limitations raises a more difficult question. Section 4977, provides that:'“An action for the recovery of the title or possession of real property can only be brought within twenty-one years after the cause of such action accrues.”

Section 4980 provides that an action upon a specialty, or an agreement, contract, or promise in writing, may be brought within fifteen years after the cause of action accrues.

Defendant in error contends that the case comes within section 4977, while the plaintiff in error contends that it comes within section 4980. ,

As to which is right, can only be determined by ascertaining the character of the action, as made by the petition. If it is an action for the recovery of the title or possession of real estate, it falls within the provisions of section 4977; but if it is an action on a specialty, or an agreement, contract,, or promise in writing, it falls within section 4980.

That the petition is, both in form and substance, a petition for the foreclosure of a mortgage and sale of mortgaged premises, can not be questioned ; and both the finding of facts and judgment of the court are in line with the petition.

[248]*248But it is urged, that such a proceeding is an action for the recoyery of the title or possession of real estate, as in the end the result of the proceeding is to deprive the mortgagor of the lands.

This leads us to an inquiry as to the legal effect of a mortgagee, and of a proceeding to enforce the same by action in court.

A mortgage of real estate is-regarded, in equity, as a mere security for the performance of its condition of defeasance, and where that condition is the payment of a debt, the security is regarded as an incident of the debt. Swarts v. Leist, 13 Ohio St., 419.

The mortgage being, in equity, regarded as a mere security for the debt, the legal title to the mortgaged premises remains in the mortgagor, as against all the world, except the mortgagee, and also as against him until condition broken, but after condition broken the leg-al title as between mortgagor and mortgagee is vested in the mortgagee. Allen v. Everly, 24 Ohio St., 97; Ely v. McGuire, 2 Ohio, 223; Hibbs v. Insurance Co., 40 Ohio St., 543, 559; Martin v. Alter, 42 Ohio St., 94.

A mortgage in its origin was in realty, what it still purports to be — an absolute sale of the lands by the mortgagor to the mortgagee, subject to be determined by performance of the conditions contained in the mortgage within the time therein specified, and upon failure to perform by the dajr named, the title to the lands became absolute in the mortgagee. On condition broken, the only remedy of the mortgagee was to take the lands for the debt, peaceably if possible, otherwise by ejectment.

Later on courts of chancery began to. regard the mortg’age as a mere security for the debt, and [249]*249to grant relief, to the mortgagor by allowing him a certain time, to be fixed by the chancellor, usually six months, in which to pay the debt and redeem the land; the decree in such cases provided that in case the mortgagor should fail to pay the debt within the time so fixed, that his right to redeem should be forever cut off and barred, or as it was usually expressed, foreclosed. Ohio Forms and Practice, by Wilcox. 2nd Ed., 794.

Upon his failure to pay the debt within the time ,so fixed, the mortgagee became the absolute owner of the lands in fee, and thereby the debt was discharged.

Still later on, and about the beginning of the present century, courts of chancery, by degrees, adopted a further rule of practice, whereby the mortgagee was allowed, at his election, to either foreclose his mortgage and take the land for the debt, or to have the mortgage foreclosed, the equity of redemption cut off, and then have a master sell the land by order of the court and apply the proceeds to the payment of the debt, rendering any surplus to the mortgagor, and in ease of a deficiency have execution awarded in his favor therefor.

This rule of practice of the -courts of chancery ordering a sale of the mortgaged premises, met with so much favor that in many of the states it was enacted into statute.

In England, by statutes 15 and 16 Viet., eh. 86, section 48, the court, at the request of either party to a foreclosure suit, may direct a sale of the mortgaged property instead of decreeing- a strict foreclosure.

In our own state, the right to foreclose a mortgage' after condition broken, either by a strict [250]*250foreclosure, or by a foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged property, continued down to the adoption of the code of civil procedure in 1853. By sec. 374 of the code, now section 5316, Revised Statutes, it is provided that: “When a mortgage is foreclosed, a sale of the premises shall be ordered.” This prohibits a strict foreclosure in this state, and now, after condition broken, if the mortgagee appeals to the courts to enforce his mortgage, he must elect between two remedies. He may sue for the recovery of the possession of the land in a real action in the nature of ejectment, using his mortgage to prove his title; or, he may sue for a foreclosure of his mortgage, and a sale of the mortgaged premises.

After condition broken, the title is vested in the mortgagee, as between him and the mortg-agor, and as the right of the mortgagee to recover the possession of the land by ejectment, always existed at common law, and has not been taken away by statute, it still exists in this state. Heighway v. Pendleton, 15 Ohio, 735; Allen v. Everly, 24 Ohio St., 97; Hibbs v. Insurance Co., 40 Ohio St., 543-559; Rife v. Lybarger, 49 Ohio St., 427.

If such right does not exist, then it must be clear that an action on a mortgage is not a direct proceeding for the recovery of title or possession of real estate. Is title or possession recovered in such an action indirectly, or at all? Conceding such right of ejectment to exist, as we do, what is the result ?

In case of a strict foreclosure in chancery, if the mortgagee was out of possession, his foreclosure had no further effect than to cut off the right to redeem, and after foreclosure he was still compelled to bring ejectment to obtain possession. [251]*251Sutton v. Stone, 2 Atkyns, 101; Ohio Forms and Practice, by Wilcox, 2nd ed., 795, note a.

A strict foreclosure, was, therefore, in no sense a recovery of either title or possession, because he already had the title vested in. him, and the strict foreclosure did not give him possession.

The same is true of a foreclosure and sale under the code.

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Related

Douglas v. Wallace
11 Ohio St. 42 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1841)
Executors of Swartz v. Leist
13 Ohio St. 419 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1862)

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Bluebook (online)
51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-lydecker-ohio-1894.