Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. v. Jeckell

124 F.2d 339, 23 Ohio Op. 246, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2489
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 1941
DocketNo. 8756
StatusPublished

This text of 124 F.2d 339 (Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. v. Jeckell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. v. Jeckell, 124 F.2d 339, 23 Ohio Op. 246, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2489 (6th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

McALLISTER, Circuit Judge.

In proceedings brought by the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company to foreclose a mortgage, Elizabeth M. Backus, a defendant, was awarded a decree on her claim for an equitable lien; and the insurance company appeals.

The controversy arises from the following circumstances: In 1919, Guttridge and Rand were owners of a parcel of real estate in Youngstown, Ohio, which they leas'ed' to Ephraim M. Braden. By the terms of the agreement, the lessee covenanted to erect buildings for his own use, and .the lessors agreed to purchase. such buildings from the lessee on the termination of the lease, or any of its extensions', at a valuation to be determined in accordance with an agreed method. The lease was recorded and Mr. Braden erected the buildings.

Several transactions subsequently took place, which, although not concerned directly with the mortgage here sought to be foreclosed, nevertheless, illuminate the issue. Mr. Braden mortgaged his leasehold estate and the buildings to The Dollar Savings and Trust Company; and the lessors mortgaged their real estate to the City Trust and Savings Bank of Youngstown, as trustee, expressly “excepting and reserving therefrom the buildings erected by Ephraim M. Braden.” Thereafter, the owners and lessors conveyed their interest, in the real estate to Charles and William Jeckell and, in -the deed of conveyance, recited that it was subject to the recorded Braden lease [341]*341and also to the mortgage to The Dollar Savings and Trust Company, which Mr. Braden had executed. Subsequently, the lessors’ mortgage to the City Trust and Savings Bank was paid and discharged, and the Jeckells executed a new mortgage to the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, which is the instrument here sought to be foreclosed. The insurance company also procured a waiver of priority of the Braden mortgage from The Dollar Savings and Trust Company.

Through the death of Mr. Braden, his widow, now Elizabeth Backus, succeeded to his rights. Extensions of the lease were agreed upon during the lifetime of Mr. Braden, as well as afterward during the period when his wife had succeeded to his rights. Finally, in December, 1935, defendant Backus notified the Jeckells that she had elected to terminate, in accordance with the terms of the agreement; and appraisers were appointed, who filed a report of the value of the buildings in order to fix the purchase price which the Jeckells were to pay in conformity to the terms of the lease.' Before this payment was made to Mrs. Backus, the insurance company filed a bill to foreclose its mortgage. Appellee Backus contends that by virtue of the terms of the lease, and the fact that one of the principal considerations therefor was the erection of the buildings at the expense of the lessee, together with the obligation of the lessors to purchase the buildings at the expiration of the lease, she is entitled to an equitable lien paramount to appellant’s mortgage. It is the claim of the insurance company that the provisions in the lease embodied merely a promise on the part of the lessors therein to pay an amount to be agreed upon, and do not give rise to an equitable lien.

Determination of the case, therefore, depends upon the construction to be given the lease; and, if it be considered that the language is not certain, involves the intention of the parties as evidenced by such of their dealings as came within the notice of appellant mortgagee.

The lease provided that in case of the death of the lessee during the term of the lease, or its extension, his administrator, upon six months’ notice in writing, could terminate the lease, “and the lessors agree to purchase the buildings constructed upon these leased premises at a proper valuation, the proper valuation of said buildings to be determined by the parties, or their legal representatives, by mutual agreement, or if they fail to agree” by arbitration.

It was further stipulated that, at the termination of the lease “the lessors agree to purchase the building or buildings constructed by the lessee, upon notice given, said notice to be given in the manner, and the determination of the value of the building to be determined in the same manner, as hereinbefore set forth, in the event of the decease of the lessee”; and that if at any time the lessee became in arrears for rent for a period of sixty days after notice given to him, or upon breach of any of the other covenants by the lessee, the lessors might at any time after such notice and the sixty day period, “enter upon the premises and thenceforth from that time, this lease shall become void, providing the lessors purchase the building constructed by the lessee, the value of said building to be determined in the manner hereinbefore set forth.”

When the Jeckells executed the mortgage to the insurance company, the latter had notice of this recorded lease. It had further knowledge that the deed, through which the Jeckells had become owners, expressly recited that' the property was subject to the terms of the lease — -as well as to the mortgage previously given by Mr. Bra-den. Furthermore, it had notice that the Jeckells’ predecessor in title had given a real estate mortgage, expressly excepting therefrom the buildings which had been erected by Mr. Braden. That Braden was considered by all parties to be the owner of the buildings, is indicated by the recognition of this mortgage on the part of the Jeckells in accepting their deed subject thereto, and by the conduct of the insurance company in procuring a waiver of priority from Braden’s mortgagee.

With regard to the claim of appellant that the lease embodied only a promise to pay money, and did not give a lien on the premises to secure the purchase price of the buildings, it is urged that the right of the lessors to a return of possession did not depend upon their previous performance of the covenant to purchase the buildings from the lessee. With this contention, we do not agree. The above-mentioned provisions of the lease clearly disclose the intention that, in spite of any defaults by the lessee in the performance of the agreement, the lessors could enter upon the premises only by purchasing the buildings. Possession and domain of the lessors depended upon their [342]*342prior performance of the contract to purchase.

Further elucidation of any supposed obscurity in the meaning of the lease seems unnecessary, but it may be observed that, in the covenant that the lessors would purchase the buildings, there is implied, in the circumstances of this case, a title thereto in the lessee, as a party could not purchase his own property. It may be granted that, in some instances, the word, “purchase,” is to be construed as merely a promise to pay the value of certain property. See Kutter v. Smith, 2 Wall. 491, 17 L.Ed. 830. But in this case, where the lessee retains the right of possession until the required payment by the lessors, “purchase” must be held to mean payment for the exchange of property rights therein; and, from the terms of the lease, there is an implication of general ownership and title to the buildings in the lessee. In this regard, it is not necessary to determine nice questions as to the nature of title to buildings erected by one party upon the lands of another. It is sufficient to say that, from the foregoing, it clearly appears that the original lessors and lessee intended to create a charge upon the real estate in favor of the lessee.

If precedents are available, the question is to be decided in accordance with Ohio law. Wolf v. Eblen, 6 Cir.,

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Bluebook (online)
124 F.2d 339, 23 Ohio Op. 246, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-mut-life-ins-v-jeckell-ca6-1941.