Ryan v. Cincinnati Model Homes Co.

25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 574
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedSeptember 15, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 574 (Ryan v. Cincinnati Model Homes Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. Cincinnati Model Homes Co., 25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 574 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Darby, J.

.The pl-'aintiffs .claim to be the owners of Lot 85 in Barton’s Subdivision, which fronts 50 feet on Browning Avenue, Cincinnati;, that the defendant has rented the structures'on said lot and collected ’the rents therefrom since their erection, without permission of the plaintiffs; that the defendant has no [575]*575title to said lot and that it threatens to continue the collection of the rents unless restrained -by the court.

In a second cause of action the plaintiffs set forth that the defendant has been in possession of the structures located on the premises and has received the rents and profits thereof from April, 1918, to the filing of the suit in 1924, whereby plaintiffs have been damaged i-n the sum of $15,000.

The prayer of the petition is

“for 'the possession of the structures on said above mentioned premises, for an accounting of the rents collected to this time, and for an injunction restraining the defendant from collecting further rents from the tenants of said buildings and that upon a hearing thereof said injunction may be' made permanent, and for damages in the sum of fifteen thousand ($15,000) dollars, and for such other relief to which they may be entitled. ’ ’

The substance of the answer is—

First, a denial of the wrongful acts complained of; and

Second, that in the year 1958 the defendant, in the tona fide belief that it owned the real estate described in plaintiffs’ petition, built an apartment building, paid of which innocently and by mistake, was placed upon the real estate' desicribed in the petition, and that ever since that time defendant has been in open, notorious and continued possession of the building thereon and has been collecting the rents; that upon the discovery of the true location of the building the defendant entered into negotiations with the plaintiffs and offered to pay plaintiffs the fair value of the land in its unimproved condition, or to accept from the plaintiffs the reasonable value of the permanent improvements alleged to be. erected' on the land, which is said to be $15,000 ór thereabouts.

A third defense in the answer sets forth that with the foregoing facts in mind the parties agreed to an arbitration and settlement of their rights by that method, and that the plaintiffs afterwards refused to carry out said agreement.

' The prayer of the answer is that the plaintiff’s petition be dismissed, that they be ordered to carry out the agreement between the plaintiffs and the defendant, or in the alternative, [576]*576that the court fix the value of plaintiffs’ land in its unimproved condition and of defendant’s lasting and permanent improvements thereon, and that the plaintiffs be required to elect whether to sell their lot at the value fixed by the court, or to purchase defendant’s buildings at the value fixed by the court, and for such other relief as the court may deem equitable and proper.

To this answer a reply was filed in the form of a general denial.

Soon after the filing of the petition a motion was made in this court for a restraining order, as asked in the petition, and for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rents of said improvement. This motion was overruled. '

Upon the trial of the case and upon inquiry of the court as to whether this was an action to recover the buildings or for damages, and as to whether or not it was an equity case or law case, counsel for the plaintiffs announced that the prayer was improperly drawn and that the action was one for an accounting.

It is important to keep in mind that the case, as claimed by the plaintiff, is an equitable proceeding and that equitable remedies are sought.

The facts of the case are that the Emery estate owned two lots of 50 feet each immediately next to the lot described in the petition. Deeds were granted by the Emery estate to the defendant of the two1 lots referred to. Wien an examination was made of the physical condition of the lots supposed to be bought by the defendant, it urns found that 100 feet of the ground was enclosed within twO' fences extending back from the street and that directly in the middle of the property was a large “For sale” sign. At the comers of the 100 foot lot so fenced were surveyor’s stakes. Assuming that the property so enclosed: was the 100 feet bought by the defendant, its contractor proceeded to erect these valuable improvements upon the property so enclosed. This was in the year 1918. How long the property had been so enclosed does not appear.

The plaintiffs did not live in the immediate neighborhood of the property, but the testimony shows that occasionally one of th§g}; ^vho acted as agent for all, yisited the property, an^ [577]*577the inference is a reasonable one that he saw the improvements going up, but was himself under the mistaken belief that the plaintiffs owned the lot adjacent to said- 100 feet.' whereas in fact they owned fifty feet of the hundred.

It is clear that there was a mistake as to the property owned by both of the parties, and that in fact each believed when the improvements were made, that the 100 feet on which they were made was the property of the defendant, and so each believed that the 50 feet adjacent to said 100 feet was the property of the plaintiffs.

All parties continued in this belief until some time in the year .1923, when upon an examination made by one of the plaintiffs, it was discovered that part of the defendant’s improvement was on the plaintiffs’ lot.

It would serve no purpose to discuss the general principle of the law that buildings erected upon land become part of the land and belong to the owner of the land.

This is an equitable action, clearly shown to be such by the pleadings and the declarations in open court by counsel on both sidles of the ease. One of the maxims of equity.which applies in a ease of this kind is that “he who seeks equity must do equity.”

Many authorities were submitted to the court on behalf of the respective parties; those on behalf of the plaintiff supporting the theory, as above set forth, that the buldings belong to the owners of the land, while those submitted on behalf of the defendant sustained the principle that where one, acting innocently and in good faith and in mistake as to his boundaries, makes permanent improvements on property of another, the latter, when he seeks the relief of a court of equity, will have it granted him only in ease he does equity.

In 3 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, Third! Edition, Section 1241, this principle is stated as follows:

“Such an equitable lien has not always been confined to cases in which a contract to reimburse could be implied at law. The right to a contribution or reimbursement from the owner, and the equitable lien on the property benefitted as a security therefor, have been extended to other oases where a party innocently and in .good faith, though under a mis[578]*578take as. to the true condition of the title, makes improvements or repairs or other expenditures which permanently increase the value of the property, so that the real owner, when he seeks the aid of equity to estaiblish his right to the property itself, or to enforce some equitable claim upon it, having been substantially benefited, is required, upon principles of justice and equity, to repay the amount expended.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-cincinnati-model-homes-co-ohctcomplhamilt-1925.