State ex rel. Squire v. Knapp

84 N.E.2d 524, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 457, 1949 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 278
CourtSummit County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1949
DocketNo. 129818
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 N.E.2d 524 (State ex rel. Squire v. Knapp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Squire v. Knapp, 84 N.E.2d 524, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 457, 1949 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 278 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

[458]*458OPINION

By WATTERS, J.

This matter was tried to the court upon an agreed statement, of facts by way of stipulation in the record between counsel for Mr. Thomas and counsel for Mr. Honeywell, which I. produce here in full.

Some of it is argumentative, or states the claims of the-parties. I have placed parentheses around that part.

AGREED STATEMENT OF FACTS

“Mr. BURROUGHS: It is stipulated and agreed by and. between the parties that the following are the facts of the-matter to be presented to the Court:

Thomas P. and Augusta Knapp in 1919 executed a note-in the face amount of Five Thousand Dollars, payable to the Peoples Savings and Trust Company, and this note was secured, by a mortgage of that same date, that is, even date with thenóte, and that mortgage conveyed the premises which are described in the plaintiff’s petition, and which are the subject of the action before this court now.

Later on the First Central Trust Company acquired all of the assets of the Peoples Savings and Trust Company, and of course among those assets the note and mortgage that we-have already referred to.

Following the acquiring of this note and mortgage by the. First Central Trust Company, the First Central Trust Company, as we all know, went into liquidation in 1939, and by-virtue of that liquidation, all of the assets of the First Central Trust Company passed to the State Superintendent of Banks.

The note and mortgage was in default, and in September of 1939 the Superintendent, in consequence, filed this foreclosure action, and the petition in this case is the petition that was filed at that time by the Superintendent asking for a judgment on the note, which as I recall was a cognovit note, —the pleadings will show what the fact is — and for the foreclosure of the mortgage and the sale of the property.

That foreclosure case, your Honor, as the pleadings will show, never came to a decree. It simply remained upon the-records, but you will find that a judgment was taken upon the note which was originally sued upon in the petition.

Thereafter the State Superintendent of Banks sold the-judgment and assigned the mortgage that has been described to the court, to Peter Thomas, and as appears by the pleadings,. Thomas was made a party plaintiff in this action in substitution for the Superintendent, and sought the foreclosure-of this mortgage.

[459]*459While this foreclosure suit was on the records, in 1927, the premises were delinquent for non payment of real estate taxes, .and they remained delinquent until 1943, when the premises were certified by the Auditor as delinquent.

In 1946 the premises were omitted, by action of the County Board of Revision, from foreclosure proceedings for delinquent taxes under the procedure that 1 think is familiar to the ■court, as prescribed by law, and on March 4, 1947, they were forfeited to the State of Ohio by action of the Common Pleas -Court.

On June 17, 1947, the premises were offered for sale and were sold by the County Auditor for the sum of Twenty-Five Hundred Dollars, and they were bought in at that sale by the ■defendant, A. L. Honeywell, whom we represent in this action.

Mr. Honeywell paid the sum of Twenty-Five Hundred Dollars to the Auditor, received his certificate from the Auditor in accordance with the Statute, later paid the requisite charge for the preparation of the deed, and the Auditor’s deed for the property was duly executed to him, and the original of the .Auditor’s deed in question is marked Defendant Honeywell’s Exhibit A and made a part of the record.

MR. ENRIGHT: No objection.

THE COURT: It may be admitted.

MR. BURROUGHS: This deed was, as shown from the ■deed itself, dated July 8th, 1947, and was duly filed for record immediately thereafter by the defendant Honeywell, on July 9, 1947, received by the Recorder at 1:51 o’clock P. M. on that day, and was duly recorded July 14, 1947, Summit County. Records of Deeds, Volume 2388, pages 381 and 382 of Summit County Records.

It is further stipulated by and between the parties that .after the recording of the deed marked Defendant Honeywell’s Exhibit A, the defendant Honeywell paid taxes and assessments upon the real estate described in his deed in the sum of $300.27, on October 23, 1948, and that Defendant Honeywell’s Exhibit B is the paid tax’ bill for such payment of taxes .and assessments upon the real estate, and is made a part of the record. The bill shows that there was a delinquent special for the first half of 1947 taxes and a delinquent general tax. The delinquent special was $124.34, including the penalty, and the delinquent general tax was $32.94, and for the last half of the year 1947, the second half, the amount of the ■special, without penalty, was $113.04, and the amount of the current taxes was $29.95, and the defendant Honeywell, on October 23, 1948, paid for both the first and the last half of 1947 taxes which included the penalty on the first half which was delinquent.

[460]*460MR. ENRIGHT: No objection to the tax bill.

THE COURT: It may be admitted. Now is there any question but what your stipulation so far is correct?

MR. ENRIGHT: No, there is no argument about it. It is-. all a matter of record.

THE COURT: Do you have anything you want to add to. the stipulation?

MR. ENRIGHT: Oh yes. The things I would like to submit, to supplement Mr. Burroughs’ statement would be about as follows: Peter Thomas acquired this judgment and security for the judgment from the Superintendent of Banks. He recorded his assignment, and he is a substitute party plaintiff. A judgment was rendered on the note and on the pending foreclosure. As a matter of fact it is still pending and exists on the two causes of action.

On October 3, 1941, prior to Peter Thomas becoming a substitute party plaintiff, the Superintendent of Banks took a certificate of-judgment in this case, and thereafter, on March 19, 1942, Peter Thomas acquired this judgment. On February-26-, 1946, he filed, with leave of court, a supplemental petition. He made Charles W. Frank, Treasurer of Summit County, a defendant. He made C. L. Bower, Auditor of Summit County, a defendant, and he likewise made the City of Akron a. defendant. Process was served on all of these public authorities, and in March of 1946, March 14, 1946, for and on behalf of Charles W. Frank, County Treasurer, the County Prosecutor filed an answer in this case, and he set up what, purported to be the tax claim against these- .premises. The ■ City of Akron never at any time filed an answer setting forth its special assessment lien against these premises.

Bear in mind, — and I’m sure the Court' is familiar with, the fact, that all of Exchange Street was subject to a very high special assessment, and our Court of Appeals reviewed it and abated quite a bit of it.

As a part of this supplemental petition, the- plaintiff, Peter-Thomas, questioned the special assessment lien of the City of Akron.

This all occurred in 1946, and in 1947, while he was a party to this lawsuit, the County Auditor proceeded to forfeit this, land. Understand, the Treasurer had set up the public claim, the claim of the general tax and the claim of the special assessment of the City of Akron.

MR.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.E.2d 524, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 457, 1949 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-squire-v-knapp-ohctcomplsummit-1949.