Ridgeway v. H.F. Sav. L. Assn.

89 N.E.2d 105, 85 Ohio App. 451, 40 Ohio Op. 333, 1949 Ohio App. LEXIS 751
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1949
DocketNo. 1007
StatusPublished

This text of 89 N.E.2d 105 (Ridgeway v. H.F. Sav. L. Assn.) 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
Ridgeway v. H.F. Sav. L. Assn., 89 N.E.2d 105, 85 Ohio App. 451, 40 Ohio Op. 333, 1949 Ohio App. LEXIS 751 (Ohio Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Marion County, in an action wherein the appellee, D.C. Ridgeway, as assignee for the benefit of creditors of Clifford Richards and Jessie Richards, husband and wife, was plaintiff, and the appellees, The Home Federal Savings Loan Association, Paul D. Michel, and others, and the appellant, The National City Bank of Marion, were defendants.

The judgment appealed from was journalized on August 3, 1948, confirming the sale of real estate ordered sold in the action, and ordering distribution of the proceeds thereof.

No bill of exceptions has been filed herein and the appeal is submitted upon the pleadings and original papers filed in the Common Pleas Court, and the record in that court.

The brief of defendant, The National City Bank of Marion, appellant herein, assigns error in that the final order and judgment of the Common Pleas Court is contrary to law.

The following pertinent facts are apparent from the pleadings and original papers filed in the Common Pleas Court, the orders of the court, and the final entry:

Clifford Richards and Jessie Richards, his wife, owned a piece of real estate in Marion, Ohio. The same was heavily encumbered by mortgages, judgment liens, tax liens, and mechanics liens.

On or about June 16, 1947, and subsequent to the attaching to the real estate of the mortgages and *Page 453 other liens mentioned, Richards and his wife made a deed of assignment to D.C. Ridgeway as assignee for the benefit of their creditors. This assignment was duly filed and recorded in the record of assignments of the Probate Court and D.C. Ridgeway duly qualified as such assignee.

The appellant is a lienholder by way of mortgage, its lien being found and adjudicated by the Common Pleas Court as fourth in priority of the liens on the premises.

The real estate in question was appraised at $9,000, which amount is less than the aggregate amount of the claimed liens thereon, as shown by the pleadings and original papers in the case.

The real estate being encumbered by liens, the assignee, pursuant to the provisions of Section 11127, General Code, brought this action in the Common Pleas Court to determine the amount of the liens, and to sell the real estate.

When the case came on for hearing on the pleadings for the purpose of determining the liens, the court found liens totaling $9,614.94, an amount in excess of the appraisement. And in addition to the liens found by the court, there were a number of liens barred by reason of the lien claimants being in default, either for pleading or for appearance.

The real estate was ordered sold and was purchased by the defendant bank for the sum of $6,000. The amount bid was insufficient to pay the defendant bank and the lienholders who held liens prior to the bank's mortgage, and nothing was ordered paid to the bank on its lien.

Upon the order of confirmation, which is the final order in this case and the order appealed from, the court below allowed and ordered paid prior to the payment of liens, the following items: *Page 454

1. To the treasurer of Marion county, Ohio, the taxes and penalties now due and owing on the real property, in the sum of $35.54.

2. To the clerk of the Common Pleas Court, the costs in the cause, in the sum of $639.75, including an assignee's fee to D.C. Ridgeway of $240 and an attorney fee to Carhart Carhart of $270.

3. To George J. Oriens, for premium on assignee's bond, the sum of $100.

4. To F.C. Bender, plumbing, $2.44.

5. To J.J. Francis, auctioneer, $10.

6. To Judge Edward J. Ruzzo, Probate Court costs in the sum of $45.15.

The court then, following the order of priority mentioned, ordered payments to lienholders out of proceeds of sale, in the following order of priority:

7. To The Home Federal Savings Loan Association, the sum of $4,774.17.

8. To the Avenue Lumber Supply Company, the sum of $99.53.

9. To revenue stamps, $6.60.

10. To Joe Bain, to apply on his lien, the sum of $285.82.

The journal entry determining liens discloses that on March 10, 1948, Joe Bain recovered a judgment against Clifford Richards and Jessie Richards, husband and wife, in the sum of $385.11, so that after crediting the amount ordered paid him in the judgment of confirmation and distribution there remained due him on his lien, a sum in excess of $98.29, which amount he would be entitled to receive prior to any payment made to the defendant bank on account of its lien on the premises.

In its entry determining liens, the court finds that the bond in the sum of $10,000 heretofore filed by D.C. Ridgeway as assignee for the benefit of all the *Page 455 creditors of Clifford Richards and Jessie Richards, husband and wife, upon his appointment, is sufficient and is, therefore, approved and confirmed and no further bond is required for the sale of the real estate as described in plaintiff's petition.

In his petition, the assignee prays that the rights, interests and liens of the defendants to the action may be fully determined, adjusted and protected, and that he "may be authorized to sell said real estate to pay the debts and costs aforesaid, according to the statute in such case made and provided, and for all proper orders and relief in the premises."

In its answer and cross-petition, the defendant bank, among other things, prays "that said premises be sold agreeably to the prayer of plaintiff's petition."

In its brief, the defendant bank states that "It is to the allowance of a commission to the assignee, and fees to counsel for the assignee, and the costs of Probate Court and the general expenses of the assignment, to which the appellant objects."

Defendant bank states further that the questions raised are:

I. Can an assignee be allowed his commission and counsel fees from a sale of real estate where a lienholder, not the first lienholder, bid in the property for a sum insufficient to pay the lienholder and those who hold liens prior to the purchaser's?

II. Can the Common Pleas Court, in such a case, allow the assignee's commission, counsel fees, and general costs of the assignment out of the proceeds of the sale prior to the distribution among lienholders?

Those questions involve the same subject matter and will be considered together.

Sections 11115, 11116, 11117, 11118, 11119, 11120, 11121, 11122, 11126, 11127, 11128, 11129, 11130, 11131, 11132, 11134, 11135, 11139, 11140, 11141, *Page 456 11142, 11143 and 11144, General Code, are pertinent to the questions raised.

The sections mentioned were originally incorporated in sections of the Revised Statutes, as follows: Section 11115, in Section 6350, R.S.; Section 11116, in Section 6350a, R.S.; Section 11117, in Section 6350b, R.S.; Section 11118, in Section 6350c, R.S.; Sections 11119 and 11120, in Section 6350d, R.S.; Sections 11121 and 11122, in Section 6350e, R.S.; Sections 11126, 11127, 11128, 11129, 11130, 11131 and 11132, in Section 6351, R.S.; Sections 11134 and 11135, in Section 6352, R.S.; Section 11139, in Section 6355, R.S.; Sections 11140, 11141, 11142, in Section 6356, R.S.; and Sections 11143 and 11144, in Section 6357, R.S.

We will first consider the validity of the allowance of commission to the assignee.

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Bluebook (online)
89 N.E.2d 105, 85 Ohio App. 451, 40 Ohio Op. 333, 1949 Ohio App. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridgeway-v-hf-sav-l-assn-ohioctapp-1949.