Provident Building & Loan Ass'n v. Pekarek

3 N.E.2d 983, 52 Ohio App. 492, 21 Ohio Law. Abs. 44, 5 Ohio Op. 40, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 445
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1936
DocketNo 14975
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 N.E.2d 983 (Provident Building & Loan Ass'n v. Pekarek) 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
Provident Building & Loan Ass'n v. Pekarek, 3 N.E.2d 983, 52 Ohio App. 492, 21 Ohio Law. Abs. 44, 5 Ohio Op. 40, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 445 (Ohio Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

*45 OPINION

By TERRELL, J.

The trial court considered that it would be inequitable to allow foreclosure and sale because there might be a possible deficiency judgment against the defendants. So it provided a scheme whereby, as a condition to the right of sale on foreclosure, the plaintiff should credit upon the judgment the apparent value or so-called intrinsic value which was found by the court. It 'would thus result that instead of defendants being charged with any deficiency judgment the plaintiff itself should suffer this loss. This appears to be one-sided equity. There seems to be no logical reason why defendant should be relieved of the debt without paying the full amount thereof. Defendants do not question the honesty of the debt, there is no question of unfair dealing raised, or sharp practice, or fraud between the parties. In fact, the court seems to have allowed considerations of sympathy for the misfortune of defendants to occupy the place of sound judgment. The depression has caused misfortune to all of us. The record does not justify a finding that plaintiff is the cause of this depression. It would not be equitable to require the plaintiff to reduce its judgment without receiving money therefor.

If the property had doubled in value by reason of prosperous times, it would not be equitable to require the debtor to pay twice the amount of the debt. The contractual relation of the parties is that of debtor and creditor. The creditor did not invest in the real estate as a purchaser. If the real estate enhances in value it should not be required to bear the loss. Equity considers the rights of each party. Should plaintiff’s premises unfortunately be visited by a fire, which destroyed the building on said premises, it would not be equitable to require the mortgagee to reduce the amount of its mortgage debt. The reduction in value of real estate by reason of the economic times is just the same as the reduction of value by fire. We may sympathize with the owner because of the loss by fire, but a court of equity cannot use its sympathy to transfer the owner’s loss to the mortgagee by reducing the mortgage debt.

Equity follows the law.

We read in Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence that equity follows the law in the sense of obeying it, conforming to its general rules and policies, whether contained in the common or statute law. This principle was clearly stated by Lord Chancellor Talbot in the following passage:

“There are instances indeed where a court of equity gives a remedy where the law gives none; but where a particular remedy is given by lav; and that remedy bounded and circumscribed by particular rules, it would be very improper for the court to take it -up where the law leaves it and to extend it further than the law allows.”

*46 From the earliest times in the history of jurisprudence in Ohio there has been provided a proper system of procedure for foreclosure and sale under mortgages. As early as “Anonymous”, I Ohio, 235, the Supreme Court laid down (he rule that in mortgage foreclosures the mortgaged premises must he appraised before sale.

Prior to the adoption of the Code in 1853, Ohio Chancery Courts respected the policy of the statutes governing sales on execution, following the procedure therein outlined in foreclosure of mortgages.

In the case of Wiles v Baylor, 1 Ohio, 509, decided in 1824, the following syllabus appears :

“The policy of requiring lands, sold under execution for debt, to be valued, pervades the legislation of the state, and has prevailed for many years. In directing the sale of real estate, especially where the legal title is to pass, a court of chancery is not at liberty to adopt a different policy.”

In Coe v Railway, 10 Oh St 375, it is stated that it is still the policy of the state that there shall be an appraisement in a proceeding for the sale of real estate under a mortgage foreclosure, and the court has no discretion, though the ascertainment of the value be peculiarly difficult.

A statute of 1810 provided that if the mortgaged premises did not sell for a sum sufficient to satisfy the judgment, then tlie residue of said judgment so remaining unsatisfied shall be deemed and taken to be a debt cf record, upon which judgment and execution could be had.

Reedy v Burgert, 1 Ohio, 157.

Sec 11581, 'GC, which has been in force for over eighty years, pi-ovides that when a mortgage is foreclosed, a sale of the property shall be had.

Other sections of the statute provide substantially that the sale shall be had as upon execution, that the property shall be appraised and not sold for less than twothivds of the appraised value.

Thus it will be seen, from the foregoing citations, that from the earliest times to the present day there has been a settled policy and law of the State of Ohio governing the procedure for the sale of mortgaged premises upon foreclosure, and this procedure has been apparently adequate to meet the ends of justice. One will search in vain through the reported cases in Ohio during the past century for any case where any judge, in the exercise of equity powers, upon a decree of foreclosure, has p’o.ced a condition that there be a waiver of a deficiency judgment.

If equity follows the law, it seems that the trial court" should have followed the established law of Ohio as herein above indicated and granted a decree of foreclosure and order of sale without imposing said condition upon it.

But, it is argued, that §11588 GC, merely states “when a mortgage is foreclosed a sale shall be ordered,” and, therefore, the Chancellor may grant a foreclosure or withhold it under such conditions as he may dictate. The mere statement of this postulate is to assert a doctrine not in accord with the modern theory of equity.

The Chancellor’s powers are not so broad as those of an autocrat. His powers in this advanced and enlightened age of jurisprudence are somewhat limited.

It is true that in the early formative days of equity jurisprudence, when the Chancellor was the keeper of the King's Conscience, equity was administered according to the conscience of the individual chancellor and with other considerations he probable gave weight to sympathetic feelings. As equity progressed it became guided by fixed principles and precedents.

“In spite of the origin of equity in England as a prerogative jurisdiction administered from an ecclesiastical point of view and notwithstanding the function which it still discharges as a corrective and complement of the common law, it is not to be supposed that modern equity continues to be wnat it once may have been — merely an arbitrary exercise of power according to the dictates of the Chancellor’s conscience.”

16 Ohio Jurisprudence, page 15.

An illuminating article upon the progress of equity is found in Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, Article 47, as follows:

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3 N.E.2d 983, 52 Ohio App. 492, 21 Ohio Law. Abs. 44, 5 Ohio Op. 40, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-building-loan-assn-v-pekarek-ohioctapp-1936.