Lea v. Welsh

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 190
CourtOttawa Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 190 (Lea v. Welsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ottawa Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lea v. Welsh, 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 190 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Haynes, J.

This case comes into this court by appeal from the judgment of the common pleas court. The petition was filed by Mary D. Tea in the January term, 1893, in the court of common pleas, in which she sets up that she is the owner of a note and mortgage and that there is due to her from Horace Welsh the sum of $1,000 and interest on a note as follows:

• “ Port Clinton, Ohio, June 6, 188G, Three years after date I promise to pay to the order of Geo. B. St. John, $1,000 at Sandusky, Ohio. Value received, with interest payable annually. ”
On the back of the note was the following endorsement: “Interest paid June 26, 18*8.” “Interest paid June 26, 1889.” “ Interest paid June 26, 1890.” “Interest paid June 26., 1892.” ‘ Payment guaranteed, Geo. E. St. John.”

She also sets up that at the time the note was made a mortgage was executed by Horace Welsh on certain property in Ottawa county to secure the payment of that note. That the mortgage was recorded on June 26, 1886, and that after said mortgage was so executed and was recorded, St. John sold, transferred and assigned said note and mortgage to her for a good and valuable consideration.

The assignment of the mortgage reads: “ I hereby assign the within mortgage to Mary D. Tea. Geo. E. St. John.” She further alleges that the note has not been paid and the mortgage has become absolute.

The defendant, John Roper, filed an answer in which he sets up that on March 30, 1889, he bought the property of Welsh, paying a full consideration therefor, upon a release of the mortgage by St. John, who appeared by record to be the legal owner thereof, and without any knowledge of the right of the plaintiff. The note being dated on June 26, 1886, and payable three years after date, would fall due June 26, 1889.

Dora, his wife, files an answer claiming she has an interest in the premises, also setting up substantially the same facts as her husband sets up in his answer.

Issue was taken by a reply denying substantially the facts and allegations of the answers.

The issue tried here arises upon the pleadings above set forth and was heard upon testimony. The testimony shows, in substance, that in 1883 a mortgage [191]*191had been made by Welsh, who was the owner of the property, to Geo. E. St. John, for $1,000, payable in three years, which had been sold to a Mrs. Curran and by her sold to the plaintiff. That about the time that note matured, St. John went to Mrs. Lea, at Sandusky, and said that Mr. Welsh desired to get an extension of time and proposed to give a new mortgage and note. He had already drawn a note and mortgage and had the same executed by Welsh, drawn payable to himself, dated June 26,1886, and had the mortgagerecorded, and had the mortgage and note with him; and thereupon she concluded to take the new note and mortgage, and thereupon it was transferred to her at that time by St. John, who indorsed upon the mortgage :

“Port Clinton, Ohio, June 26, 1886. For value received, I hereby assign the within mortgage, to Mary D. Uea.”

And upon the note he wrote “Geo. E. St. John,” and guaranteed the payment in writing upon the note. Some controversy is made there, perhaps not very important and not much dwelt upon, as to whether St. John became the agent of Mrs. Lea, in any manner. St. John states that he had agreed to collect the interest on the note and that he had collected from Welsh, for two or three years, and transmitted the same to Mrs. Lea. Mrs. Lea denies that she authorized him, in any manner or form, or agreed to have him collect interest for her; that St. John told her he was acting for Mr. Welsh in the matter and that he would see him paid. It seems the endorsements were made on the notes sometimes by St. John and sometimes by Mrs. Lea. No entry was ever made on the records in the office of the recorder at Port Clinton of the assignment of the mortgage to Mrs. Lea.

Welsh testified that he supposed St. John held thenote and made his payments of interest to him. Now that matter run along to March 3, 1889. The note and mortgage of Welsh was then not due; it would not become due until June, 1889; at that time Welsh sold this property to the defendant, Roper, for the sum of $2,200 cash, and received the money in payment for it. The circumstances attending the transaction are substantially these: Mr. Roper was desirous of buying a piece of property; he had accumulated some little money, having worked for Lockwood, who lives in this or Erie countjq and hearing of this place he went to look at it and thereupon entered into an agreement with Welsh to buy it of him for $2,200. Welsh told him that there were two mortgages on the property held bjr George E. St. John, of Port Clinton. They came to town and called upon St. John, who said he was willing to receive the money on the mortgages. St. John drew a deed and delivered it to Mr. Welsh. Roper then went to the office of the recorder and had a search made of the records to see if the title was good, the following week. .They came to Port Clinton again and the parties (Mr. and Mrs. Roper, Mr. Welsh and Geo. E- St. John), all went to the recorder’s office together and the recorder then told Mr. Roper that the title was good, producing the abstract; that there were two mortgages to Mr. St. John (being the mortgages before spoken of), and thereupon the transaction was concluded by the payment of the $2,200 in money by Roper to Welsh, and the cancelling of the mortgages by St. John upon the record in the presence of the recorder, and a delivery of a portion of the money by Welsh, $1,500 to St. John at that time, in payment of these mortgages; the balance belonged to Welsh. In all this transaction nothing was said about Mrs. Lea, or any intimation that she owned the mortgages; in fact, St. John said that he was the owner of the mortgages. He said one mortgage was there, the one owned by Mrs. Hitchcock, and that the other mortgage was at Sandusky, in his box there, but he would get it in a few days and deliver it. This he failed to do, and when his attention was called to it a few days after, he told Roper that it was none of his business, that it was Welsh’s. Subsequently Roper spoke to him again asking for the mortgage, but he said it was burned. Welsh also testifies that he spoke to him a few days afterward and he said that the mortgage was burned and that [192]*192■he could’not deliver it. No record was made by St. John of this mortgage, and •the witnesses testify (Welsh, Roper and Mrs. Roper) that they had no knowledge •whatever that Mrs. Lea had or owned the mortgage, and that the statement was made to them that St. John owned the mortgage; and there is no evidence •whatever to show that the Ropers had any knowledge whatever, or notice that Mrs. Lea had or held the note and mortgage or had any interest in the same.

The case has been very thoroughly argued on both sides. We have ■endeavored, so far as we could, to give it a full consideration. The questions -■involved are important, as well as the amount, to the respective parties. The question here is whether as against the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Roper, Mrs. Lea is entitled to enforce the lien of this mortgage. That she is the owner of -the mortgage in good faith, having paid a good consideration for it, there is no ■dispute; that she never received a dollar of money upon the principal is also true. The defendant, Roper, depends very largely upon the case of the executors of Wm. Swartz v. Leist, 13 Ohio St., 419.

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Related

Executors of Swartz v. Leist
13 Ohio St. 419 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1862)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lea-v-welsh-ohcirctottawa-1894.