Lingler v. Wesco

79 Ohio St. (N.S.) 225
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1908
DocketNo. 10576
StatusPublished

This text of 79 Ohio St. (N.S.) 225 (Lingler v. Wesco) 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
Lingler v. Wesco, 79 Ohio St. (N.S.) 225 (Ohio 1908).

Opinion

Price, C. J.

There is nothing in the petition which was held bad on demurrer, to indicate that the chattel mortgage confers any special powers, such as power to sell or make other disposition of the mortgage property. As our statement of the case shows, the petition describes certain notes executed and delivered by Franz Kraft to the plaintiff Lingler, and that to secure their payment as [234]*234each should become due, the mortgage was executed and delivered to the payee of the notes. It was properly verified and filed in order to perfect the intended lien on the personal property described therein. In addition to the facts alleged as to creation of the lien by virtue of this mortgage, it is averred “and that thereby the said property was conveyed to this plaintiff by said Franz Kraft.”

The other material provision of the mortgage is the written condition, that if said Kraft should pay or cause to be paid when due each of the several notes described in the mortgage, then it was to be void; otherwise to remain in full force.

The second mortgage referred to in the petition, given at a later date to secure the payment of a note for twenty-five hundred dollars, covers the same property and contains similar conditions. It may be inferred from the language of the petition, that Kraft paid some of the notes, but he died on the 7th day of March, 1904 — less than a year from the date of the notes and mortgage, at which time notes due in six, seven, eight, nine, ten and eleven months respectively, had matured. His wife, Florentine Kraft, became administratrix of his estate, and on April 15, 1904, Lingler brought suit in replevin against the administratrix to recover possession of the mortgaged property, and in pursuance- of the provisions of the statute of which he availed himself, he obtained possession.

As before stated, the petition discloses no condition upon which the mortgagee might take possession save the averment that by the execution [235]*235of the mortgage Kraft thereby conveyed the mortgaged property to Lingler who thus acquired a special ownership therein. Evidently this personal property remained in the possession of the mortgagor and was in his possession at the. time of his death. What change, if any, in the relation of the mortgagee to- this property was wrought by the death of the mortgagor ?

It is not claimed that death discharged or in any degree weakened the lien of lingler, but he was not satisfied with holding his lien and permitting the administratrix to sell and administer upon the proceeds, and therefore asserted title under his mortgage and charged ’ that the administratrix wrongfully and illegally detained the property from him. The lower court decided that he could not maintain replevin against the administratrix and assessed damages against him for the value of the goods replevied.

Death soon or later is the certain fate of all men, and when a party accepts a mortgage upon chattels securing the payment of a series of notes some of which will not mature for many months, as was the case here, such party must be held to take such security in contemplation of what the law may require if death prevents the mortgagor from complying with the terms of his contract. The value of mortgaged property might be far in excess of the debt, and the estate of the deceased mortgagor would in such case be largely interested in the proper and advantageous disposition of the same, and it would seem unfair to the estate, that a mortgagee should be permitted to arbitrarily take possession and keep or dispose [236]*236of the property as he please. The petition discloses no duty on the part of the mortgagee in respect to such property. It does not appear that he was authorized by the mortgage to sell at either public or private sale, nor does it appear what shall be done with the proceeds in case a sale should be made.

But aside from the lack of averment of what powers were conferred by the mortgage in question, we still have the question, what change occurs in the rights of a mortgagee on the death of the mortgagor? — not change in his contract lien, but change in the remedy to enforce it. Indeed, on the facts alleged in the petition in the present case, it can not be fairly urged that the decision of the lower court tended to impair any of the contract rights of the mortgagee. He contracted for a lien to secure his notes. Death did not remove or impair the lien, but we think it did so change the relation of the parties that the remedy by replevin, which might have been enforced in the lifetime of the mortgagor, is not available when the mortgaged property passes into the custody of the administratrix. The new situation does not dissolve the contract relation or impair the contract, but cuts off one of the remedies that could have been pursued against the mortgagor. Hence, 'it is not correct to say, that unless the mortgagee may take the property from the personal representative of the mortgagor, he does not enjoy the full measure of his contract rights. His rights as to the debt and its security may be one thing, and the remedy to enforce them may be another. The former may not be changed [237]*237by the death of a party, while the other may necessarily be affected.

While the statute provides the method of obtaining a valid lien on personal property by mortgage, and one which was adopted by Lingler in this case, other provisions provide for the sale and distribution of personal property after the death of the owner. Section 4163, Revised Statutes, provides that: “When a person dies intestate and leaves any personal property, such personal property shall be distributed in the manner prescribed in section forty-one hundred and fifty-nine,” etc. This section points out the course of descent and distribution. But there are still other provisions to be observed after death of the owner of personal property. It is the subject of administration, and Section 6006, Revised Statutes, requires a bond of the administrator, one of the conditions of which is to make and return into court on oath within three months, a true inventory of all moneys, goods, chattels, rights and credits of the deceased which have or shall come to his possession or knowledge. The statute requires the administrator to administer according to law all the moneys, goods and chattels, etc. These are some of the duties of an administrator as to personal property of the deceased which comes into his possession or of which he has knowledge, and these duties are primary, or first duties in discharge of the trust. Later it is the duty and power to sell the personal estate and make due return of the same. In this case, some interest in the mortgaged property vested in the administrator, the extent of which depends upon [238]*238its value as compared with the amount of valid liens, and the contract called the chattel mortgage, “must be expounded according to the laws in force at the time they are made, and the parties are as much bound by a provision contained in the law, as if that provision had been inserted in, and formed part of, the contract.” Lindemann v. Ingham, 36 Ohio St., 1.

Applying this rule to the case at bar, we think the chattel mortgage and Lingler’s rights under it must be expounded and determined with a proper recognition of the statutes regulating the settlement of estates of deceased persons, and that the mortgagee should not be allowed to supplant administration under the law, and take upon himself the administration on part of the estate.

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Related

Kilbourne v. Fay
29 Ohio St. 264 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 Ohio St. (N.S.) 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lingler-v-wesco-ohio-1908.