Toledo Trust Co. v. Moyer

9 N.E.2d 1020, 56 Ohio App. 10, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 486, 9 Ohio Op. 196, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 364
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 N.E.2d 1020 (Toledo Trust Co. v. Moyer) 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
Toledo Trust Co. v. Moyer, 9 N.E.2d 1020, 56 Ohio App. 10, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 486, 9 Ohio Op. 196, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 364 (Ohio Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By LLÓYD, J.

The above captioned action was commenced in the Court of Common Pleas on October 31, 1931, by The Toledo Trust Company against Lucille Metcalf and others to recover a judgment on a note of Lucille Metcalf for $10,000 dated October 17, 1925, and payable in three years thereafter and which, by payments thereon, had been reduced at the time of the filing of the petition-to $8843.13 with interest thereon at 8 per cent per annum from October 13, 1930, and .to foreclose the mortgage securing the same.

March 23, 1928, Lucille Metcalf entered into a written contract with William A. Lay, signed by each of them personally, for the sale to him of the mortgaged real estate at an agreed purchase price of $19,000 cash “when warranty deed is furnished, together with opinion of title showing said property clear and free from material de *487 feet- and incumbrances, but subject to taxes and assessments due and payable after the June, 1928, payment.” The contract recites the receipt of $250 from Lay “on account of the purchase” and that the own,er shall pay to the Hugh J. Bartley Company a commission of $770. On April 18, 1928, Lucille Metcalf conveyed the regl estate to Lay by warranty deed wherein it Iwas covenanted that “the title so conveyed is clear, free and unencumbered and that she will warrant and defend the same against all claims whatsoever. Except taxes and assessments due and payable in December, 1928, and thereafter, excepting also a certain mortgage given to The Toledo Trust Company on October 7, 1925, on which there is due as of date $10,018.33.”

On August 31, 1928, Lay sold and conveyed the real estate to Maurice Moyer, who expressly covenanted to assume and pay the taxes and assessments thereon and The Toledo Trust Company mortgage as a part of the purchase price thereof. On August 5, 1936, Metcalf filed a cross-petition against Lay and Maurice Moyer averring substantially that she conveyed the premises to Lay subject to the mortgage held by the trust company and that the consideration for the deed was the deduction by Lay from the agreed purchase price of the premises the amount of the mortgage indebtedness and the payment of the balance in cash to her, and averring that he had assumed the payment of the mortgage. She averred that he thereafter conveyed the premises to Maurice Moyer and that by the express terms of the deed Moyer assumed and agreed to pay the taxes and mortgage indebtedness and that neither he nor Lay had made such payment. She further says that she was damaged thereby in the amount of $8,843.13, and she prayed that in the event a deficiency judgment should be rendered against her she might have a judgment for a like amount against William A. Lay and Maurice Moyer and that the court would decree that they save her harmless from the payment of the deficiency judgment or any part thereof, and be compelled to exhaust their resources before she should be called upon to make payment, and for further relief.

On the issues thus made by the pleadings, trial was had in the Court of Common Pleas, resulting in a finding and judgment in favor of Lay and a default judgment in favor of Metcalf against Moyer. The judgment for Lay was reversed by this court and the cause remanded to the Court of Common Pleas for a new trial. The grounds of the reversal were that the trial court erred to the prejudice of Metcalf in rejecting as evidence the written contract of March 23, 1928, and in striking from the files her request for separate conclusions of fact and law. Thereafter Met-calf filed an amended and supplemental cross-petition averring therein in substance the facts as to the execution by her of The Toledo Trust Company note and mortgage, the sale by the contract of March 23, 1928, of the mortgaged premises to Lay for $19,000 in cash, the conveyance of the property to him by the deed to which reference is hereinabove made, the deed by Lay on August 31, 1928, to Moyer, the foreclosure proceedings of The Toledo Trust Company, the deficiency judgment against her, a levy upon her “goods, chattels and property” and the payment by her on January 2, 1934, of the judgment with interest in the total sum of $4972.87, for which sum with interest at 6 per cent per annum from January 2, 1934, she prays judgment against Lay.

Upon retrial on July 27, 1936, the Court of Common Pleas found upon the issues joined between the defendants Metcalf and Lay in favor of Lay, and, overruling Met-calf’s motion for a new trial, dismissed her amended and supplemental cross-pethion and entered judgment against her for costs. Prom this judgment she appeals to this court on questions of law. Numerous errors are alleged in the assignment of errors, they being those assigned in the motion for a new trial, all of which could well have been included in the allegation that the record contains no evidence to support the findings of the court and its judgment thereon, but on the contrary required the entry as a matter of law of a finding and judgment in her favor against Lay.

Lay claims that by a subsequent oral agreement made by him on March 26, 1928, with a Mr. Miller, salesman of the Hugh J. Bartley Company, a real estate firm that represented Metcalf in the negotiations resulting in the written contract of March 23, 1928, Lay was to purchase only Metcalf’s equity in the mortgaged premises, and that the sale was consummated on that basis. Mr. Lay testified that on that date he gave the Hugh J. Bartley Company a check for the $250 mentioned in the agreement of March 23rd, and that between those dates he had a conversation with Miller in effect that he would first have to see “the Port Meigs Electric” before he went any further as to whether *488 “they are still interested in the building; that they had in mind to buy this property”; that after he saw the “Fort Meigs people” he told Miller “that this contract could not be carried out; that it was impossible for $19,000 cash; that the property could not be financed and -the people was not going to go through the way they had promised; that they could rent cheaper and have a building put on the lot later on.” Then Lay testifies that Miller sai'd “Why don’t you just buy the equity in the property, which requires only $9,000,” and later said that he and Miss Metcalf had arranged with the trust company “that they will carry the mortgage for Miss Met-calf,” and that he thereupon said to Miller “If this can be made right in that way, that I am not responsible for the mortgage, I will take the equity,” his intention being “not to be held liable for tbe mortgage; just the equity.”

On cross-examination he testified that in July, 1928, he paid the taxes then due on the property and in August, 1928, paid $228.33 interest due on the mortgage and that thereafter he consulted the trust company as to his opportunity to sell the property to Moyer and was told that it was all right. Miss Metcalf never met or had any conversation with Lay concerning the sale to him of the mortgaged premises. The sale and purchase of the property was concluded on April 20, 1928, in the office of Mr. Frank Foster, attorney for Lay; Miller, Bartley and Miss Metcalf being present. Lay was not there. The deed which had theretofore been executed by Metcalf was delivered to Foster and he gave to Mr.

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9 N.E.2d 1020, 56 Ohio App. 10, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 486, 9 Ohio Op. 196, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-trust-co-v-moyer-ohioctapp-1937.