CitiMortgage, Inc. v. Brown ( 2015 )


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  •         [Cite as CitiMortgage, Inc. v. Brown, 
    2015-Ohio-5347
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
    HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
    CITIMORTGAGE, INC.,                              :          APPEAL NO. C-140694
    TRIAL NO. A-1203655
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                         :
    O P I N I O N.
    vs.                                            :
    VERNON BROWN,                                    :
    Defendant-Appellee,                          :
    and                                            :
    NATIONAL CHECK BUREAU, INC., et :
    al.,
    Defendants.                                  :
    Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas
    Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed
    Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: December 23, 2015
    Tracye T. Hill and Brittany Griggs, for Plaintiff-Appellant,
    Noel M. Morgan, Elizabeth A. Tull and Elizabeth A. Zak, for Defendant-Appellee.
    Please note: this case has been removed from the accelerated calendar.
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    D E W INE , Judge.
    {¶1}     If a mortgage is granted by only one of two joint tenants, and the
    mortgaging joint tenant dies, may the bank enforce the mortgage against the surviving
    joint tenant? This question is at the center of this appeal by a bank in a foreclosure case.
    We agree with the trial court that the death of the mortgaging joint tenant extinguishes
    the mortgage. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s judgment that the surviving joint tenant
    owns the property free of the mortgage.
    I. Background
    {¶2}     Vernon and Theresa Brown purchased a home in 2000. The purchase
    contract conveyed the property to the Browns in a joint tenancy with the right of
    survivorship. Theresa, however, was the sole borrower on the note. The mortgage
    identified the mortgagor as only Theresa, and just Theresa signed the signature line of
    the mortgage.     Theresa’s typewritten name on the mortgage is followed by a hand
    written notation “married to Vernon Brown who signs with the sole intent of releasing
    dower.”   Theresa’s signature is on the signature line of the mortgage above her
    typewritten name. Vernon’s signature appears only at the bottom of the mortgage.
    {¶3}     CitiMortgage assumed the mortgage when it merged with the originating
    lender. In 2005, CitiMortgage entered into a loan modification with Theresa. Although
    both Theresa and Vernon signed the new note, the note identified only Theresa as
    “borrower.”
    {¶4}     In May 2012, CitiMortgage filed a suit for foreclosure. The suit sought
    payment of the unpaid amounts due on the note and to foreclose on the mortgage. The
    complaint also sought reformation of the mortgage, asserting “that due to an inadvertent
    mutual mistake, the mortgage deed was executed to release dower only.” In addition to
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    arguing mutual mistake, the bank claimed that it was entitled to reformation of the
    mortgage to avoid unjust enrichment to Vernon. Vernon filed a counterclaim seeking a
    declaratory judgment that his interest in the property was not encumbered by the
    mortgage.
    {¶5}    Theresa died in November 2012, while the action was still pending.
    Both parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and a decision was issued by a
    magistrate of the common pleas court. The magistrate found that upon Theresa’s death,
    Vernon took the property subject to the mortgage but that the mortgage encumbered
    only Theresa’s half-interest. The magistrate found that CitiMortgage could order the
    sale of the entire property “but must preserve Vernon Brown’s one-half interest by
    accordingly paying the sale proceeds to him before judgment creditors.”
    {¶6}    Both parties filed objections to the magistrate’s decision. The common
    pleas court reversed the magistrate and found that the death of Theresa extinguished the
    mortgage. As a result, the court found that Vernon owned the property free of the
    mortgage.
    II. The Mortgage was Extinguished Upon Theresa’s Death
    {¶7}    In its first assignment of error, CitiMortgage argues the trial court erred
    when it rejected the magistrate’s finding that it held a mortgage lien against Theresa’s
    one-half interest in the property and granted summary judgment in favor of Vernon.
    CitiMortgage contends that Theresa’s interest was not extinguished upon her death, but
    instead was transferred to Vernon subject to the mortgage.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    A. Under the Plain Terms of R.C. 5302.20(C)(2), CitiMortgage’s
    Interest Terminated Upon Theresa’s Death
    {¶8}     The Browns held the property as joint tenants with a right of
    survivorship. By statute in Ohio, such a tenancy is a “survivorship tenancy.” R.C.
    5302.20(A). In such an estate, both tenants hold an “equal share of the title during their
    joint lives.” R.C. 5302.20(B). Upon the death of one of two joint tenants, the other
    tenant becomes fully vested with title to the property as the sole title holder. 
