Wheeler v. Nims

23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 527, 1921 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 41

This text of 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 527 (Wheeler v. Nims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. Nims, 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 527, 1921 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 41 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Rogers, J.

The case is heard on separate demurrers of the defendant Nims to the amended petition of plaintiffs and the amended answer and cross-petition- of the Kibler Co.; also on said defendant’s motion to dissolve the temporary injunction.

One of the main legal -questions is this: When a defectively executed lease of real estate has been made between lessor and lessee, and that property is afterwards transferred to a third person with notice of the prior contract of lease, though defective, whether such third person is liable to have the contract of lease enforced against him at the suit of the prior intended lessee. The foregoing is, in substance, what has transpired among the parties, as shown by the pleadings. Nims with notice that the Kibler Co. had a lease, though defectively executed, covering certain described premises, obtained a perpetual lease for the same and other premises; and the Kibler Co. now seeks to have the defectively executed lease enfored as against Nims. True; the suit was brought by the transferrers, but the Kibler Company, by cross-petition, adopts the averments of their amended petition, and is as much a petitioner as if formerly plaintiff in the ease. It must be borne in mind that in equity the chancellor looks at substance and not at form to work out equitable remedies. I am satisfied that plaintiffs are proper parties to the suit, and can well be treated, along with the Kibler Co., as joint parties with it.

It seems to be conceded that the Kibler lease, because defectively executed on account of having but one witness to the signature of the parties, is void as a lease. I think the law is too clear on this subject for controversy. However, it is contended that a defectively executed lease is not, according to the Ohio decisions, enforcible in equity as against Nims, although at and prior to the making of the lease to him he had notice of the prior• defectively executed lease to the Kibler Company. The lease in question, as I sought to point out in a former opinion, [529]*529is not made void because of the recording acts; but it is void because of tbe failure to comply with the statute relative to the formal execution of such instruments. Furthermore, the only recording act, if the Kibler Company lease had been prpoertly executed, applicable thereto, is Section 8543, General Code. Sections 8518 and 8519, General Code, have no application to such lease, nor do the decisions construing the latter sections have any bearing on the case before us. And the recording act governing leases such as this one only applies to leases executed according to the statute etc., and even then only protects subsequent bona fide purchasers without notice. As I view it, the recording acts are in nowise a limitation upon the equities of the parties in the instant case The question is purely one of equity between the plaintiffs and the defendant the Kibler Company, on tñe one side, and the defendant Nims on the other, irrespective of the formal positions they occupy in the suit.

By the settled law of Ohio; the Kibler Company, lessee, upon the execution of the defective lease, acquired an equitable title. See Abbott v. Bosworth, 36 Ohio St., 605. Having such a title', the chancellor will grant him such relief as the rules of equity— not law—prescribe.

Upon careful consideration, I am satisfied that the contention of learned counsel for Nims, that the Kibler Company has no remedial right of specific performance on the pleadings as amended as against Nims, is not based upon sound principles nor supported by the Ohio authorities. Stress is placed upon Richardson v. Bates, 8 Ohio St., 257, as setting forth the ruling principle governing the ease before us. I am unable to discover anything decided in that ease vdiich governs the instant case. The suit was one at law to recover for rent on a defectively executed lease, after the lessee had surrendered! possession. The defense set forth the fact of the defectively executed instrument, and this was held a good defense, and that the suit was not aided by the statute of frauds. The suit did not seek equity of any kind, but was solely founded upon plaintiff’s alleged legal right to recover, which was denied him, and rightfully so, on his pleading. What the court may have said in the opinion must be con[530]*530fined to the ease before it, when cited as a precedent to cases of similar tenor. -The only similarity between that case and the instant case is that of a defectively executed lease. However, it .does not follow that because a lessor under a defectively executed .lease can not at law recover his rent thereunder, the lessee may not in equity have it enforced or. specifically performed as against third persons with notice of the defectively executed instrument. And I think on examination of all the subsequent decisions in Ohio wherein Richardson v. Bates, supra, is cited or approved, the right to any relief at law under such leases is denied; and that is so, because the instruments are void at law. In my search I have been unable to find in Ohio any decision binding upon this court, to the effect that such instruments are •not evidence of a written contract for a lease, and enforceable in equity as against subsequent transferees with notice.

It is contended that the law of Ohio differs from the law of many of the other states with reference to the enforcement in equity of contracts for the lease of land as against esubsequent purchasers with notice. The text in 24 Cyc., 904, supports this contention, and Langmede v. Weaver, 65 O. S., 17, is cited as authority for the Ohio doctrine, but that ease is based solely upon the statute relative to oil leases, licenses and assignments thereof. It has no application to the case before us. The author did not carefully distinguish between the law relative to oil leases, and other leases, in' Ohio.

Further, it was suggested in argument that the Kibler lease being inoperative as a lease, could not operate as a sufficient memorandum to satisfy the statute of frauds. An examination of text writers and authorities on this subject, however, convinces me that such defectively executed lease does satisfy the statute On this subject may be cited 20 Cyc., 257, and cases. And ill 'Ohio an instrument of writing in the usual form of a deed of conveyance, but delivered as an executory contract of sale, is sufficient to take the case out 'of the statute, though the instrument was not delivered as a deed. See Thayer v. Luce, 22 O. St 62. I have not referred to Lithograph Bldg. Go. v. Wait, 96 0. S., 74, because it is familiar to counsel/ Moreover, learned coun[531]*531sel apparently seek to interpolate a matter of possession' as a necessary equitable ground for granting the relief in the. last above case. The third proposition of the syllabus, however, in nowise coupled possession of the lessee with his defectively exe>euted lease to constitute a sufficient equity; but it declares the law to be “a lease, defectively executed, will in equity be treated as a contract to make a lease,” and says nothing about possession as a necessary equity upon which to grant relief.

Likewise Wood, on Landlord and Tenant (2d ed.) Section 210, in discussing the formalities required in the execution of leases and the inoperative character of leases defectively executed, says: “But, even where an instrument is inoperative, pr void as a lease, it may operate in equity as an agreement for a lease, ’ ’ citing eases.

In Parker v. Taswell 2 DeG.

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23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 527, 1921 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-nims-ohctcomplfrankl-1921.