Wilson v. Otis

5 Ohio C.C. 228
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio C.C. 228 (Wilson v. Otis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Otis, 5 Ohio C.C. 228 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Moore, J.

The questions relied upon are presented by the fifth and sixth assignments of error in the petition in error, viz:

The court erred in rendering the judgment and decree in-said cause in favor of said Julia A. Maxwell and Nettie Cow-hick, and against these plaintiffs in error.”

“ The court erred in refusing to and not making a decree foreclosing the mortgage of said defendants, Thompson, Dalrymple and Henry, on the said twenty-five feet of land adjoining said Cornell Block; and in making a decree quieting the title of said Julia A. Maxwell in and to said lot as against said mortgage and all rights or claims of these plaintiffs to said lot, and in ordering said mortgage to be cancelled; and in refusing to subrogate these plaintiffs in error to the rights of said Thompson, Dalrymple and Henry in and to said mortgage on said lot adjoining said Correll Block.”

The record discloses -that on the 17th day of May, 1888, George K. Otis and his wife executed to one John W. Smith,, the plaintiff below, their mortgage deed on lots bios. 223 and 224, and ten feet adjacent thereto upon the southwesterly part of-lots Nos. 2231- and 2241, in Hicksville, Defiance County,. Ohio, to secure certain bonds, each in the sum of $2000, and which mortgage is conceded to be the first lien upon the premises just described, and has been satisfied from the proceeds of the sale of the said property.

On August 23d, 1888, Otis and wife executed and delivered to Dalrymple, Thompson and Henry their mortgage deed to-secure the payment of $1500 on the premises above described,, and also twenty-five feet from lots 2231 and 2241, adjacent to the said ten feet, making thirty-five feet upon the said lots-2231 and 2241. This mortgage, was filed for record, August 21st, 1888.

On the 11th day of October, 1888, Otis and wife executed and delivered to Thompson, Wilson and Henry their mort[230]*230gage deed to indemnify them for having become security for him, Otis, on a note given to Root and McBride Brothers, in the sum of $5062.00, and which mortgage contained the follow description, in additiou to other descriptions in it: “Also sixty feet front by two hundred feet back of lots No. 223 and 224, on the original plat of said town, in said county and state; lots 223|- and 224|- adjoining said lots 223 and 224, all in said plat and said county and state, the premises being known heretofore as the Correll property, the Correll Block in said town being situated upon the said premises. This deed was filed for record on the 13th day of October, 1888.

Ótis and wife executed and delivered to one Nettie Cow-hick a warranty deed, conveying to her the twenty-five feet of lots 223J- and 224J described in the mortgage to Thompson, Dalrymple and Henry ; the deed is without date, but the acknowledgment of it bears date of October 12th, 1888. This deed was filed for record the 24th day of October, 1888, on which day the proof shows it was executed and delivered.

On April 10th, 1890, Nettie Cowhick sold and conveyed the twenty-five feet by warranty deed to Julia A. Maxwell, which deed was filed for record April 17th, 1890.

Root and McBride Brothers were made parties to the action, and setting up among other things by way of answer’ and cross-petition, that the full amount due on said indemnity mortgage of Thompson, Wilson and Henry was payable to them, and asked that the proceeds arising from the sale of the mortgaged premises be decreed to them; that Dalrymple, Thompson and Henry be decreed to have their mortgage satisfied out of the other mortgaged premises, to-wit: the twenty-five feet adjacent to the Correll Block, and that the proceeds of the sale of the Correll Block, after the payment of the Smith mortgage, be awarded to them.

To this answer and cross-petition of Root and McBride Brothers, and the answers of Thompson and others, setting up their mortgages and asking the same relief as do Root and McBride Brothers, Mrs Cowhide makes answer, and says [231]*231among other things : “ This answering defendant further says that on the sale of the premises described in the petition herein, there came into the hands of the sheriff as proceeds of the sale thereof, and into the control of this court more than sufficient funds to satisfy and discharge in full the costs of said action, the taxes on the tax duplicate of said county, the decree in behalf of the said plaintiff on his mortgage set up in said action, and the debt or liability made by George K. Otis to these defendants and the mortgage securing the same.. Whether the said mortgage of the said answering defendant covers the said premises hereinbefore described, this answering defendant is not fully advised, but denies that it affects the same in any manner or form, or is in any way a lien thereon.”

Mrs. Maxwell asserting her own right to the premises answers substantially the same as her grantor, Nettie Cowhick.

The premises covered by the original mortgage to Smith, the plaintiff, were sold, and his claim fully satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale, and the residue was sufficient to satisfy the mortgage to Dalrymple and others, and costs; but it was retained in the hands of the court,' subject to the litigation that is made by the issues that are joined in this case, and the court below refused to subject the twenty-five feet that was deeded to Mrs. Cowhick, and by her conveyed to Mrs. Maxwell, to the payment of any. portion of the Dalrymple mortgage, or to order any portion of it to be applied upon the mortgage of Thompson and others, the plaintiffs in error, by subroga-tion.

Two claims are now presented and relied upon by the plaintiffs in error:

First. That the description in the mortgage given to them by George K. Otis includes the twenty-five feet afterwards conveyed to Mrs. Cowhick. Of course, if it did cover such description, it is subject to the payment of that mortgage, the same as the real estate that was mortgaged to the other parties.

[232]*232Second. That as a prior mortgage to Dalrymple, Thompson and Henry included the twenty-five feet, and also the Correll Block, that plaintiffs in error are entitled in equity to have Dalrymple, Thompson and Henry, in case the Correll Block is not sufficient to satisfy both liens, to first exhaust the twenty-five feet covered by the mortgage of the plaintiffs in error; in other words, that the plaintiffs in error should be subrogated to the rights of Dalrymple, Thompson and Henry in the twenty-five feet.

As to the first proposition it is perhaps sufficient to say that the description in the mortgage to the plaintiffs in error is not a definite or certain description; it is not entirely void of ambiguity. We are of the opinion, however, that taking it altogether, it described sixty feet by two hundred feet, known as the Correll Block, situated on the Correll property, but does not include the twenty-five feet in controversy.

As to the second proposition upon which the main controversy arises, it may be said that it is a general principle of equity that if one party has a lien or interest in two funds for a debt, and another party has a lien on or interest in one only of the funds for another debt, the latter has a right in equity to compel the former to resort to the other fund in the first instance for satisfaction, if that course is necessary for the satisfaction of both the parties.

There are three parties, however, interested in this case; not only the mortgagees, but also the grantees of Otis.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio C.C. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-otis-ohiocirct-1891.