Williams Trucking v. Gable, Unpublished Decision (6-8-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 2000
DocketNo. 75614.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Williams Trucking v. Gable, Unpublished Decision (6-8-2000) (Williams Trucking v. Gable, Unpublished Decision (6-8-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Williams Trucking v. Gable, Unpublished Decision (6-8-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
This case involves competing claims to a one-half acre of real property situated in Solon, Ohio. Plaintiff-appellee Williams Trucking, Inc., formerly known as Welker Trucking, Inc., claims title to the parcel based on a 1986 deed and a 1991 corrective deed. Defendants-appellants Robert Gable and Ann Gable claim title based on a 1993 deed of conveyance. The trial court quieted title in favor of Williams Trucking, Inc., and the Gables contest this ruling. Because we find no error in the trial court's judgment, we affirm that judgment.

The parcel in question, hereafter referred to as the "Disputed Parcel", originally was part of a larger parcel of property owned by Emil F. Danciu in Solon, Ohio. In 1961, Danciu filed two separate deeds of conveyance. By deed filed April 27, 1961 and recorded in Volume 10148, Page 361 of the Cuyahoga County deed records, Danciu conveyed a parcel of land fronting on Bainbridge Road to 33141 Bainbridge Road Company (hereafter "33141"). 33141 was an Ohio general partnership whose partners were Michael P. Fornaro, now deceased, and the Robert Realty Company, another Ohio partnership whose partners were brothers Robert P. Velotta and Michael F. Velotta, Jr. The Disputed Parcel is the northerly portion of the parcel transferred by this deed to 33141. By separate deed filed April 27, 1961 and recorded in Volume 10148, Page 363 of the Cuyahoga County deed records, Danciu conveyed the land situated to the north and west of the first parcel to the Robert Realty Company.

The parcel transferred to 33141 was occupied over time by a bowling facility. By 1978, the parcel owned by the Robert Realty Company was being leased to Welker Trucking, Inc. In that year, Welker's president, Floyd E. Williams, began negotiations to purchase the parcel Welker was leasing from the Robert Realty Company. A purchase agreement between Williams and Robert Realty was executed in 1979 but did not refer to the Disputed Parcel or any property owned by 33141. Because Williams defaulted on the contract, however, the sale was never consummated and no property title transfer occurred.

In 1985, Williams renewed discussions to purchase the property Welker was leasing from Robert Realty. Williams wanted to purchase the entire parcel owned by the Robert Realty Company as well as one acre of the property owned by 33141. 33141 declined to sell one full acre to Williams but agreed to sell the one-half acre that is now the Disputed Parcel. By deed filed on January 16, 1986 and recorded at Volume 86-0234, Page 21 of the Cuyahoga County deed records, Robert Realty and 33141 conveyed property to Floyd Williams that included the Disputed Parcel.1

By 1986, Floyd Williams's son, Carl J. Williams, had begun working for his father's trucking business. By deed filed on April 30, 1986 and recorded at Volume 86-2558, Page 22 of the Cuyahoga County deed records, Floyd Williams conveyed to Carl Williams the property that Robert Realty and 33141 had conveyed to Floyd Williams, including the Disputed Parcel. Floyd Williams died in 1988 and Carl Williams became president of Welker Trucking, Inc. By deed filed on May 23, 1991 and recorded at Volume 91-2979, Page 4, Carl J. Williams conveyed the entire parcel, including the Disputed Parcel, to Welker Trucking, Inc.

By 1991, certain errors in the 1986 deed from Robert Realty and 33141 to Floyd Williams were discovered, and two separate corrective deeds were thereafter filed. In particular, it was discovered that the 1986 deed from the Robert Realty and 33141 partnerships did not contain the signatures of all partners of the respective partnerships. Accordingly, by deed filed on August 28, 1991 and recorded at Volume 91-5498, Page 23, Robert Realty and 33141 conveyed directly to Welker Trucking, Inc., the same property described in the 1986 deed from Robert Realty and 33141 to Floyd Williams. In addition, the description used for the 1986 deed inadvertently omitted from the conveyance a small strip of land, referred to as the "orphan parcel", that apparently was created as a result of an exchange of small strips of land between Robert Realty and 33141 during the 1970s. By deed filed on August 28, 1991 and recorded at Volume 91-5498, Page 25 of the Cuyahoga County deed records, Robert Realty conveyed the "orphan parcel" to Welker Trucking, Inc.2

The Solon Freeway Lanes bowling facility occupied the property owned by 33141. In June 1992, 33141 and Solon Freeway Lanes contracted to sell the land owned by 33141 and the bowling alley business to Robert Gable and Ann Gable. By deed filed on July 27, 1993 and recorded at Volume 93-07816, Page 52, 33141 conveyed property to Robert Gable, d/b/a Gable Investments Co. The warranty deed's property description included the Disputed Parcel. The Gables' title company also noted that the "legal may not be correct" on the draft deed.

33141's partners say that the 1993 warranty deed from 33141 to Gable mistakenly included the Disputed Parcel. They maintain that 33141, with Robert Realty, had conveyed the Disputed Parcel by deed to Floyd E. Williams in 1986 and by corrective deed to Welker Trucking, Inc., in 1991.3 Moreover, Robert Velotta says he told Robert Gable that the boundary of the land sold by 33141 would run through the middle of a large pile of topsoil, a description excluding the Disputed Parcel. Gable, on the other hand, could not recall that statement and assumed the property he was purchasing extended to a fence, a description including the Disputed Parcel.

Welker Trucking, Inc., which changed its name to Williams Trucking, Inc., on or about June 29, 1995, advised the Gables in 1996 that Williams Trucking, Inc., was the true owner of the Disputed Parcel and demanded that the title discrepancies be corrected. When the Gables refused to do so, Williams Trucking, Inc., filed this action to quiet title on November 18, 1997 against the Gables and others. On March 30, 1998, the Gables filed their answer and counterclaim as well as a third-party complaint against 33141, Robert Realty Company, and their respective individual partners.

The trial court bifurcated Williams's complaint to quiet title from the Gables' third-party complaint. A magistrate heard the quiet title action and, on September 10, 1998, determined that title to the Disputed Parcel should be quieted in favor of Williams Trucking, Inc., as to all claims of the Gables and anyone claiming under or through the defendants. On October 29, 1998, the trial court overruled objections to the magistrate's decision and adopted the decision to quiet title in favor of Williams Trucking, Inc. A subsequent order certified that there was no just reason for delay, pursuant to Civ.R. 54(B).

The Gables' first assignment of error states:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN QUIETING TITLE TO THE DISPUTED PARCEL IN PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE WHERE, BY THE TESTIMONY OF APPELLEE'S OWN EXPERT, THE CLAIMED TITLE DEED OF APPELLEE WAS NOT ENTITLED TO RECORD.

This assignment of error is not well taken.

The Gables contend that because 33141 did not obtain approval from the City of Solon to subdivide the Disputed Parcel from the larger parcel owned by 33141 before 33141 conveyed the Disputed Parcel to Floyd Williams in 1986, that deed did not comply with the provisions of R.C. Chapter 711 and was not entitled to record pursuant to R.C. 711.121, which states:

The county auditor and the county recorder shall not transfer property or record deeds or leases which attempt to convey property contrary to the provisions of Chapter 711. of the Revised Code.

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Bluebook (online)
Williams Trucking v. Gable, Unpublished Decision (6-8-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-trucking-v-gable-unpublished-decision-6-8-2000-ohioctapp-2000.