Kraay v. Gibson

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 537
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedDecember 17, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 537 (Kraay v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kraay v. Gibson, 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 537 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

The transactions being all of a substantially similar character,\ it will suffice here to say that in each instance there is a war- and a perpetual lease back to the grantor, containing a privil ege of purchase at the lessee’s option at the consideration statec in the deed. ( ranty deed, absolute on its face, with consideration fuly stated in deed.

The auditor, upon statutory proceedings taken in consequence of information given him by agents employed to look up tax [538]*538■omissions, found and certified to the treasurer for collection the .following additions to the tax returns made by Mr. White:

Year. Am’t added. Tax.

1898 ............ $116,500 $2,947.45.

1899 ...........'. 123,500 ............. 3,178.89.

1900 ............ ■ 82,500 ............. 2,143.35.

1901 ............ 32,500 806.65.

1902 ............ 32,500 753.35.

1903 ............ 27,500 624.25.

The amount so certified included tax upon certain bonds which lave since been paid, reducing the taxable amount added in .1898 by $17,000, and in 1899 by $14,000.

It appears that by will, Mrs. Selina Cadwallader left a residue of her estate to said M. M. White in trust, to pay the income thereof to children until the youngest should attain the age of thirty, and then to divide the principal between them, with power to invest and re-invest and make deeds of real estate. Mr. White also subsequently became trustee for the children.

As such trustee, Mr. White, as he, in substance, testifies, in-vested the money in his' hands in the several properties in question for income, because his cestuis que trustent never wanted the principal; he claims to have made no loan, and to have taken no security; but that he bought the property for the purpose of creating the ground rent, and that the entire transactions and all conditions are fully shown in the recorded deeds and leases.

The testimony of the other parties to these transactions taken before the auditor, was substantially the same — Mr. Holland, for example, testified that he wanted to raise money on the property and put it in the shape of a ground rent so he would never have to pay it back if he did not want to, but could buy it (the property) back after a certain number of years if. he wanted to. The other parties gave evidence substantially of the same tenor.

The determination of the issue here rests, primarily, upon the ocnstruction to be given to the tax law of Ohio, in this behalf. The interest in lands created by the transaction in question, is claimed by plaintiff to be taxable as "“personal property,” by [539]*539virtue of the provisions of Revised Statutes, Section 2730, reading as follows:

“The terms ‘personal property,’ shall be held to mean and include * * * the money loaned on pledge or mortgage on real estate, although a deed or other instrument may have been given for the same, if, between the parties, the same is considered as security merely.”

The object of this definition is, undoubtedly, to bring within the purview of the tax laws that class of equitable mortgages created by acts of parties in the form of -absolute conveyances, but with the purpose of pledging real property as security for the debt or obligation. It had long been held by courts of equity that, whatever the form of the contract may be, if it is intended thereby to create a surety for a debt or obligation, it is an equitable mortgage, and its quality is often implied from the nature of the transaction between the parties as against the written form (Jones on Mortgages, Par. 162).

But, in a sense, our statute, by the explicit character of its definition, imposes limitations because it confines the inquiry to that which is the equivalent of a mortgage per se.

In the first place, it must be money “loaned on pledge, or mortgage of real estate.” A loan is defined as “that which is lent; anything furnished on condition of the future return of it, or of the delivery of an equivalent in kind, especially a sum of money lent at interest” (Cent. Diet.). The legal definition embodies the more specific idea of a bailment or lending of something' specifically to be returned at the determination of the bailment (Story on Bailments, Section 228).

The term “pledge” carries with it also the correlative idea of an obligation to return the thing lent. It is defined as a “bailment of personal property as a security for some debt or engagement” (Century Dictionary).

The meaning of the statute is therefore plain and unequivocal, as relating to money put out as a loan where real estate is pledged to secure its return, and, as between the parties, the same, although a deed in form is given, is considered by the parties as security merely. Of course, any investment of money in land, in a very broad but not accurate sense, is a “security.” [540]*540A simple purchase of land may be for the specific purpose of security for the money — for land is generally regarded as the most secure form of money-investment; yet the money is not taxed in such case as an investment. The word “merely,” in connection with “security,” emphasizes the explicitness of the meaning — as though its defining equivalents “simply,” “solely,” “only” (Cent. Diet.), had been used, and directs attention to the thing to be secured, namely, the obligation to pay back again.

It would seem theyefore, as a necessary construction of the statute in question, that money not in possession of the owner can be taxed as personal property only when it is held by another as a loan, and- the obligation to repay is secured by-mortgage or by conveyance, that, as between the parties, is regarded as a mortgage in effect, i. e., “as security merely,” for the performance of the obligation to repay the loan. Myers v. Seaberger, 45 O. St., 232 (234).

The effect of the statute, in another aspect, is to legalize the established practice of courts of equity in permitting evidence of intention to prevail over the written contract in these cases; but it has been held, and wisely, that such evidence must be clear, explicit and unequivocal. 3 W. and S., 338; 115 Penn., 254; 129 U. S., 58; 192 Ills., 398, Carroll v. Tomlinson; 149 U. S., 17, Bogk v. Gassert; 5 O. St., 195 (198), Miller v. Stokely; 16 O. St., 170; Stall v. Cincinnati; 24 O. St., 615 (624), Matthews v. Leaman.

As was said in a well-considered opinion of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania:

“Conceding that parol testimony may be admitted to show a deed absolute on its face to be a mortgage, yet the facts and circumstances relied on must not be of a doubtful import. It is not sufficient that they be merely consistent with the instrument being a mortgage, they must be clearly inconsistent with its being an absolute conveyance. Evidence less than this can not establish a parol defeasance. Titles regular and legal on their face can not be swept away by parol evidence of doubtful facts or ambiguous inferences.” Burger v. Dankel, 100 Penn. St., 118.

[541]*541In the ease at bar, there was, in each instance, a deed absolute on its face, and a perpetual leasehold regranted to the vendor, I with privilege of purchase exercisable at his option. The ques- J

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraay-v-gibson-ohsuperctcinci-1904.