    Id.
    {¶9}     At common law, a conveyance by less than all of the joint tenants would
    sever the joint tenancy. See 4 Thompson on Real Property, Section 31.08(b) (2d
    Thomas Ed.2004).       Upon severance, the tenants would no longer hold undivided
    interest as joint tenants, but would hold separate interests as tenants in common. 
    Id.
    But under Ohio’s statutory scheme, a conveyance by less than all of the joint tenants
    does not sever the joint tenancy. Rather,
    a conveyance from any survivorship tenant, or from any number of
    survivorship tenants that is less than all of them, to a person who is not a
    survivorship tenant vests the title of the grantor or grantors in the
    grantee, conditioned upon the survivorship of the grantor or grantors of
    the conveyance and does not alter the interest or the title of any of the
    other survivorship tenants who do not join in the conveyance.
    R.C. 5302.20(C)(2). Thus, Theresa’s conveyance of the mortgage did not sever the
    survivorship tenancy. But the only interest that CitiMortgage held was one that was
    “conditioned” upon her survival.        Because the conveyance was conditional upon
    Theresa’s survival, CitiMortgage’s mortgage interest was terminated upon her death.
    Vernon took the property free of the mortgage.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    {¶10}    We dealt with a similar problem in Murphy v. Murphy, 
    77 Ohio App.3d 573
    , 
    602 N.E.2d 1216
     (1st Dist.1991).         There, one joint tenant executed a deed
    purporting to transfer his undivided one-half interest in the joint tenancy. Murphy at
    574. When the transferring joint tenant died, the person who ultimately acquired the
    interest sought to partition the property. We held that the death of the transferring joint
    tenant extinguished the transferee’s interest, and the surviving joint tenant held full title
    to the property. “A survivorship tenant,” we explained, “can only alienate his interest to
    a third party subject to the right of survivorship.” Id. at 577. Thus, because the inter
    vivos transfer was subject to the right of survivorship, the transfer failed upon the death
    of the transferor. The surviving joint tenant became the sole owner of the property in fee
    simple absolute. Id. Murphy was decided after the enactment of R.C. 5302.20 but the
    conveyance took place before the effective date of the statute. We did not reach the
    question of whether the statute had retroactive application because we determined the
    result would be the same under both the statute and prior Ohio law. Id. at 576.
    {¶11}    Indeed, while R.C. 5302.20(C)(2) applies to interests in real property,
    the result reached under the section is consistent with generally applicable principles of
    a joint tenancy with right of survivorship in Ohio. In Certificates of Deposit Issued by
    Hocking Valley Bank, 
    58 Ohio St.3d 172
    , 174, 
    569 N.E.2d 484
     (1991), a bank issued
    certificates of deposit to joint tenants with the right of survivorship. One of the joint
    tenants granted the bank a security interest in the certificates of deposit. Certificates
    of Deposit at 173. When the joint tenant who granted the security interest died, the
    bank sought to enforce its security interest against the surviving joint tenant. 
    Id.
    The court ruled that the bank’s security interest did not survive the death of the joint
    tenant. Id. at 174. The joint tenant could convey no more of an interest than he
    possessed. Id. Because he possessed “no more than a lifetime interest” in the
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    certificates of deposit, the bank’s interest terminated at his death. Id.    Upon the
    death of the other joint tenant, the surviving joint tenant became “full owner of the
    certificates free from the bank’s security interests.” Id. at 173; see 20 American
    Jurisprudence 2d, Cotenancy and Joint Ownership, Section 8 (2015) (The “surviving
    joint tenant becomes the absolute owner of the property held in joint tenancy, upon
    the death of the cotenant, free of the claims of the heirs or creditors of the
    deceased.”).
    {¶12}   Thus, under both the plain terms of R.C. 5302.20(C)(2) and general
    principles of Ohio law, the trial correct correctly found that CitiMortgage’s interest
    was extinguished upon Theresa’s death.
    B. We Disagree with the Twelfth Appellate District’s Decision in
    Fannie Mae v. Winding
    {¶13}   CitiMortgage’s argument that the mortgage survived Theresa’s death is
    premised almost exclusively on the Twelfth Appellate District’s decision in Fannie Mae
    v. Winding, 
    2014-Ohio-1698
    , 
    10 N.E.3d 799
     (12th Dist.). To fully understand why
    we disagree with the result reached in Winding, it is helpful to take a step back and
    examine the common law notion of a tenancy in common.
