Yoppolo v. Household Realty Corp. (In Re Winland)

276 B.R. 773, 2001 WL 1857104
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 9, 2001
Docket16-01111
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 276 B.R. 773 (Yoppolo v. Household Realty Corp. (In Re Winland)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yoppolo v. Household Realty Corp. (In Re Winland), 276 B.R. 773, 2001 WL 1857104 (Ohio 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND DECISION

RICHARD L. SPEER, Chief Judge.

This cause comes before the Court after a Trial on the Plaintiff/Trustee’s Complaint to Avoid an Unperfected Interest in Real Property. The underlying property inter *775 est at issue in this case involves a mortgage granted by the Debtors to the Defendant as security for a loan. At the Trial held on this matter, both the Trustee and the Defendant were afforded the opportunity to present evidence and make any arguments that they wished the Court to consider in reaching its decision. This Court has now had the opportunity to review the arguments of Counsel, the exhibits, as well as the entire record of the case. Based upon that review, and for the following reasons, the Court finds that the Trustee may not avoid the Defendant’s mortgage interest in the Debtors’ real property, and thus the Trustee’s Complaint will be Dismissed.

FACTS

On December 15, 1999, the Debtors, Gerald Winland and Leslee Winland, who are husband and wife, filed a joint petition in this Court for relief under Chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. At the time of the Debtors’ bankruptcy petition, the Debtors were the owners of a home in Toledo, Ohio. This property is at the center of the dispute between the Parties.

In the years immediately leading up to the filing of the instant bankruptcy case, the Debtors’, apparently because of financial difficulties, refinanced their property on a number of occasions. Although not altogether exclusive with whom they conducted business, the Debtors, when refinancing their home, have apparently relied primarily on the Defendant, Household Realty Corporation (hereinafter referred to as the “Defendant”). In this respect, it was related to the Court that the Debtors, in obtaining financing from the Defendant, have at one time or another granted on their home at least five (5) separate mortgages to the Defendant, the most recent occurring in November of 1998. At the time the Debtors’ bankruptcy case was commenced, the Debtors disclosed, in their bankruptcy petition, that their residence was encumbered by three (8) separate mortgages: a first mortgage held by the Defendant having a present balance of Eighty-seven Thousand Seven Hundred Sixty-one and 81/100 dollars ($87,761.81); a second mortgage held by Fifth Third Bank having a balance of Twenty-one Thousand Three Hundred Sixty-four and 88/100 dollars ($21,364.83); and a third mortgage held by the Defendant having a current balance Twenty-two Thousand Six Hundred Five and 50/100 dollars ($22,-605.50).

On March 10, 2000, the Trustee filed the instant complaint to avoid the first mortgage held by the Defendant on the basis that the mortgage was not executed in accordance with Ohio law. In support of this assertion, the Trustee introduced into evidence a mortgage signed by the Debtors, in which the same party — a one Dean A. Crothers — signed twice as a witness and once as a notary public. 1 The facts presented in this case also show that this mortgage was executed contemporaneously with a promissory note, a notice of a right to cancel, and a settlement statement.

In opposition to the Trustee’s complaint to avoid its mortgage, the Defendant, while not disagreeing that its mortgage dated April 23, 1997 was improperly executed, argues that this specific mortgage is not the operative mortgage securing its loan to the Debtors. Instead, the Defendant argues that the actual mortgage securing its loan was executed on April 24, 1997, and *776 thereafter recorded on April 29, 1997. 2 In making this assertion, the Defendant professed that shortly after the Debtors signed the mortgage dated April 23, 1997, the error in its execution was discovered, which, according to the Defendant, necessitated and thereafter resulted in the Debtors returning to the Defendant’s place of business on April 24, 1997 to execute a new mortgage which complied with all the terms of Ohio law. As proof of this transaction, the Defendant introduced into evidence a certified copy of a facially valid mortgage (i.e., a mortgage which contained the signatures of the Debtors, two witnesses, and a notary public) dated April 24, 1997. In response, however, to the Defendant’s assertion that a new mortgage was executed, the Trustee, while not actually disputing the actual existence of a recorded mortgage dated April 24, 1997, has contested the veracity of this mortgage on what are essentially two separate legal grounds: one procedural and one substantive.

The Trustee’s substantive objection to the Defendant’s mortgage holds the mortgage dated April 24, 1997 did not comply with those mandatory conditions set forth by Ohio law because the mortgage was not, in fact, executed by the Debtors. Simply put, the Trustee asserts that the Debtors, after executing a mortgage on April 23,1997, did not return the very next day to the Defendant’s place of business and execute again, for the benefit of the Defendant, a new and subsequent mortgage. By comparison, the Trustee’s procedural objection, although related, holds that the Defendant’s mortgage is not admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence because the original mortgage was not produced. Stated in more precise legal terms, the Trustee contends that since the validity of the Defendant’s mortgage is at issue, the Best Evidence Rule requires the Defendant to produce an original mortgage. In reply to this argument, however, the Defendant has asked this Court to accept a certified copy of the original mortgage.

At the Trial held on the substantive issue raised by the Trustee, the Debtors testified that when they executed the mortgage dated April 23, 1997 only one witness was present, and that this witness did not notarize the mortgage. More importantly, however, with regards to the substantive issue at hand, both of the Debtors testified that, after executing the mortgage dated April 23, 1997 they never returned to the Defendant’s place of business on April 24, 1997 to sign an additional mortgage. When asked why their proposed signatures appeared on the mortgage dated April 24, 1997, the Debtors both responded by questioning the authenticity of the document. In this respect, the Debtor, Mr. Winland, and to some extent, the Debtor, Mrs. Winland, were both unwilling to state that the signatures contained on the April 24, 1997 mortgage were in fact their signatures. On this latter assertion, however, the Defendant put forth evidence which tended to show that the Debtors’ signatures on the April 24, 1997 mortgage were authentic. Specifically, the Defendant elicited the testimony of a handwriting expert who, after examining authenticated samples of the Debtors’ signatures, came to the conclusion that those signatures contained on the mortgage dated April 24, 1997 were in fact made by the Debtors. In this regard, the *777 Court, after closely examining the pertinent documents, must agree that the signatures contained on the mortgage dated April 24, 1997, although photocopied from an original, are authentic.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 B.R. 773, 2001 WL 1857104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yoppolo-v-household-realty-corp-in-re-winland-ohnb-2001.