Markey v. Waldo

18 Ohio C.C. 849
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio C.C. 849 (Markey v. Waldo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Markey v. Waldo, 18 Ohio C.C. 849 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This case is here on appeal. The action was brought on certain promissory notes, the principal of which amounted to $2,300, against Waldo and Varney as makers and Lorenzo Corey as endorser, the endorsement upon each note reading as follows:

“I hereby sell and assign the within note to Mathew M. Markey and Catharine Sunders.
LORENZO COREY.”

It appears from the pleadings and evidence that the notes were duly protested, so that if the endorsement was sufficient to hold Mr. Corey as endorser all other action necessary in the premises to hold him was taken.

To this petition defendant Corey files an answer. The defendants Waldo and Varney did not answer. I am not sure that they have been served with summons. At all events there is no question in the case in which they are interested. Corey sets forth several defenses. He admits that the notes were given as alleged, and that he endorsed them as alleged and as they appear; but he says that the endorsement was made under circumstances that should relieve him from liability as endorser. And he says among other things, that the endorsement itself, taken in connection with another instrument which is introduced in evidence, and which was executed as a part of the transaction, concurrently with the making of the endorsement, is not sufficient to hold him as endorser. He also says that the endorsement was made without consideration, and that if the endorsement is sufficient in terms to hold him as endorser, it should be reformed; that it should in fact be an endorsement without recourse upon him as endorser; that he and the counsel who transacted the business for him and wrote the endorsement and the other contract to which I have made reference, or the other paper, were mistaken about the legal effect of the terms used, and that the endorsees, the plaintiffs here, were aware that they were so mistaken as to the legal effect of the terms used, and that the endorsement was not in fact in accordance with the oral agreement of which the endorsement and the other paper were the written evidence; and that the endorsees took advantage of the circumstances and accepted the endorsement and are now prosecuting a suit upon it, when to do so is inequitable and fraudulent.

In order that this defense may be understood it will be necessary to recite briefly some of the facts surrounding the transaction. In December, 1890, one Whipple and his wife, being the owners of a certain grist mill, which was then in operation as a grist mill, including all the necessary machinery, executed a mortgage upon it to secure an indebtedness of $6200 to one Bridget A. Taffee. In January, 1892, Corey ,the defendant who is interposing this defense, purchased the premises subject to this mortgage from Whipple and wife. On May 18, 1892, Corey by contract sold the machinery in the mill to George A. Waldo and Alden M. Varney, authorizing the purchasers to remove the machinery from [850]*850the mill. He accepted in payment from them the notes upon which this action is prosecuted, and one other note of $200 which they afterwards paid, and also another note of $500 which has been reduced to judgment, and therefore is not included in the petition. At the same time the purchasers gave to Corey in pledge certain shares of stock in an incorporated company called the Tobacco River Milling & Manufacturing Co., which was located at Clyde, in the state of Michigan, to which place this machinery was removed, and set up in the establishment which was owned and operated by this incorporated company. A contract was formulated between the parties, reduced to writing, setting forth the terms upon which the stock was put in pledge to Corey. On June 10, 1892, the plaintiffs here became the owners of the mortgage of $6,200 upon this property, given by Whipple and his wife to Bridget A. Taffee. The circumstances under which they became the owners it is not necessary to mention. On June 25, Corey applied to Mrs. Sunders, one of the plaintiffs and one of the owners of this mortgage, for permission to remove this machinery from the mill. At the time he made this application to her he made a payment to her of $217, being the interest which had accrued and was due at that time upon this mortgage. There is some controversy as to whether lie had, at that time, in fact permitted the removel of this machinery, or whether it was subsequeently removed, but the evidence tends to show, and we are inclined to adopt the view, that the machinery was in fact removed after this permission had been obtained. There is some controversy' also as to the terms upon which this permission was given — whether it was unconditional, or whether it was coupled with the condition, as insisted upon by the plaintiffs, that Corey should pay this mortgage indebtedness within about sixty days from that date. I may say here that the witnesses testifying upon this subject are Mrs. Sunders, on the one hand, and Mr. Corey on the other, there having been no witnesses to the transaction other than the parties engaged in it. Mrs. Sunders says the permission to remove the mill was given upon the promise of Mr. Corey that he would pay the debt within sixty days. Mr. Corey undertakes to deny this, and to state the matter somewhat differently, but it seems to us that his statement amounts to practically the same thing. He testifies that what he said was that in his opinion the property, with the machinery removed, was worth enough to satisfy the mortgage. At all events, he had pending negotiations for a sale of the property, and said he would be able to sell the property, he felt quite sure, within sixty days, for an amount sufficient to pay off the mortgage, and that he would then pay it. As I have stated, the mortgage was owned at that time by Mathew M. Markey and Catharine Sunders. There is some question made also as to whether Mrs. Sunders, who signed this release, was authorized at that time to sign on behalf of her brother Markey, the other plaintiff, but we do not find it necessary to pass upon that question. I mention it that counsel may know that we have given it such consideration as we deem necessary. Subsequent to the obtaining of the permission of plaintiffs to remove the machinery, Corey sold his interest in this mill property and conveyed it to another. In 1893 plaintiffs began foreclosure proceedings under their mortgage in the circuit court at Detroit • — a suit under the statutes of that state in the nature of strict foreclosure, as we understand it. They brought the property to sale, and on October 30, 1893, plaintiffs bid off the premises for $7,040.41, which is an amount in excess of the amount that was then due upon the mortgage. In this proceeding the plaintiffs seem to have undertaken to sell not only the real estate then remaining but the machinery which had been removed. The description of the property in the publications authorized and required by the statutes of Michigan was the same as that contained in the [851]*851mortgage, and the mortgage specifically described the machinery belonging to the mill, and having been given at the time the machinery was in the mill, of course covered it. The question of the legal effect of this proceeding is debated before us and has been considered by us so far as deemed necessary.

It is contended upon the part of Corey that this amounted to a satisfaction of the debt.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio C.C. 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markey-v-waldo-ohiocirct-1898.