Timmerman v. Howell

2 Ohio C.C. 27
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio C.C. 27 (Timmerman v. Howell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timmerman v. Howell, 2 Ohio C.C. 27 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Shauck, J:

We do not deem it necessary to determine whether the remedy sought by the petition in this case is in all respects consistent with the theory urged by plaintiff’s counsel or not. If a re-sale of the premises was unnecessary, it was made pursuant to the prayer of the petition, and with the consent of the only defendant who now asserts an interest in the subject of the controversy.

The fact that Hastings and Hilbrant are financially able to respond to their liability to Fritsch on their guaranty that the note is collectible, is pressed upon our attention by counsel for the plaintiff as affording a solution of the case favorable to him. But this must not be confounded with a case in which one of two lienholders has other security. Fritsch has no security of the debt other than the land in question. Aside from (his, his only resource is the personal liability of Hastings and Hilbrant, and that is to be determined by the contract which they have made. It is well settled that one who holds a guaranty of the collectibility only of a claim, must exhaust all prior resources before proceeding upon the guaranty. Within this rule he is required to have resort to a mortgage which secures the payment of the claim, when, as here, the mortgage is assigned with the claim. Brandton Sur. & Gfuar., sec. 83; Barmann v. Carhart, 10 Mich., 338.

If, therefore, there is by virtue of this mortgage, a valid lien on the premises in question for the payment of the money due Fritsch, his failure to exhaust that lien would be a defense to his action against Hastings and Hilbrant on their guaranty.

That the plaintiff is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the parties to the original suit, is not seriously questioned. [32]*32To that extent the claim of the plaintiff is supported by sections 5402 and 5411 of the Revised Statutes.

A purchaser at a sale under an order for the sale of mortgaged premises, is invested with the mortgagee’s interest in the land; and so far as the land is concerned, he is subrogated to all the rights of the mortgagee. Frische v. Kramer's Lessee, 16 Ohio, 125. Among the rights as to this land to which Timmerman was subrogated by his purchase, was the equitable right of Collins to have his mortgage so reformed as that it should apply to the land which Howell owned, and thus to give effect to the intehtion of all the parties to that instrument.

But counsel for the defendants insist that the plaintiff is not entitled to assert this right as against the later mortgagees, Hastings and Hilbrant. It is a recognized limitation upon the relief here sought, that subrogation will not be decreed to the prejudice of such intervening rights of third persons as have been innocently acquired. Subrogation is an equitable doctrine, and it will not be so applied as to produce inequitable results. This limitation upon the general doctrine is recognized in the statute referred to, which provides that the purchaser at a sale of property on execution, whose title is defective by reason of a defect in the proceedings, may be subrogated to the rights of the creditor against the debtor, and to the extent of the money applied for his benefit, shall have a lien upon the property sold, as against all persons, except bona fide purchasers without notice.

Did Hastings and Hilbrant acquire their mortgage under such circumstances, so as to entitle it, in their hands, to protection against the equitable demand of the plaintiff? The evidence affords no warrant for the claim that they were guilty of active fraud. At the time of the plaintiff’s purchase at the sheriff’s sale, they were, so far as the evidence discloses, entire strangers to him. They did not lead him to belie ve'^h at the premises owned by the mortgagor were described in the proceedings, nor did they in any way induce him to make the purchase. But we are satisfied from the evidence, that they were present at the sale, and that they then had [33]*33express notice of the mistake in the description of the premises in Colliris’ mortgage and the proceedings founded thereon. They knew that he made his bid and accepted the sheriff’s deed, in the belief that the proceedings had relation to the premises owned bjr the mortgagor, and that by said deed he acquired a valid title to said premises. When they subsequently accepted their mortgage, they knew that the purchase price paid by the plaintiff upon such belief had, by the order of distribution, been applied to the discharge of the costs, taxes and the three prior mortgages, and that the receipts upon the sheriff’s cash book were in consideration of money so paid on distribution, and not of payments made by the debtor.

Counsel for the defendants insist that this express notice does not defeat the priority of right acquired by the later mortgage, executed and recorded according to the requirements of the statute; and as authority for that conclusion they cite Bloom v. Noggles, 4 Ohio St., 53; Erwin v. Shuey, 8 Ohio St., 509; Van Thornily v. Peters, 26 Ohio St., 471, and Building Association v. Clark, 43 Ohio St., 427.

In Bloom v. Noggles it is determined, that a contract in writing to execute a mortgage, does not create an equity paramount to the rights of creditors under a subsequent assignment, although the assignment be taken with knowledge of the contract. In Erwin v. Shuey it is,determined that an instrument intended for a mortgage, but defective because not under seal, creates no lien in favor of the intended mortgagee as against an assignee under a general assignment subsequently made for the benefit of creditors, although the assignee had full notice of the mortgage. In Van Thornily v. Peters, it is held that a mortgage defectively executed, because attested by but one witness, when reformed, will not affect the lien of a judgment rendered between the dates of the execution and the reformation of the mortgage. These cases are all determined with reference to the registry act. The object of that act is to put an end to all such controversies as to the date of mortgage liens, as arise from conflicting evidence of express notice, and to provide for the taking effect of such mortgages only upon compliance with the provisions of the act.

[34]*34Delivery for record is indispensable to the lien, and a due execution of the mortgage according to the terms* of the statute is indispensable to the record. If the recorder in fact records an instrument that is defectively executed, his unauthorized act imparts to it no validity. In this case there was no defect in the execution of the Collins mortgage. The cases cited do not decide that a subsequent purchaser is not bound by express notice of a mistake in the substantive parts of a prior mortgage that is properly executed and recorded. Nor does the reasoning of the court in those cases lead, or even tend to such conclusion.

It is not denied that the principles which govern courts of equity in the correction of instruments, where mutual mistake has intervened, would require the correction of the description in the Collins mortgage in a suit against the mortgagor for that purpose. To the granting of such relief between the parties to the instrument the registry act offers no impediment. Nor does it take such a case out of the general rule, that a purchaser takes subject to prior rights of which he has express notice.

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

Related

Bush v. . Lathrop
22 N.Y. 535 (New York Court of Appeals, 1860)
Murray v. Lylburn
2 Johns. Ch. 441 (New York Court of Chancery, 1817)
Barman v. Carhartt
10 Mich. 338 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1862)
Olds v. Cummings
31 Ill. 188 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1863)
Silverman v. Bullock
98 Ill. 11 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1880)
English v. Waples
13 Iowa 57 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1862)
Sims v. Hammond
33 Iowa 368 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio C.C. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timmerman-v-howell-ohiocirct-1886.