Levenson v. Wolfson

182 N.E. 111, 42 Ohio App. 318, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 501, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 479
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 182 N.E. 111 (Levenson v. Wolfson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levenson v. Wolfson, 182 N.E. 111, 42 Ohio App. 318, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 501, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 479 (Ohio Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Ross, P. J.

This case is presented at this time on a motion to dismiss the appeal.

The proceeding in the court of common pleas was brought by virtue of the provisions of Sections 8572-1 to 8572-118, General Code, designated “Registration of Land Titles,” and commonly known as the Torrens Act.

The right of appeal to this court is specifically authorized by the provisions of Section 8572-80, General Code.

It has been repeatedly held by the Supreme Court *320 that similar acts of the Legislature are wholly ineffective in themselves to confer appellate jurisdiction upon this court. Commonwealth Oil Co. v. Turk, 118 Ohio St., 273, 160 N. E., 856; In Re Hawke, 107 Ohio St., 341, 140 N. E., 583; Thompson v. Bedington, 92 Ohio St., 101, 110 N. E., 652, Ann. Cas., 1918A, 1161; Cincinnati Polyclinic v. Balch, 92 Ohio St., 415, 111 N. E., 159.

It is contended that Section 8572-80, General Code, is vitalized by Section 40, Article II, of the Ohio Constitution: “Laws may be passed providing for a system of registering, transferring, insuring and guaranteeing land titles by the state or by the counties thereof, and for settling and determining adverse or other claims to and interests in, lands the titles to which are so registered, insured or guaranteed, and for the creation and collection of guaranty funds by fees to be assessed against lands, the titles to which are'registered; and judicial powers with right of appeal may by law be conferred upon county recorders or other officers in matters arising under the operation of such system.”

It is obvious that the language “judicial powers with right of appeal” refers not to any court, for such possess inherent “judicial” powers, but to county recorders and other officers similar to county recorders.

Section 6, Article IV, of the Ohio Constitution provides that the Court of Appeals shall have appellate jurisdiction in the trial of chancery cases. The question then presented is whether this proceeding under the Registration of Land Titles Act is a “chancery case.”

Such an action was held so to be by the Court of Appeals of the Second District in the case of Persinger v. Britton, 10 Ohio App., 164, but the matter was disposed of with the bare statement: “From this judgment an appeal was taken by the plaintiff to this court. The right of appeal was sustained upon the ground *321 that the jurisdiction involved chancery relief and that the probate court was a court of record within the meaning of Section 6, Article IV of the Constitution.”

The Supreme Court has also considered such a proceeding coming to it from a Court of Appeals, wherein it was heard on appeal. Stewart v. Kellough, 104 Ohio St., 347, at page 350, 135 N. E., 608. No question of the right to appeal was raised as far as the report of the case shows.

The main contention of the movement is predicated upon the assertion that such a proceeding is an action in rem, and that, as equity acts only in personam, such proceeding cannot be a chancery case.

As to the character of the proceeding, we are met at the outset by a statement of the Supreme Court in Stewart v. Kellough, supra, at page 358 of the opinion in 104 Ohio State, 135 N. E., 611, “The proceeding under the Torrens Law (Section 8572-1 et seq., General Code) was a proceeding in rem. It is so designated in the act itself.”

We presume that the reference to self-designation refers to the language used in Section 8572-22, where it is provided that the “decree of confirmation and registration shall be entered, which shall have the effect of a decree in rem."

Section 81 of the Act of April 27, 1896 (92 Ohio Laws, 239), reads: “The decree of the court ordering registration, shall be in the nature of a decree in rem,” etc. Yet the Supreme Court in State of Ohio, ex rel., v. Guilbert, Aud., 56 Ohio St., 575, 47 N. E., 551, 38 L. R. A., 519, 60 Am. St. Rep., 756, held as to the act as then written that in spite of such self-designation, which it noted on page 609 of the opinion, it was emphatically not a proceeding in rem. Before quoting the language of the opinion, in which the entire act was carefully considered, it may be well to remark that such changes as have occurred in the new act under the constitutional amendment would not be *322 calculated to make the proceeding one in rem, if it were not so under the sweeping provisions of the old act applying to service of notice and scope of the decree.

Quoting from the opinion of the court in State, ex rel., v. Guilbert, at pages 618 and 619 of 56 Ohio State, 47 N. E., 556:

“Is it such notice as the law of the land requires to be given to persons claiming interests in property of the pendency of a judicial proceeding, in which such interests are to be the subject of adjudication and in which, unless they appear, a decree will be entered precluding their further assertion? It is said that it is, because the proceeding to register land under the act is in rem. -Whether it is in rem or in personam is determined by its nature and purpose. To say that the legislature may prescribe such notice as is appropriate to proceedings in rem, and thus invest the proceeding with that character, is to affirm its power to annul the constitutional requirement. In this aspect of the case, and considering the effect of registration upon interests adverse to those of the applicant, the proceeding to register does not, in any substantial respect, differ from a suit quia timet to settle title. It bears the least possible analogy to a proceeding in rem. The res is not taken into the possession of an officer of the court. No charge or lien is asserted against it.
“It is not to be sold with a view to the distribution of its proceeds, and it partakes, therefore, less of the nature of a proceeding in rem than does the foreclosure of a mortgage. The land is not a thing of shifting situs like a ship, against which obligations may accrue today in one jurisdiction and tomorrow in another. The status of the land is not changed by registration. The substantial thing determined by registration is that the person who makes the application has a right of property in the land to the exclusion of all other persons. The judicial force of the proceeding is wholly *323 expended in a conclusive determination of the rights of persons in the land.

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 111, 42 Ohio App. 318, 12 Ohio Law. Abs. 501, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levenson-v-wolfson-ohioctapp-1931.