    {¶14}   At common law, as Blackstone explained, joint tenants have one and the
    same interest, accruing by one and the same conveyance, commencing at one and the
    same time, and held by the same undivided possession (the “four unities”).            2
    Blackstone, Commentaries on the Law of England, 180-82 (1766). A conveyance by one
    joint tenant disrupts the unity of interest and thus severs the joint tenancy creating a
    tenancy in common. See 4 Thompson on Real Property, Section 31.08(b) (2d Thomas
    Ed.2004).
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    {¶15}   A mortgage was considered a conveyance of title at common law. Under
    this title theory, the conveyance of a mortgage severs the joint tenancy, because it
    disrupts the unity of interest. 
    Id.
     Because the joint tenancy has been severed, the
    mortgage is enforceable against the mortgagee’s half-interest even after death. See, e.g.,
    Land Am. Commonwealth Title Ins. Co. v. Kolozetski, 
    159 N.H. 689
    , 
    992 A.2d 681
    (2010); Schaefer v. Peoples Heritage Sav. Bank, 
    669 A.2d 185
     (Me.1996). In contrast,
    in jurisdictions where a mortgage has been held to operate as merely a lien, the
    mortgage does not sever the joint tenancy. See, e.g., Harms v. Sprague, 
    105 Ill.2d 215
    ,
    224, 
    473 N.E.2d 930
     (1984); Smith v. Bank of Am., 
    103 A.D.3d 21
    , 
    957 N.Y.S.2d 705
    ,
    709 (2d Dept.2012). If the mortgagor dies before the other joint tenant, the mortgage is
    extinguished and the surviving tenant takes free of the mortgage. Harms at 224; Smith
    at 709. This is because the surviving joint tenant takes the property by virtue of the
    conveyance that created the joint tenancy, not as the successor of the deceased. Harms
    at 224.
    {¶16}   In Winding, the Twelfth District was confronted with a situation
    remarkably similar to the one before us. Only one joint tenant had granted a
    mortgage, the mortgagee joint tenant died and the bank sought to enforce the
    mortgage against the surviving joint tenant. Winding, 
    2014-Ohio-1698
    , 
    10 N.E.3d 799
    . The court reasoned that R.C. 5302.20(C)(2) does not apply to mortgages,
    because a mortgage constitutes a security interest (or a lien), rather than a
    conveyance of title. Id. at ¶ 23. The court then concluded that the mortgage was not
    extinguished by the cotenant’s death, but rather would continue to be enforceable
    against one-half of the estate. Id. at ¶ 30.
    {¶17}   As an initial matter, the Winding court’s conclusion that R.C.
    5302.20(C)(2) does not apply because a mortgage is a security interest is difficult to
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    reconcile with the statute. Ohio has been characterized as neither a pure lien-theory nor
    a pure title-theory state. 1-17 Curry and Durham, Ohio Real Property Law and Practice,
    Section 17.01[1] (Matthew Bender Rev.Ed.). The Ohio Supreme Court has “explained
    that while a mortgage is a lien for a debt, it also is a conveyance of property that passes
    the property conditionally to the mortgagee as well as a transfer of property as security
    for the debt.” FirstMerit Bank, N.A. v. Inks, 
    138 Ohio St.3d 384
    , 
    2014-Ohio-789
    , 
    7 N.E.3d 1150
    , ¶ 23.     Thus, under its plain terms, R.C. 5302.20(C)(2) applies to a
    mortgage. The granting of the mortgage by Theresa was a “conveyance” that vested the
    mortgage interest in the bank “conditioned upon the survivorship” of Theresa. See R.C.
    5302.20(C)(2). When Theresa did not survive, the conditional mortgage interest held by
    CitiMortgage disappeared under the terms of the statute.
    {¶18}    Furthermore, while the Winding court characterizes Ohio as a lien-
    theory state, the result it reaches is directly contrary to a lien theory of mortgages. As
    explained above, under the lien theory, the mortgage does not survive the death of the
    joint tenant. See Harms, 
    105 Ill.2d at 224
    , 
    473 N.E.2d 930
    ; Smith, 
    103 A.D.3d 21
    , 957
    N.Y.S.2d at 709.
    {¶19}    Not only is the Winding result contrary to the vast line of authority
    applying a lien theory of mortgages, it is also directly contrary to the Ohio Supreme
    Court’s decision in Certificates of Deposit Issued by Hocking Valley Bank, 
    58 Ohio St.3d 172
    , 
    569 N.E.2d 484
    . As that case makes clear, a security interest granted by
    only one joint tenant terminates upon the death of the joint tenant.
