Western Education Society v. Huntington

15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 481, 28 Ohio Dec. 483, 1914 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 89
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedFebruary 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 481 (Western Education Society v. Huntington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Education Society v. Huntington, 15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 481, 28 Ohio Dec. 483, 1914 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 89 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Oppenheimer, J.

Some time prior to June 9th, 1885, defendant Frank Huntington, being then the owner of lots 99 and' 100 on the plat oí subdivision of lands in Cincinnati, Ohio, made by William C. Huntington, constructed two adjoining houses upon them known as 129 and 131 Saunders street, Mount Auburn. These houses fronted 22y2 feet each on the south side of Saunders street and extended southwardly 90 feet to Edinboro Place, which street is about 50 feet below the -level of Saunders street. The upper three stories front on Saunders street, from which there is a separate entrance to each house. The lower three stories front on Edinboro Place, the one entrance to them being through No. 131. The entrance to the lower floor is by means of a hallway which opens directly into Edinboro Place, and which is situated along the west side of No. 131. The access to the next floor is by a stairway on the outside and to the east of No. 131, which stairway leads to a porch from which a doorway opens into a hall which runs from the east side of No. 131 to a hall on the west side thereof which corresponds with the hallway on the first ■floor. The access to the third floor is by way of the same outside stairway and porch through a door to a flight of steps leading to’ a hall in the third floor which is situated on the west side of No. 131 and corresponds with the hállway on the first floor. From the several hallways along -the west side of No. 131, doors open through a partition wall between the two buildings into the rooms which constitute the several apartments' of No. 129.

The water supply for both houses is through the pipes and meter located in No. 129. The toilets and water closets which are used by the tenants of both houses are situated on the east side of No. 131, and are accessible only through the halls of. that building. Both houses are rented in apartments or flats of several rooms to various tenants. The buildings, so far as the several passageways referred to are concerned, are in the same condition now as when they were originally constructed, there being no entrance to the lower floors of No. 129 except through No. 131 as heretofore described. .

[483]*483On June 9th, 1885, Frank Huntington, who was then unmarried, executed a mortgage covering the entire property known as No. 129 Saunders street to plaintiff, the consideration therefor being a loan of $4,000, payable five years after'date. This mortgage is in the usual form, covering “all the estate, title and interest of said Frank Huntington either in law or in equity, of, in and to the said premises; together with all the privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, and all the rents, issues and profits thereof; to have and to hold the same to the only proper use of the said Western Education Society, its heirs and assigns forever.”- There then follow the usual covenant against incumbrances, and the defeasance clause.

On May 26, 1886, Frank Huntington executed another mortgage in favor of plaintiff covering the same property, the consideration therefor being a loan of $2,500, payable three years after date. This mortgage contains the same provisions as the preceding mortgage excepting that in the warranty against incumbrances said preceding mortgage is excepted.

On August 20th, 1910, Frank Huntington, who was still unmarried, executed and delivered to Mary Kinsella a deed of general warranty covering lot 100, together with the house thereon, known as No. • 131 Saunders street, the consideration therefor being one dollar and a marriage contract which had been previously entered into betwen the grantor and the grantee. This deed covered a number of pieces of property which has belonged to the grantor, and contained the usual clauses except a covenant against incumbrances.

On September 21, 1910, Frank Huntington was duly adjudicated bankrupt in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, Western Division, and Henry Straus was appointed trustee of his estate. Shortly thereafter the Western Education Society filed in the bankruptcy case a cross-petition for the foreclosure of its mortgage on No. 129 Saunders street, and at the conclusion of the proper proceedings the property was sold at foreclosure sale and bought in by the Western Education Society to protect its own claim, which then aggregated more than $6,800. A trustee’s deed was accordingly ex[484]*484ecuted by Henry Straus, trustee in bankruptcy, and delivered to the Western Education Society.

On June 16, 1911, Frank Huntington and Mary Kinsella Huntington, who had then intermarried, executed and delivered to plaintiff a quit-claim deed covering the same property, and containing this clause:

“To have and to hold the same, with all the privileges and appurtances thereunto belonging, to said grantee, its successors and assigns forever.”

The purpose of this quit-claim deed was to complete plaintiff’s chain of title, and the consideration therefor was recited to be “one dollar and other valuable considerations, including the release of the grantor (sic) from all personal liability on the respective notes secured by the mortgages set forth below, ’ ’ and the two mortgages heretofore referred to are then recited.

All these conveyances were recorded in accordance with law.

Since the date of the transfer of the house at No. 131 Saunders street to Mary Kinsella, Frank Huntington has been acting as her agent in the management of the property and the collection of the rents. At all times prior to the execution of the deed from the trustee in bankruptcy to plaintiff, Frank Huntington had also collected the rents for No. 129 Saunders street and had paid all charges upon the property, including the interest upon the mortgages executed to plaintiff.

The petition alleges, and it is admitted to be true, that defendant Mary Kinsella Huntington now threatens to cut off the passageways to the lower floors of No. 129 which front on Edinboro Place as hereinbefore described, and to deprive its tenants of the use of the toilet facilities and water closets in No. 131. A temporary restraining order was issued, and plaintiff now seeks to have it made permanent, while defendants ask to have it dissolved.

It is urged on plaintiff’s behalf that as the property was in its present condition with respect to passageways and privileges at the time when the mortgage of Juñe 9th, 1885, was executed, and as such privileges were at all times open and visible, plaintiff [485]*485is entitled to their benefit without let or hindrance from defendants. On the other hand, it is urged by defendants that ‘as plaintiff was merely a mortgagee, and as the mortgagor at all times remained in possession and control of both pieces of property, no easement was ever' created in favor of plaintiff, but at most only a privilege which was revocable at will; that the first severance of the joint ownership of the properties took place when the deed of August 20th, 1911, was executed and delivered to Mary Kinsella, until which time no adverse possession could be said to have existed; and that defendant Mary Kinsella Huntington may therefore close up all passageways leading from her property to that which has been acquired by plaintiff by virtue of the foreclosure proceedings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 481, 28 Ohio Dec. 483, 1914 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-education-society-v-huntington-ohsuperctcinci-1914.