16 Ohio St. 533 | Ohio | 1847
"Upon the above state of facts arise the following three questions:
1. Where there is a senior judgment, and no levy within the year, a junior judgment and levy within the year, which gives it precedence over the senior judgment, and an intervening mortgage which has precedence over the junior judgment, which lien shall prevail—that of the senior judgment, that of the mortgage, or the junior judgment ?
2. Prom what time does a mortgage take effect—from the date of its delivery to the mortgagee, or from the time it is delivered to the recorder to be entered upon record ?
3. If from the time of its delivery to the recorder for record, which has the precedence—a mortgage delivei-ed for record on the first day of the term, but before the court has actually opened, or a judgment recovered at the same term ?
The case now under consideration has had a singular fate. It was one of the first cases to arise, and it involves all three of the above important questions, and yet all three of these questions, one after the other, have been decided in three several cases in court in bank, before this has come on for disposition.
The first-named proposition is known to the profession as the triangular question; it was decided in the case of Brazee v. Bank of Lancaster, 14 Ohio, 318, that in such ease the senior judgment had precedence both over the junior iudgment and tho-mortgage,
The second proposition was decided in Stansel v. Roberts, 13 Ohio, 148, and also in Mayham v. Parker et al., 14 Ohio, 431, where it is decided that a mortgage under tho statute, shall take effect from the time it is delivered to the recorder to be entered of record ; that the recording or delivering for record, is a part of the execution ; and hence, before that act is done, that the instrument is not a mortgage, and therefore that notice that certain written instruments exist which may become mortgages by delivery for record, will not prevent another party from taking a like instrument .and making it a mortgage by delivering it for record ; and -when it once becomes a mortgage by such delivery, if it bo *prior in time, it will take precedence ander the statute.
having absolute rights and equities for money, secure its payment by fixing a lien upon the property of the debtor? All have an equal right to payment and to security. The court has said, therefore, that he who first takes a security which is legal, shall have its benefit. But it is said that, upon principles of equity, he who first makes the effort to get a mortgage security shall
We have reported this ease merely to assert and reaffirm the decisions already made upon these vexed questions, with the hope that they may be regarded as permanently settled.
to the point last decided, giving a mortgage delivered for recoi’d on the first day of the term of a court, but before the opening of court, a preference over a judgment rendered at that term, dissented.