    {¶20}    We are not alone in our disagreement with the result reached in
    Winding. As a leading treatise on Ohio property law explains, the result in Winding
    “appears to be inconsistent with the terms and intent of the statute.” 1-4 Curry and
    Durham, Section 4.01. The treatise goes on to quote a national commentator who notes
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    “there is nothing in the Ohio joint survivorship tenancy statute that requires (or justifies)
    the court’s conclusion. * * * The fact that a mortgage creates only a lien does not mean
    that the grant of a mortgage is not a conveyance.”       
    Id.,
     quoting Posting of R. Wilson
    Freyermuth, freyermuthr@missouri.edu, to DIRT Periodic Developments (Concurrent
    Ownership        Edition),      https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/nyclarealprop/
    C8ANXDtpyg8/jWJ1VzipPnMJ (July 31, 2014).
    C. R.C. 5302.20(C)(4) has No Application in this Case
    {¶21}    As we have seen, Ohio has modified the common law rule, that a
    conveyance by one joint tenant severs the joint tenancy. Ohio does, however, have a
    statutory vehicle to protect creditors of one joint tenant. R.C. 5302.20(C)(4) provides:
    A creditor of a survivorship tenant may enforce a lien against the interest
    of one or more survivorship tenants by an action to marshall liens against
    the interest of the debtor or debtors. Every person with an interest in or
    lien against the interest of the debtor or debtors shall be made a party to
    the action. Upon a determination by the court that a party or cross-
    claimant has a valid lien against the interest of a survivorship tenant, the
    title to the real property ceases to be a survivorship tenancy and becomes
    a tenancy in common.
    CitiMortgage maintains that because it filed a foreclosure suit this section applies, and
    that it may enforce its mortgage against the half interest in the property that was held by
    Theresa before her death.
    {¶22}    CitiMortgage’s argument is defeated by the plain language of the statute.
    The statute allows a creditor to enforce a lien by transforming the estate to a tenancy in
    common only “upon a determination by the court” that the party has a valid lien. R.C.
    5302.20(C)(4). In this case, CitiMortgage filed a foreclosure action, but Theresa died
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    before any “determination by the court.” See R.C. 5302.20(C)(4). Thus, the estate
    remained a joint tenancy at Theresa’s death and Vernon took the property free of the
    mortgage. See Brown v. Brown, 
    95 Ohio Misc.2d 38
    , 41, 
    706 N.E.2d 872
     (C.P.1998).
    D. The Outcome We Reach Does Not Create Commercial
    Uncertainty
    {¶23}    CitiMortgage also asks that we rule in its favor because to do otherwise
    would create commercial uncertainty and be unfair to banks that have received a
    mortgage from only one joint tenant. We are not persuaded.
    {¶24}    We note the commentator who analogized the question of a mortgage by
    one joint tenant to a “comet in our law,” “an intriguing academic question of little
    practical significance” because “[i]t is a rare (or negligent) commercial lender who would
    accept a mortgage from a joint tenant without first seeing that the joint tenancy was
    severed or that all the joint tenants had signed.” See 4 Thompson on Real Property,
    Section 31.08(b). This strikes us as about right.
    {¶25}    Courts do not create uncertainty when they follow basic principles of
    property law; they create uncertainty when they fail to follow such principles. To ignore
    a clear Ohio statute simply because the bank perceives the result to be unfair in this case,
    would create the very uncertainty that the CitiMortgage warns against. If banks want to
    avoid situations like this one, they simply need to ensure that every joint tenant has
    signed the mortgage. The first assignment of error is overruled.
    III. No Reformation or Equitable Lien
    {¶26}    In its second assignment of error, CitiMortgage contends that the trial
    court erred when it held that CitiMortgage was not entitled to reformation of the
    mortgage and an equitable lien on Vernon’s one-half interest in the property. First,
    CitiMortgage claims it is entitled to reformation, because the mortgage includes a
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    handwritten note indicating that Vernon was signing with the sole intent to release
    dower. Second, CitiMortgage contends it is entitled to an equitable lien on Vernon’s
    interest, because he would be unjustly enriched if he received full, unencumbered title to
    the property.
