Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Strausz

22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 268
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJuly 1, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 268 (Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Strausz) 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
Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. Strausz, 22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 268 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

This case has been submitted to us on the demurrers of the plaintiff, the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company, and Willard F. Robison, to the amended and supplemental cross petition of the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company.

The original action was a suit by the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company to foreclose a mortgage which it held on certain property owned by Ida E. Strausz and her husband.

The Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company was made a party, having a supposed interest in the property, and on June 3, 1910, filed a pleading in the case. The case on motion of plaintiff company was ordered dismissed by the court without prejudice.

The Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company excepted to this order, and thereafter attempted to proceed with its claims as to the property in controversy.

It seems, without a full review of the circumstances (which are somewhat complicated) out of which this litigation has grown, that the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company had at one time itself a junior mortgage upon the property of the Strauszs, which mortgage covered a small part of the same property that is described in, the petition of the plaintiff company, and which required some corrective instrument or instruments to be made by the Strauszs to the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company to make this apparent. This was done and ultimately the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company ob[270]*270tained title to the same property subject to whatever interest the plaintiff company, the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company, had by virtue of its prior encumbrance.

In the pleading first filed by the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company it asked for the protection of its interests by a prayer which seeks to compel the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company to make sale of the property in parcels so as to subject first to the lien of its encumbrance the property not covered by the mortgage of the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company, and to which the Mutual Aid Building &. Loan Company ultimately obtained title.

The prayer was that the court would determine the validity of the notes and mortgages set forth in the petition, and if same should be found a valid and subsisting lien against the property owned by the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company, that the property described in the petition might be ordered sold in parcels.

It prayed also for all relief to which in equity and good conscience the defendant company was entitled.

After the dismissal of the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company from the case, a so-called amended and supplemental petition was filed by the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company, in which they alleged that the Strauszs had made conveyance to Willard F. Robison and had him brought in as a party, and alleged further in its pleadings that there was a conspiracy between Robison, who was an officer of the plaintiff company, and the plaintiff company, to defeat the claims of the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company by the dismissal of the plaintiff company out of the case and preventing the Mutual Aid Company from litigating its claims therein.

Motion was made to strike the amended and supplemental petition from the files, both by the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company and by Willard F. Robison, and these motions were by the court overruled.

Demurrers were also filed by both plaintiff company and Willard F. Robison and subsequently withdrawn, and after-[271]*271wards demurrers were again filed and heard and sustained by the court. The Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company, not desiring to plead further, its claims were dismissed by final judgment and order.

From these proceedings and final judgment, an appeal was taken to our court, and the case is presented to us upon the demurrers of the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company and Willard F. Robison to the claims asserted by the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company.

It is insisted that after the dismissal of the plaintiff’s case there was no proceeding remaining in court in which the defendant company could have its rights litigated, and it is insisted by Willard F. Robison that he is not properly brought into the case under the circumstances, and that the court has no jurisdiction to render judgment against him; and I suppose the plaintiff company is asserting substantially the same thing, that there is no jurisdiction now in court to grant the asked for relief, or any relief, to the Mutual Aid Building & 'Loan Company.

Without dwelling too long on the question of jurisdiction, it suffices to say that we are of the view that the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company after having been brought into court by the suit of the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company had the right to file its cross petition as to matters touching claims in the plaintiff’s petition, and ask the relief which it did ask.

In other words, when a first mortgagee brings suit to foreclose his mortgage, a subsequent mortgagee may properly ask, if the mortgage is on part of the same property, that the land be sold in parcels in such a way as first to subject that property which is not covered by the second mortgage, on the principle of equity that where one creditor has recourse to two funds, although his equity be prior, he must exhaust the fund upon which he has the exclusive right, so as not to prejudice the equity or right which is held by the other party.

As to Willard F. Robison, by invoking the jurisdiction of thé court in his motion and demurrer, he gave the court full [272]*272jurisdiction of his person. I will not stop to cite authorities. "We think that under the law in Ohio it is quite clear that Willard F. Robison got himself into court, so that if the court had no original jurisdiction to entertain a suit of the Mutual Aid Building and Loan Company to quiet its title as against Willard F. Robison, or indeed, as against the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company, yet after the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company was brought in as a defendant, and the court acquired original jurisdiction of the subject-matter to determine the right of the parties in such an action, the court below had jurisdiction to go on and determine the case, and that the filing of the demurrers by the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company and Willard F. Robison to the subsequent pleading of the Mutual Aid Building & Loan Company substantially kept all the parties in court, and gave the court jurisdiction to determine the matters in controversy.

. One of the questions involved in this" case we have had a good deal of trouble in determining, viz.: whether a person who has become the owner of property, a part of which is covered by a mortgage, which the mortgagee does not desire at present to foreclose but which has become absolute, can compel its foreclosure so as to prevent the lien from remaining upon his property for an indefinite time, perhaps in the end growing by reason of accrued interest to such an amount as to endanger the property of the person who has become the owner, when otherwise it would be saved, and also at all times preventing his sale of the property by reason of the cloud upon it. The assertion is made in _this supplemental and amended cross petition, that this mortgage of the Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company is a cloud upon the title which the Mutual Aid Building &

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio C.C. Dec. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-savings-bank-trust-co-v-strausz-ohiocirct-1910.