Lange v. Grabe

5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 148, 11 Ohio C.C. 171
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 148 (Lange v. Grabe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lange v. Grabe, 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 148, 11 Ohio C.C. 171 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Haynes, J.

’ This case was brought here by appeal. The plaintiff filed her petition in the court of common pleas for the purpose of foreclosing a certain mortgage, and set up in that petition the following note:

“$701.44. ' Toledo, O., March 11, 1894.
“Three years after date I promise to pay to the order of Dora Tange, seven hundred and one dollars and forty-four cents, value received, with interest at six per cent per annum. August Grabe.”

(Secured by mortgage on real estate.)

This petition was filed in the court of common pleas on the 14th day of June, 1894, being about three months after the execution of the [149]*149note, and long before the note had fallen due, and before anything was due upon it, either of principal or interest, according to its terms.

The plaintiff then proceeds to set up the mortgage, and after doing that and describing it, the petition proceeds :

“ Plaintiff further says that said deed of mortgage has the following conditions thereunder written, and became an important condition in the sufficiency of the security of said note, to wit: ‘ The said obligor further agrees to pay all taxes and assessments against said premises, as ■ the same shall become due and payable; and further agrees to keep said premises fully insured in favor of said grantee, her heirs or assigns, in companies to be approved by her, failing in which such insurance may be affected by said grantee, and all expenses thus arising from premiums or otherwise shall constitute a lien against said premises from this date, as though specifically stipulated therein. It being hereby covenanted, that if failure be made in the payment of either principal, interest, taxes, assessments, or insurance premiums, or any part thereof when due, as aforesaid, and the same shall remain 'in arrears for thirty days, the whole of said principal sum shall become and be then due, and the said mortgagee, her heirs or assigns, shall be and are hereby, authorized in said case of default to proceed at her option for the collection' of the whole amount unpaid thereon. Now, if the said August Grabe, his heirs, assigns, executors, or administrators, shall well and truly pay the aforesaid obligation according to the tenor thereof to the said Dora Tange, her heirs and assigns, together with all taxes, assessments, and insurance premiums, then the above deed shall be void; otherwise the same shall remain in full force and virtue.’ ' _ 1
“ Plaintiff says the said defendant has not kept the conditions of said mortgage deed; that said conditions have been broken by said defendant with reference to the condition of insurance by said defendant. That more than thirty days have elapsed since the making of said mortgage; that he has repeatedly and wilfully refused, and still wilfully refuses to procure for plaintiff’s benefit and protection said insurance, and have the same properly transferred upon the books of the insurance company, loss-if any payable to plaintiff as her interest may appear, as a part of her mortgage security, but still wilfully refuses to effect said insurance, according to the terms of said mortgage.
“Plaintiff says that she has endeavored to procure insurance on her own account as provided in said mortgage, for the purpose of protecting her mortgage interest in said property, but has failed to procure said insurance, for the reason said defendant has a policy of insurance on said premises for all said property will bear, and all insurance agents are willing to carry.”

The petition then described the property.

There is no allegation, it will be perceived, that the note itself is due, or that the interest is due, or taxes and assessments; the whole gravamen of the petition is, that the defendant has insured the premises in his own name and refuses to assign the policy to the plaintiff or to have the same made payable to her, as her interest may appear. It will be noticed that the condition is that he shall insure the premises in favor of said grantee, and that if he fails to do it, then the insurance may be effected by the grantee, and the ¡expenses and premiums shall constitute a Hen against said premises from that date, as though specifically stipulated therein. And the further condition is, that if he fails to pay the insurance premiums, or any part thereof when due as aforesaid, and the [150]*150same shall remain in arrears for thirty days, the whole of said sum shall be then due, at the option of the plaintiff.

The defendant having failed to make the insurance as agreed, taking insurance in his own name, the only excuse that plaintiff gives for not insuring them herself is, that she has not been able to effect insurance, for the reason that the agents refuse to issue a policy upon the property in her favor.

We have examined the matter with some care, and we are clearly of the opinion that the condition of this mortgage is not yet broken in refusing to pay premiums, for the plain reason that the mortgagee has paid no premiums, and that the condition upon which the whole sum would become due was, “if he should fail to pay the premiums which had been advanced or paid by the plaintiff.”

The rights of the parties under this conditton of affairs seem to be well settled by the authorities. I read first from a case in 5 R. I.,—Nichols v. Baxter, 491—I will read from the syllabus : ,

“ A mortgagee, merely as such, has no interest in or claim to a policy of insurance effected by the mortgagor upon the mortgaged property for his own benefit.
“ A covenant, or a contract, express or implied, by the mortgagor, that he will keep the mortgaged premises insured during the existence of the mortgage, for the benefit of the mortgagee, creates an equitable lien in favor of the latter upon the money due for a loss on a policy effected by the former in his own name upon the mortgaged property, whether the policy exist upon the property at the time of the mortgage, or be after-wards taken out by the mortgagor; and where, in case of an existing policy of a certain amount, having six years to run at the time of the execution of the mortgage, a condition in the mortgage called for the keeping up of insurance by the mortgagor of precisely that amount for the benefit of the mortgagee, the amount, in case of loss, to be payable to him, it was held that, by virtue of the contract of the parties, evidence by such a condition, the mortgagee had an equitable lien, after loss, upon the amount due upon the policy of the mortgagor, notwithstanding a clause in the condition permitted the mortgagee, in default of the fulfillment of such condition by the mortgagor, to take out a policy of that amount for his protection at the expense of the mortgagor, and under the security of the mortgage for the premiums paid by him therefor.

In such case, the insurance company and an assignee of the policy, both of whom were notified of the equity of the mortgagee prior to the assignment, were held to be subject to that equity.

The case was discussed, and many decisions are cited by the learned judge who delivered the opinion in that case in support of the propositions laid down in the syllabus.

Another case may be found in 101 U. S., 439—Wheeler v. Insurance Co. The syllabus is:

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 148, 11 Ohio C.C. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lange-v-grabe-ohcirctlucas-1896.