Thacker v. Matthews

43 N.E.2d 108, 70 Ohio App. 314, 36 Ohio Law. Abs. 145, 25 Ohio Op. 63, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 695
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 1942
Docket3408
StatusPublished

This text of 43 N.E.2d 108 (Thacker v. Matthews) 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
Thacker v. Matthews, 43 N.E.2d 108, 70 Ohio App. 314, 36 Ohio Law. Abs. 145, 25 Ohio Op. 63, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 695 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

OPINION

By GEIGER, P. J.

This matter is before this Court upon appeal from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas upon matters then at issue between the parties.

The amended petition of Orrin Thacker recites, in substance that on the 13th day of September, 1933, the defendant Lindsay Matthews and Edna Matthews, his wife, in consideration of the cancellation of an indebtedness of $2025.00 and of the payment of $75.00 in cash, executed to the plaintiff Orrin Thacker a warranty deed conveying in fee simple certain lands located in the State of Michigan. Said instrument covenanted that the premises were free from all incumbrances except a mortgage held by the grantee, and it is stated that the conveyance is made by the grantor in order to satisfy said mortgage and the note secured thereby in addition to $75.00 and they will warrant and defend the same unto said Thacker against the lawful claims of all persons whomsoever, except as aforesaid.

Plaintiff further says that at the time of the execution of the covenant by the defendants there was outstanding, as a valid lien, a mortgage executed by Matthews to one Harry E. Schmidt securing $600.00, principal and interest, and at the time of said covenants there was due $300.00 in delinquent taxes.

It is alleged that subsequent to the execution of said covenants one Poole, assignee of the mortgage given to Schmidt, filed a suit in Michigan to establish his mort *146 gage as a first lien, during the course of which litigation plaintiff made expenditures in the sum of $250.00.

It is alleged that by the judgment rendered by the Court in Michigan, the mortgage lien held by Poole, as assignee of Schmidt, was held to be a first lien on the property after taxes and costs of the proceeding.

Plaintiff says that the covenant against incumbrances has been breached and that by virtue of the Michigan Court’s order to sell, he has been deprived of the title t" his property, warranted by defendant, to his damage in the sum of $2100.00.

On July 23,1941, defendants for their first defense make certain admissions and state that they advised plaintiff and that plaintiff had full knowledge in regard to a certain mortgage lien of $600.00 held by Schmidt on said premises and that with full knowledge thereof plaintiff prepared his own deed after having obtained such information; that defendants were induced to execute said deed in reliance upon the express promise of the plaintiff that he would pay the mortgage lien of Schmidt, which promise and representation was a fraud upon the defendants, since plaintiff never intended to and did not fulfill said promise.

As a second defense they set- up the proceedings in Michigan in which it is stated that the plaintiff sets forth the same facts and thereafter sought to enforce said covenant against the defendants and that in said action in the state of Michigan a judgment was rendered against the plaintiff on his cross-petition. It is alleged that the parties to the present litigation are also the parties in the Michigan case and that the issues were one and the same and that they have been determined and adjudicated in favor of the defendants.

The cases cited, upon which the court below relied in his first opinion, generally state that in order to maintain an action for reformation of a deed upon the ground of mutual mistake, the proof of such mutual mistake must be clear and convincing; that if the nature and contents of the instrument are fully comprehended by both parties at the time of its execution, it can not be reformed. If an oral agreement or other matter is purposely left out of the instrument, the same will not be reformed. Where there is no fraud or mistake in the preparation of the instrument and it appears that the parties signing understood its language and purport, it can not be reformed on the faith of a contemporaneous oral promise which was not kept. For further statements of the principle see Herman Saum, et v Orrill, et decided by the Montgomery County Court of Appeals, on January 20, 1942. 36 Abs 111).

On the 17th day of May, 1941, Leach, J., of the Court of Common Pleas based his opinion upon Crawford v. Edison, 45 Oh St 239; Grant v Kinney, 117 Oh St 362; Long v Moler, 5 Oh St 272; Kunkle v Beck, 1 Oh Ap 70; Hott v McDonough, 3 C. C. 177, and other cases cited, and concluded in substance :

“So in the case at bar there is in the amended answer no allegation of fraud or mistake in the omission of the alleged promise oí plaintiff that he would pay the mortgage lien then held by Schmidt, from the deed and there is no prayer for reformation of the deed; on the other hand, the allegation of the plaintiff’s knowledge of the existence of the Schmidt mortgage and his express promise and representation that he would *147 pay the mortgage lien of Schmidt is set forth purely as defensive matter. * * * The case being submitted as purely a law case, we think we are forced to the conclusion that in ‘such case parol evidence is inadmissible to prove such agreement’ of the plaintiff to pay-the Schmidt mortgage or in any way to contradict or vary the terms of the covenant; this requires judgment for the plaintiff.”

The Court, in consideration of the defense of res judicata, due to the holding in the Michigan case, concludes that the same is not a bar to the defense herein set up and in this we concur.

Thereafter, on July 23rd, the defendants moved to amend their amended answer by making certain insertions both in the first defense and in the prayer. The Court sustained this motion and ordered that the defendants’ amended answer be amended by inserting the matters set out in the motion as they relate to the Schmidt mortgage.

It is ordered that the prayer of the answer be amended to include a prayer that the plaintiff’s petition be dismissed and that the deed be reformed to exclude the Schmidt mortgage from the conveyance of warranty, etc.

The essential element of the amendment is that the warranty failed to include the mortgage lien of Schmidt and does not conform to the agreement of the parties and that such omission was a fraud upon the defendant and that the deed does not include the mutual agreements and -understanding of the parties. The defendants pray that the petition be dismissed and that the deed be reformed to exclude the Schmidt mortgage from the covenant of warranty.

The matter with the amendment to the answer again came before the same judge. He announced an opinion on the 3rd day of July, 1941, wherein he states that following the rendition of his former opinion on the 17th day of May, 1941, the defendants filed not only a motion for new trial but a motion for leave to amend; that from the evidence it appeared that Matthews held the fee to the Michigan land and Thacker held a mortgage thereon in the amount of $1500.00 and that Schmidt held a second mortgage in the amount of $600.00; that Thacker threatened to foreclose the mortgage and that thereupon a quitclaim deed was prepared, but that Thacker refused to accept the same, demanding a warranty deed. The defendants would not give a warranty deed because of the existing mortgage to Schmidt, of which mortgage Thacker had knowledge.

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Related

Saum v. Orrill
42 N.E.2d 925 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.E.2d 108, 70 Ohio App. 314, 36 Ohio Law. Abs. 145, 25 Ohio Op. 63, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thacker-v-matthews-ohioctapp-1942.