Vinewood Realty Co. v. Village of Willowick

45 N.E.2d 148, 70 Ohio App. 74, 24 Ohio Op. 381, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 668
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 1941
Docket416
StatusPublished

This text of 45 N.E.2d 148 (Vinewood Realty Co. v. Village of Willowick) 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
Vinewood Realty Co. v. Village of Willowick, 45 N.E.2d 148, 70 Ohio App. 74, 24 Ohio Op. 381, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 668 (Ohio Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

Phillips, J.

Plaintiffs, The yinewood Realty Company and The Cleveland Trnst Company, trustee, hereinafter referred to as the realty company and the trustee, appeal on questions of law from an adverse .judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Lake ■county in their action against defendants, The Vine-wood Land Company, The Cleveland Trust Company, ■the village of Willowick, and its clerk, herein called the land company, the trust company, the village and •the clerk, respectively, and against the recorder, treasurer and auditor of Lake county, herein designated as such, to enjoin the enforcement of liens and collection •of assessments for special improvements allegedly appearing on the records of the recorder against their real estate situated in the village, to cancel same, to •quiet their title thereto, and for a mandatory injunction ordering defendants to remove certain memorials placed on such lands from the master certificate of ■title thereof.

Plaintiffs alleged, and the evidence disclosed, that •the involved lands were registered in accordance with the provisions of Section 8572-1 et seq., General Code, •commonly known as the Torrens Act; that no copies of the ordinances authorizing and directing the special improvements and no registration of the liens of the assessments were filed and noted in the recorder’s office as required by Section 8572-56, General Code (115 Ohio Laws, 447; repealed, 117 Ohio Laws, 479), until May 26, 1936, nearly seven years after such assessments were levied; that on April 1,1922, the realty company, which held the fee simple title to the lands involved, executed a ninety-nine year, renewable for■ever, lease thereon to the land company, which con *76 tained an option to purchase by the latter; that several, months thereafter the realty company conveyed itsreversionary estate therein to the trustee, under a. present existing agreement whereby the trust company became trustee and the realty company the beneficial owner thereof, subject to the before-mentioned lease..

By answer the land company alleged, and the evidence disclosed, that its corporate charter was can-celled by the state; that it forfeited and surrendered, its ninety-nine - year lease because of default in the payment of rent, taxes, advances, and other conditions- and obligations required under its terms; that it held no directors’ meetings nor performed any corporate-functions after August 4,1930, since which time possession of the -lands in issue was in the trustee and the-realty company.

Defendants answered, and alleged, that the plaintiffs were estopped from relying upon Section 8572-56, General Code, by their conduct, inactivity and acquiescence, and denied that plaintiffs’ interest in the lands-were ever registered under the Torrens Act. However the latter feature of the case was determined in the case of Vinewood Realty Co. v. Village of Willowick, 136 Ohio St., 257, 25 N. E. (2d), 345, and is not here-involved.

By a pleading designated an answer defendant, city of Willowick, set up its lien.

The evidence disclosed that the land company, lessee, entered into an agreement with the village and' contributed $9,713 toward the pavement improvement, which it requested the village to undertake, and by an executive officer signed, and agreed to procure others to sign, the formal petitions presented to the village-which contained a request to it to make the improvements and an express promise by the petitioners to pay all installments of the special assessments levied-' *77 against their properties for the cost thereof; that it promoted the improvements, participated therein, and received the benefits thereof with full knowledge of same, and without repudiating the acts of its officers; that the petitions which were circulated late in the year 1927 were signed by more than sixty per cent of the owners of the involved lands; that in accordance therewith on January 8, 1928, the village council gave its ordinance of necessity numbered 181 its first, second and third readings, and thereafter passed the enabling ordinances, and thereupon proceeded to and did install storm sewers, sanitary sewers, water house connections, paving, and various and sundry other improvements.

The Court of Common Pleas found that the special assessments levied by three ordinances and reassessed by ordinance 462 were of such a nature that the realty and land companies were estopped to deny that they constituted valid and subsisting liens against the involved lands and refused to order the memorials to those lots expunged from records to which reference has been made.

It is the law of this case that the registration proceedings registered both the leasehold of the land company and the reversion of the trust company. See Realty Co. v. Willowick, supra.

Defendants concede “that in the absence of an equitable estoppel the trust company (presumably herein referred to as the trustee) would be entitled to relief,” but contend that “The Vinewood Realty Company has no possible standing in this law suit,” and ■that both the land company and the trust company are estopped in equity to assert that the clerk of the village filed notices of the assessing ordinances more than a reasonable time after their enactment and are estopped to maintain this action in equity to remove *78 •the memorial of the lien of the special'assessments-■from the certificate of title covering the' lands.

It appears from the record that the petitions for the--sanitary sewer were lost and accordingly could not be-introduced in evidence, but that the clerk testified from his recollection that petitions for such improvement •signed by the land company were presented ta village -council, but could not testify how many signatures-were on the petition for the sanitary sewer..

“In the absence of evidence to the contrary* the law Indulges a prima facie presumption in favor of the validity of the proceedings of a municipal council. Under this rule, where action has been taken pursuant to a petition, it will be presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the petition was sufficient.” 28 Ohio Jurisprudence, 294, Section 169.

See, also, Shalersville Bd. of Edn. v. Horner, 55 Ohio App., 356, 9 N. E. (2d), 918; Tone v. Columbus, 39 Ohio St., 281; Ireton Brothers v. Traction Co., 2 N. P. (N. S.), 317,15 O. D. (N. P.), 129; 44 Corpus Juris, 233, Section 2388.

As a result of a careful review of the evidence submitted to us on this phase of this case and on plaintiffs ’ claim that the petitions were not sufficient in law to authorize the village to proceed thereon, reference to which has heretofore been made in part, and further reference to which need not be made, we cannot say that the finding of the lower court that a sufficient percentage of property owners signed the petition, or that land company’s executive officer acted without authority in signing them, is against the manifest weight of the evidence.

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Related

Shalersville Bd. of Edn. v. Horner
9 N.E.2d 918 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1936)
Vinewood Realty Co. v. Village of Willowick
25 N.E.2d 345 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1940)
Amrich v. Boyle
25 N.E.2d 850 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1940)
Curry v. Lybarger
11 N.E.2d 873 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.E.2d 148, 70 Ohio App. 74, 24 Ohio Op. 381, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vinewood-realty-co-v-village-of-willowick-ohioctapp-1941.