Miller v. Scott

154 N.E. 358, 23 Ohio App. 50, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 330, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 129
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 154 N.E. 358 (Miller v. Scott) 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
Miller v. Scott, 154 N.E. 358, 23 Ohio App. 50, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 330, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 129 (Ohio Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Washburn, J.

This case is before this court on appeal from the judgment of the common pleas court. It is an action in equity, by which Clara F. Miller seeks to enforce the lien of a judgment' *51 obtained by her against Glen R. Scott and Hazel M. Scott by the sale of real estate belonging to said Glen R. Scott and Hazel M. Scott.

The controversy is not between said parties, bnt is between Clara F. Miller, on the one hand, and Catherine and John Blank, on the other, and the solution of the question involved depends upon whether or not Catherine and John Blank are entitled to the aid of the doctrine of subrogation, so as to make their lien upon the real estate of Glen R. and Hazel M. Scott prior to the judgment lien of said Clara F. Miller.

The facts are not in dispute, and, so far as it is necessary to determine the question involved, they are as follows:

Prior to the year 1922, the Scotts were indebted to Clara F. Miller upon promissory notes secured by mortgage upon certain real estate, not the real estate involved in this suit, which the Scotts had once owned, but had later sold subject to the Miller mortgage; and the Scotts were also the owners of certain other real estate, the real estate involved in this suit, upon which there were two valid and subsisting mortgages, aggregating over $7,000, which mortgages were owned by a man by the name of Patterson, and his wife. On February 14, 1922, Mrs. Miller brought her action to foreclose her mortgage on the premises formerly owned by the Scotts, and to recover a judgment against the Scotts for any deficiency there might be. Before that time, the Pattersons had been pressing for payment of their mortgages on the premises then owned by the Scotts, and the Scotts had been attempting to negotiate a loan upon said *52 premises in order to pay the Pattersons, but the defendant Akron Savings & Loan Company would loan but $4,000 upon said premises; the value of real estate having suddenly decreased. Thereupon the Scotts applied to aforementioned Catherine and John Blank, the father and mother of Mrs. Scott, for financial assistance, and as a result of negotiations the Pattersons agreed to cancel their mortgages upon the property upon the receipt of $5,700 cash, which amount was to be raised by giving a first mortgage on said premises for $4,000 to the Akron Savings & Loan Company, and a second mortgage for $1,700 to Catherine and John Blank.

The loan company furnished the $4,000, and the Blanks furnished the $1,700, and the Patterson mortgages were paid off on February 16, 1922, two days after the suit hereinbefore mentioned was brought by Mrs. Miller. The first mortgage to the loan company for $4,000 was promptly executed and recorded, but there was a delay of some time in the execution and delivery of the mortgage to the Blanks; the same not being executed until June 7, 1922, and not recorded until August 10, 1922. In the meantime, on July 10, 1922, judgment was taken against the Scotts in the suit brought by Mrs. Miller, which, by operation of law, became a lien from the first day of the term, which was April 3, 1922, and thereafter, on August 16, 1922, an execution upon said judgment was levied upon the property owned by the Scotts and involved in this suit.

Mrs. Miller was not a party to the arrangement by which the money was raised to pay off the *53 Patterson mortgages, nor did she have any notice whatever of that transaction.

Although the Blanks are related to the Scotts, there is no room to doubt that when they mortgaged their own property to raise the $1,700 which they gave to the Scotts for the purpose, and which was used for the purpose, of paying off a part of the Patters on mortgages, there was a bona fide agreement that they were to be secured by a. second mortgage upon the Scott property, so that the loan company mortgage and the Blank mortgage should take the place of the two mortgages to the Pattersons which were canceled in carrying out the agreement of the parties; but, as has been said, Mrs. Miller knew nothing of such agreement.

In this situation it is the claim' of the Blanks that they are entitled to .be subrogated to the rights of the Pattersons under their mortgages; that said Patterson mortgages should be considered in equity as valid liens upon the property to the extent of the money contributed by the Blanks to pay off same. On the other hand, it is claimed by Mrs. Miller that the Blanks are not entitled to be so subrogated and that the lien of her judgment has preference over the claim of the Blanks.

In considering this matter, we will make a summary of the dates of the transactions involved:

The Miller suit was begun February 14, 1922; the Patterson mortgages were paid February 16, 1922; the mortgage to the Blanks for the money with which to pay the Patterson mortgages was executed June 7, 1922; the Miller judgment was taken July 10, 1922, but became a lien on April 3, 1922; the mortgage to the Blanks was filed for *54 record August 10, 1922; the execution on the Miller judgment was issued August 11, 1922, and levied on the premises August 16, 1922.

“Subrogation is founded on the principles of equity and benevolence, and is not to be allowed in favor of one who has permitted the equity he asserts to sleep in secrecy until the rights of others would be injuriously affected by its assertion and enforcement. * * * However, subrogation is often allowed notwithstanding there is more or less negligence, and it may be said that negligence which does not increase the burdens of any lien-holder does not prevent subrogation or bar the right thereto.” 25 Ruling Case Law, p. 1393, Section 76.

“Where a loan of money is made on an agreement with the borrower that it is to be secured by a mortgage which shall be the first lien on property then incumbered with other liens that are to be paid off out of the money loaned, and they are so paid in order to give the lender the promised security, the latter is neither a stranger nor volunteer, but sustains such relation to the premises and the parties as will entitle him, if his mortgage prove defective, to subrogation to the rights of those whose liens were so paid.” Amick v. Woodworth, 58 Ohio St., 86, 50 N. E., 47.

“As a general rule, one having an interest in or lien on property, who pays off for his protection a prior incumbrance upon it, is entitled in equity to be subrogated to all the rights of the prior encumbrancer, and to enforce the security for his reimbursement out of the incumbered estate. This equitable right, however, will not prevail *55 against intervening bona fide purchasers without notice, or those occupying a like position; nor does it belong to a mere stranger or volunteer who pays the incumbrance.” Id.

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Bluebook (online)
154 N.E. 358, 23 Ohio App. 50, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 330, 1924 Ohio App. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-scott-ohioctapp-1924.