    A. Reformation
    {¶27}    CitiMortgage argues the handwritten note releasing dower entitles it to
    reformation, because Vernon had no dower interest to release. Dower does not apply to
    spouses who own property as joint tenants, because dower is only provided to nontitle-
    holding spouses. Std. Fed. Bank v. Staff, 
    168 Ohio App.3d 14
    , 
    2006-Ohio-3601
    , 
    857 N.E.2d 1245
     ¶ 16 (1st Dist.). Therefore, CitiMortgage contends, we should disregard this
    superfluous language leaving only Vernon’s name and signature.
    {¶28}    A court’s role in examining a contract is to determine the intent of the
    parties. See Hodesh v. Korelitz, 
    123 Ohio St.3d 72
    , 
    2009-Ohio-4220
    , 
    914 N.E.2d 186
    , ¶ 10. Where a contract’s terms are unambiguous, a court must apply the plain
    language of the contract. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Guman Bros. Farm, 
    73 Ohio St.3d 107
    , 108, 
    652 N.E.2d 684
     (1995). Mortgages are subject to the same rules
    of interpretation and analysis as contracts generally. First Fed. S. & L. Assn. of
    Toledo v. Perry's Landing Inc., 
    11 Ohio App.3d 135
    , 143, 
    463 N.E.2d 636
     (6th
    Dist.1983). The purpose of an equitable reformation is to apply a valid instrument
    in the way the parties intended. Campbell v. Krupp, 
    195 Ohio App.3d 573
    , 2011-
    Ohio-2694, 
    961 N.E.2d 205
    , ¶ 55 (6th Dist.), citing Delfino v. Paul Davies Chevrolet,
    Inc., 
    2 Ohio St.2d 282
    , 286, 
    209 N.E.2d 194
     (1965).
    {¶29}    Here, there is simply no evidence that the parties intended Vernon’s
    notation to indicate that he was granting a mortgage. Absent some indication that
    11
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    that was what the parties intended, we will not grant the equitable remedy of
    reformation.
    B. Equitable Lien
    {¶30}   CitiMortgage also claims it is entitled to an equitable lien.         An
    equitable lien is “a charge on property for the purpose of security and is ancillary to
    and separate from the debt itself.”     66 Ohio Jurisprudence 3d, Liens, Section 16
    (2015). It is “a right, not acknowledged in law, to have a fund, or specific property, or
    its proceeds, applied, in whole or in part to the payment of a particular debt or class
    of debts.” 
    Id.
     An equitable lien may arise from either (1) a written agreement that
    evidences the intent to make a particular property a security for a debt or obligation,
    or (2) through implication by a court of equity after consideration of right and justice
    as applied to the relationships of the parties and the surrounding circumstances.
    Katz v. Banning, 
    84 Ohio App.3d 543
    , 551, 
    617 N.E.2d 729
     (10th Dist.1992), citing
    Syring v. Sartorious, 
    28 Ohio App.2d 308
    , 311, 
    277 N.E.2d 457
     (4th Dist.1971). The
    denial of an equitable lien is within the sound discretion of the trial court, and so, we
    review for abuse of discretion. In re Estate of Ring, 10th Dist Franklin No. 06AP-
    801, 
    2007-Ohio-500
    , ¶ 9.
    {¶31}   As the assignee of the mortgage, CitiMortgage stands in the shoes of
    its predecessor. See Wells Fargo Bank v. Mowery, 
    187 Ohio App.3d 268
    , 2010-
    Ohio-1650, 
    931 N.E.2d 1121
    , ¶ 39 (4th Dist.2010). The failure to obtain a mortgage
    from Vernon was evidently the result of the negligence of CitiMortgage’s
    predecessor. While equity may sometimes relieve a party of the result of negligence
    that is excusable, it will not relieve a party from inexcusable negligence. 
    Id.
     Here,
    the mortgage document was prepared by the bank and the omission of Vernon from
    the mortgage is evident from a simple examination of the mortgage. CitiMortgage
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    even entered into a loan modification without attempting to rectify the situation. As
    the Fourth District noted in Mowery in denying the equitable remedy of
    reformation, “a mortgage company’s failure to learn the most basic facts about a
    mortgaged property cannot be excusable negligence.” Id. at ¶ 38.     The negligence of
    the banks in this case was not excusable. The trial court did not abuse its discretion
    in failing to impose an equitable lien. CitiMortgage’s second assignment of error is
    overruled.
    IV. Conclusion
    {¶32} The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    Judgment affirmed.
    F ISCHER , P.J., concurs.
    S TAUTBERG , J., concurs in judgment only.
    Please note:
    The court has recorded its own entry on the date of the release of this opinion.
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