Kocsorak v. Cleveland Trust Co.

85 N.E.2d 96, 151 Ohio St. 212, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 212, 39 Ohio Op. 36, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 417
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1949
DocketNo 31545
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 85 N.E.2d 96 (Kocsorak v. Cleveland Trust Co.) 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
Kocsorak v. Cleveland Trust Co., 85 N.E.2d 96, 151 Ohio St. 212, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 212, 39 Ohio Op. 36, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 417 (Ohio 1949).

Opinion

Stewart, J.

The sole question in this case relates to the application of Section 11663-1, General Code, to what are substantially undisputed facts. The part of that section which we must interpret and apply, reads as follows:

“Any judgment for money rendered in a court of .record in this state upon any indebtedness, which is secured or evidenced by a mortgage, or other instrument in the nature of a mortgage, on real property or any interest therein, upon which real property there has been located a dwelling or dwellings for not more than two families which has been used in whole or in part as a home or farm dwelling or which at any time was or is now held as a homestead by the person who-executed or assumed such mortgage or other instrument, or which has been held by such person as a homesite, shall be unenforceable as to an/ deficiency remaining due thereon, after the expiration of two years from the date of the confirmation of any judicial sale of such property completed subsequent to the rendition of such judgment, or after August 19, 1939, whichever shall be later. * * *”

Plaintiff owned and used the premises involved herein as a ’ omestead for three or four months but moved out of such premises before he mortgaged the same to defendant and did not thereafter use or occupy the premises as a homestead.

*216 The foreclosure money judgment involved in this case was for money upon an indebtedness secured by mortgage upon the premises involved herein, and, concededly, more than two years had expired from the date of the confirmation of the judicial sale of the property before defendant deducted money from plaintiff’s commercial account and used it to satisfy the deficiency in such judgment.

Was that judgment unenforceable as to the deficiency, by virtue of Section 11663-1, General Code? If it was, did defendant have any right to take the amount of the deficiency from plaintiff’s commercial account upon the theory of setoff?

The Court of Common Pleas entered judgment for the defendant and thus justified defendant’s action in taking the amount of the deficiency from plaintiff’s commercial account in satisfaction of such deficiency, apparently upon the theory that Section 11663-1, Gen-, eral Code, did not apply to a situation where the judgment debtor had not occupied the residence upon the mortgaged premises during the period of the mortgage.

The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas and entered judgment for plaintiff and held that Section 11663-1, General Code, was applicable because of the plain, clear and unambiguous meaning of the words therein, and that the section applied if the premises had been used as a home or held as a homestead or homesite during the period of the mortgagor’s ownership of the premises, whether before or during the existence of the mortgage.

We agree with the Court of Appeals in its conclusion that the words of a statute must be given their common, ordinary and accepted meaning in the connection in which they are used, and agree with the holding in Baker v. Powhatan Mining Co., 146 Ohio St., 600, 67 *217 N. E. (2d), 714. However, the writer of this opinion does not agree that the plain, clear and unambiguous meaning of the words in Section 11663-1, General Code, supports the interpretation given such words by the Court of Appeals.

That statute says:

“* * * upon which real property there has been located a dwelling or dwellings for not more than two families which has been used * * * as a home or # * * held as a homestead by the person who executed or assumed such mortgage * * * or which has been held by such person as a homesite * # *.’?

Such a dwelling could not have been used or held as a home or held as a homestead by a person who executed or assumed a mortgage thereon, until after he had executed or assumed the same. If he so held the property before he executed or assumed the mortgage, he would not have held it as a person who so executed or assumed. In this case, therefore, plaintiff never as a person who executed the mortgage used the dwelling as a homestead or held it as a homesite. When he resided in the dwelling he was not a person who had executed or assumed a mortgage upon the premises, and as such person he never occupied the dwelling as a homestead or held it as a homesite, for the reason that after he became such person he never again resided upon the premises in question. Therefore, if the plaintiff’s status alone were involved and there had been no assumption of plaintiff’s mortgage by any one who had resided in the dwelling on the premises, it could be logically contended that Section 11663-1, General Code, was not applicable as to the deficiency in the judgment against the plaintiff in the present case. However, the situation with reference to Mike and Elizabeth Butty must be considered in our decision in this case.

It will be remembered that the Buttys purchased the *218 premises from plaintiff after plaintiff had executed his mortgage to defendant; that the Buttys assumed and agreed to pay such mortgage; that they moved into the dwelling upon- the premises; and that they used such dwelling wholly as a home, held it as a homestead and as a homesite for the entire period from October 1925 until the foreclosure of the mortgage in 1936. So, though it might be said that plaintiff, as a person who executed a mortgage thereon, had not used the dwelling as a home or held it as a homestead or home-site, it is obvious the Buttys were persons who had assumed such mortgage and had used such dwelling as a home and held it as a homestead or homesite during the existence of the mortgage.

It is manifest and indeed conceded that Section 11663-1, G-eneral Code, is applicable as to any claim which defendant has against the Buttys upon the deficiency in the judgment herein involved, and we must consider this situation with reference to the case between plaintiff and defendant.

The foreclosure money judgment was against the plaintiff, his wife and both the Buttys. It is for the same indebtedness, to wit, the indebtedness which was the balance due on the mortgage indebtedness after the application-1 of the proceeds from the sale of the mortgaged premises. The plaintiff and his wife were liable for that judgment as mortgagors and the Buttys as assumers of the mortgage. But, the judgment is the same, and the indebtedness was evidenced by a mortgage.

In Riegel v. Belt, Admr., 119 Ohio St., 369, 164 N. E., 347, paragraph three of the syllabus reads as follows:

“The purpose of a mortgage is to secure the payment of a debt. A note described in the condition of a mortgage is only evidence of the debt. No change in the form of the evidence, or the mode or time of payment, not amounting to actual payment of the debt, or *219 an express release, will operate to discharge the mortgage. ’ ’

See Brigel v. Creed, 65 Ohio St., 40, 60 N. E., 991.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.E.2d 96, 151 Ohio St. 212, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 212, 39 Ohio Op. 36, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kocsorak-v-cleveland-trust-co-ohio-1949.