Smith v. Phillips

5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 502, 18 Ohio Dec. 429, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedFebruary 14, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 502 (Smith v. Phillips) 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
Smith v. Phillips, 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 502, 18 Ohio Dec. 429, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Pflegbr, J.

This proceeding is on appeal from the probate court to determine the priority of two liens — on one hand, a judgment or decree rendered by the old district court of this county in 1883, in favor of Ezra A. Hill, whose successors are the present claimants, and against Tabitha Meyers, then a married woman, and now deceased, and on the other hand, a mortgage executed by said Tabitha Meyers in 1895, in favor of J. C. Smith.

It is admitted that this judgment or decree in favor of Hill was based on a promissory note dated in 1880, executed in Indiana, and signed by Tabitha Meyers and her husband; that the original petition in the action was in the usual form for the recovery of a judgment on a promissory note, but that an amendment to the petition alleged that Tabitha Moyers was a married woman, that’she was then possessed of a separate estate of real and personal property under her sole control, on the faith of which the plaintiff extended the time of payment of the sum mentioned in the note and by the execution” thereof, and thereby intended, and she did charge her said separate estate with the payment thereof; that at the time of -the execution of said note, and while the plaintiff’s debt was existing, she held by gift from her husband a two-tenths interest in a- tract of land which is particularly described, consisting of 3.56 acres; and that the said Tabitha Meyers intended to and did charge her said interest in such land with the payment of the plaintiff’s note. Plaintiff prayed in addition to the prayer of his petition, that said indebtedness (then about $900) and interest be adjudged due him and that the separate property of said Tabitha Meyers be subjected to the payment of the same, and for all proper relief in the premises.

The answer, among other things, denied that she intended to charge 'her separate estate, and that the note was executed in [504]*504the state of Indiana, where it was claimed no contract of this sort could be made by her.

In a reply to this answer the plaintiff averred that by the laws of Indiana she was competent to make a contract and was entitled to a personal judgment against plaintiff, and then prayed as in his original petition.

A judgment or decree was rendered in favor of Iiill against Tabitha Meyers. She appealed to the district court, and upon a final hearing there a judgment or decree was again entered in favor of Hill and against Tabitha Meyers, finding among other things that Tabitha Meyers executed the obligation described, and intended and thereby did charge her separate estate, consisting of the premises described by the plaintiff with the payment of the amount of said Obligation, and that the plaintiff became by virtue thereof entitled to have the same subjected and applied to such payment. The court further found that there was due thereon the sum of ten hundred and eighty-three ($1,083.60) dollars and sixty cents, with eight per cent, interest, and therefore considered that the plaintiff recover judgment against the said Tabitha Meyers, charging the said premises with the payment of said sum and interest, and that she pay the same within thirty days, and in default thereof that the sheriff sell her separate estate so described as upon execution at law. This “judgment” was affirmed by the Supreme Court. See opinions in Hill v. Meyers, 9 Bull., 202; 9 Bull., 362; 15 Bull., 199, and 46 O. S., 183.

In the meantime, without the knowledge or consent of Hill, Tabitha Meyers entered into a partition of said tract of land, and she received as her divided portion and in fee a small tract, upon a portion of which her husband built a homestead. After the mandate was returned from the Supreme Court, Hill sought to enforce his judgment or decree by levy and sale, whereupon Tabitha Meyers claimed the right of homestead, and this was again contsted until it reached the Supreme Court, where it was determined, as appears in 46 O. S., 183, that she was entitled to such homestead upon the part so occupied as such. A portion of the separate tract in the rear of the residence was levied upon [505]*505and sold and brought only sufficient to liquidate a small part of the debt or judgment. Thereafter, and in 1895, Tabitha Meyers executed a mortgage upon this homestead to J. C. Smith, and the indebtedness which this mortgage was sought to secure is still unpaid and the mortgage uneanceled.

It is not denied by Hill that thereafter he did not issue execution every five years in accordance with the provisions of Section 5380 of the Revised Statutes governing judgments, but he insists that it is unnecessary for him so to do inasmuch as his claim was in the nature of a specific lien and charge upon this property and that this provision of the statute is not applicable to decrees for sale of specific 'property, and therefore his decree did not become dormant, similar to a judgment at law (Beaumont v. Herrick, 24 O. S., 446), but continued pending for the purpose of execution until an order of sale was executed or it was otherwise satisfied (Moore v. Ogden, 35 O. S., 430; Rankin v. Hannan, 27 O. S., 113), unless he was guilty of laches in permitting the same to remain inactive for a great length of time, to the prejudice of innocent parties who had acquired interests (Fox v. Reeder, 28 O. S., 181). It was determined in McComb v. Thompson, 42 O. S., 139, that when the rights of homestead are removed, liens on such property may be enforced by due process of law.

It is not claimed that there was such laches, but it is now contended by J. C. Smith that Hill has nothing but a judgment at law and that he failed to keep his judgment alive by having execution issued every five years as provided by statute, that the same is therefore dormant and that his mortgage is now the prior lien upon the property.

The material question at issue, therefore, is whether the order made by the district court in 1883 amounts only to a judgment at law, or a decree in equity specifically charging this particular property.

As the note was executed in 1880, before the act of 1884 removing all disabilities against married women, it must be governed by the law passed March 30, 1874, which provided that a, married woman could be sited alone upon her written obliga[506]*506tion and judgment rendered and enforced against her in ail respects as if she were unmarried, and in every such case her separate property and estate would be liable for any judgment so rendered against her. Prior to 1870 there was no personal liability, and no personal judgment could be rendered against a married woman. A number of cases involving the liabilities of married women under the act of .1874 have arisen and are reported.

In Avery v. Van Sickle, 35 O. S., 270, it was held that before a judgment can be taken against her under this act on her promissory note, it must appear that she had a separate estate to charge with its payment and that she -intended to charge it at the time she executed the note. The court in this case said that the statute expressly gave the right of a judgment at law in actions wherein she may be sued alone, and a prayer for such judgment in such action is therefore quite proper.

Tn Patrick v. Littell, 36 O. S., 79, it was held that it was not error to render a personal judgment against a married woman under this act. Prior to 1870 this could not be done, and only a decree entered reaching her separate estate.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 502, 18 Ohio Dec. 429, 1907 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-phillips-ohctcomplhamilt-1907.