Warner v. York

15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 310
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 310 (Warner v. York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warner v. York, 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 310 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

The facts in this case are as follows:

S. M. York and Alice M. York were husband and wife. On December 26, 1896, they were owners as tenants in common of a parcel of real estate in the city of Cleveland, which is worth about $12,500. On said date the said S. M. York and Alice M. York jointly executed their promissory note for the sum of $8,000, payable one year after its date with interest at six per cent., said note to draw interest at seven per cent, after its maturity. To secure the payment of this note the makers [313]*313of it at the same time executed a mortgage upon the premises herein-before named, which note and mortgage were delivered to the payee named in the note, and the mortgage was duly recorded. Said note and mortgage are now owned by the Colonial National Bank. After the execution of said mortgage the said S. M. York and Alice M. York executed a quitclaim deed of the same premises to one Gibbons, which deed contained a clause reading, so far as it is necessary for the understanding of this case:

"‘Said premises are conveyed to said grantee above named in trust for the benefit of said grantors and the survivor of them for life, and after their death to their children. * * * Power and authority is hereby conveyed and vested in said grantee above named to execute and deliver a deed in fee simple for said premises to said Standish M. York and Alice M. York for life, and in trust upon the terms and fpr the purpose above named.”

(Standish M. York named in the deed is the same person as the S. M. York hereinbefore mentioned.) The defendants, Blanche York, Milton York and Alice S. M. York are the only children of S. M. York and Alice M. York.

Thereafter said .Gibbons executed and delivered to said S. M. York and Alice M. York a quitclaim deed of the same premises, containing the following clause:

“This conveyance is made to said Standish M. York and Alice M. York and the survivor of them for life, and to them and the survivor of them the fee in trust for their children now born or hereafter born.”

Both of these deeds were duly recorded.

In January, 1898, said S. M. York died, and the defendant, Alice M. York, was appointed administratrix with the will annexed of his estate. Thereafter and while acting as such administratrix she made various payments out of her own money upon the mortgage debt herein-before mentioned. The money -from which these payments were made came to her upon policies of insurance upon her husband’s life, she being the beneficiary named in said policies. The aggregate of the payments made by her was about $3,300. No other payments have ever been made upon said indebtedness.

On July 15, 1899, said Alice M. York was by the probate court removed from her administration, and the plaintiff in this action was appointed to succeed her in said trust, and is still in the performance of his duties under such appointment.

Upon the settlement of the accounts of the said .Alice M. York, of her administration, it was found by the probate court that there re[314]*314mained in her hands as assets of said estate the sum of $23,381.07, and, on January 27, 1900, the probate court entered its order directing her to pay said amount to the plaintiff herein as administrator as aforesaid. This payment has not been made.

On November 27, 1899, the Wick Banking & Trust Company recovered a judgment in the court of 'common pleas of Cuyahoga county against said Alice M. York for $1,672.25.

On December 18, 1899, the American Surety Company commenced an action against said Alice M. York in the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga county, and on June 25, 1900, an order of attachment was issued in said last named action and levied on the premises hereinbefore named. .

On August 3, 1900, the plaintiff filed his petition in this action, and on October 19, 1900, filed his amended petition herein, the same being the petition upon which this case is tried.

On October 25, 1900, execution was issued upon the judgment obtained by the Wick Banking & Trust Company, and this was levied upon the interest of said Alice M. York in thé same premises. Ever since the execution of said mortgage the said Alice M. York has been in possession of said premises.

The petition of the plaintiff is in the nature of a creditor’s bill, and sets out the order made by the probate court as hereinbefore mentioned, the execution and delivery of the mortgage now held by the Colonial National Bank and the execution and delivery of the quitclaim deeds hereinbefore mentioned, and prays that the interest of the said Alice M. York in said premises be subjected to the payment of the plaintiff’s claim.

It is conceded by all the parties that the first lien upon these premises is the mortgage of the Colonial National Bank.

The plaintiff, the Wick Banking & Trust Company, and the American Surety Company each claim that Alice M. York, by the payment which she made upon the mortgage debt, became subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee to the extent of such payments.

The claim of Alice M. York and her children is that there was no subrogation, but that such payments extinguished the mortgage debt to that extent.

On the part of the Wick Banking & Trust Company it is further claimed that the life estate of'the said Alice M. York is a legal estate and that its judgment operated as a lien upon such estate from the date of its recovery.

It is further suggested by said Wick Banking & Trust Company [315]*315that the estate which it claims that Alice M. York obtained in said premises by the payments made on the mortgage indebtedness was merged in the life estate, and that, therefore, its judgment is a lien upon all the estate which she has in these premises.

The American Surety Company claims that no part of the estate of Alice M. York in these premises is subject to any lien by reason of the judgment obtained by the Wick Banking & Trust Company, and that, in any event, only her life estate could be subject to any such lien, but that the estate which she obtained in the premises by her payments made upon the mortgage debt is an equitable estate only; that it is not subject-to levy of execution, but is a proper subject of attachment and that its attachment creates a lien upon such estate from the date of the levy of such attachment.

The further claim of the plaintiff is that the estate which Alice M. York has in the premises, in any,event, all the estate which she has other than her life estate is an equitable estate only, which is not subject to be levied upon either by execution or attachment. '

It will thus be seen that the first question for consideration is, whether Mrs. York obtained any estate in these premises by her payments made upon the mortgage debt. If she did, was the estate so obtained by her merged in her life estate? If not, can such estate be reached either by the levy of execution, or attachment?

Before entering into a discussion of the questions already suggested, it should be said that we find that the order made by the probate court, upon the settlement of the accounts of Mrs. York, is a proper foundation for the bringing of the present suit. Section 544 Rev. Stat.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-york-ohcirctcuyahoga-1903.