OPINION
Accredited Home Lenders (“Accredited”) appeals the entry of summary judgment by the bankruptcy court in favor of *800 the Chapter 7 Trustee (“the Trustee”) in an adversary proceeding in which the Trustee sought a determination of the validity and extent of Accredited’s mortgage against the debtors’ real estate, which was subject to the Ohio Land Registration Act. In granting summary judgment, the bankruptcy court found that Accredited’s mortgage interest in the debtors’ real estate (“the property”) extends only to husband David Morgeson’s one-half interest in the property, thereby reserving wife Tina Morgeson’s one-half interest for the bankruptcy estate. For the reasons that follow, the bankruptcy court’s decision is AFFIRMED.
I. ISSUES ON APPEAL
The issue presented is whether the bankruptcy court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the Trustee and finding that Accredited’s mortgage interest extends only to David Morgeson’s one-half interest in the property, despite a memorial on the certificate of title noting its mortgage against the present owner.
II. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (“BAP”) of the Sixth Circuit has jurisdiction to hear this appeal. The United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio has authorized appeals to the BAP, and neither party has timely elected to have this appeal heard by the district court. 28 U.S.C. §§ 158(b)(6), (c)(1). “A final order ‘ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.’ ”
Belfance v. Bushey (In re Bushey),
Summary Judgment is appropriate when “[t]he pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
In cases such as this, where the parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment, the court must consider each motion separately on its merits, since each party, as a movant for summary judgment,
*801
bears the burden to establish both the nonexistence of genuine issues of material fact and that party’s entitlement to judgment as a matter of law.
Lansing Dairy v. Espy,
III. FACTS
On August 31, 1999, husband and wife David and Tina Morgeson were granted a certificate of title to the real property commonly known as 9684 Kelso Court, Cincinnati, Ohio 45231, certifying that they are the owners in fee simple of the property as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. The property is situated in Hamilton County, Ohio, and is subject to Ohio’s Land Registration Act. The certificate of title was properly registered on the Torrens Land Title Register of Hamilton County.
On May 24, 2002, the Morgesons executed a mortgage in favor of Accredited Home Lenders, Inc. The mortgage doeument provides that “ ‘Borrower’ is David M. Morgeson and Tina M. Morgeson, husband and wife” and further provides that “Borrower is the mortgagor under this Security Instrument.” (J.A. at 77.) David Morgeson signed the mortgage document, granting a mortgage on his full one-half interest in the property. Tina Morgeson also signed the document. Below Tina Morgeson’s signature, however, was a notation stating “spouse, signing only to release her dower interest.” The certificate of acknowledgment contained the same language, stating that Tina Morgeson was signing only to release her dower interest in the property.
The signed and acknowledged mortgage document was filed for record with the Hamilton Country Recorder and, thereafter, the Hamilton County Recorder placed a notation on the certificate of title for the property, as is required by Ohio Revised Code § 5309.48. This notation indicates that Accredited is the holder of a $106,200 mortgage against the “present owner” of the property. 1 The county recorder did not note on the certificate of title that Tina Morgeson had released only her dower interest.
On July 15, 2004, the Morgesons filed a voluntary petition for Chapter 7 relief in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio. An order for relief was entered and, thereafter, the Trustee, Appellee herein, filed a complaint against Accredited seeking to avoid Ac- *802 eredited’s purported mortgage against Tina Morgeson’s one-half interest in the property and to determine the validity and extent of Accredited’s mortgage lien. Although brought under 11 U.S.C. §§ 544 and 547, the prayer for relief in the complaint asks for “such other and further relief as the court might deem to be just and proper.” (J.A. at 11.) The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. On August 31, 2006, the bankruptcy court granted the Trustee’s motion for summary judgment and denied Accredited’s motion for summary judgment.
The court found that Tina Morgeson’s intent was to convey only her dower interest, and that the county recorder erred in noting on the certificate of title that both Morgesons were mortgagors. The bankruptcy court further found that the underlying mortgage document must be given effect despite the notation on the certificate of title. The bankruptcy court then concluded that Accredited’s mortgage interest extended only to David Morgeson’s interest in the property. Having found that no mortgage against Tina Morgeson’s one-half interest was ever granted to Accredited, the bankruptcy court did not address whether a mortgage on her one-half interest was avoidable under § 544.
IY. DISCUSSION
The Ohio Land Registration Act, also known as Torrens law, creates a system by which title to land is registered, not recorded as under traditional recording laws.
See Weyandt v. Davis,
The purpose of the Ohio Land Registration Act was “to create an absolute presumption that the certificate of registration in the registrar’s office at all times speaks the last word as to the title, thus doing away with secret liens and hidden equities” and creating an indefeasible title, excepting only those claims and encumbrances noted therein.
Curry v. Lybarger,
Accredited argues that the certificate of title must be given effect over the underlying mortgage document because it is the act of registering and memorializing the mortgage on the certificate of title that creates the property interest, not merely the execution of the mortgage as between the parties. Accredited relies on
Bavely v. Fifth Third Mortgage Co., (In re Cowan),
Accredited’s reliance on Bavely, however, is misplaced. The facts of Bavely are not analogous to those under consideration here. In Bavely, Fifth Third Bank failed entirely to register its mortgage. Id. at 102. The subject property in Bavely straddled two parcels of land, one of which was registered land, the other of which was traditional, non-registered land. Id. Although Fifth Third had recorded the mortgage with respect to the non-registered land, it had failed to present the mortgage to the county recorder for notation on the certificate of title to the registered parcel. Id. The panel in Bavely held that Fifth Third did not hold a perfected security interest in the debtor’s registered parcel because “no unregistered claim or interest shall prevail against a registered title taken bona fide for valuable consideration.” Id. at 103.
The
Bavely
decision relies on the pin-pose of land registration, which is to protect a bona fide purchaser against unregistered encumbrances. Ohio courts have regularly upheld certificates of title as conclusive as to the state of title when the holder of an encumbrance seeks to enforce an unregistered charge against a third party who was without notice of the charge.
See Bavely,
The proposition that a certificate of title cannot reflect an encumbrance greater than that which the mortgage deed provides finds support in Ohio Revised Code §§ 5309.47 and 5309.48. Section 5309.47 provides, in relevant part:
Whenever any registered land or interest therein is intended to be charged or made security in favor of any mortgagee, the mortgagor shall execute a mortgage deed.... Every mortgage deed and instrument of encumbrance shall contain a pertinent description of the land and an accurate statement of the interest intended to be mortgaged, charged, or encumbered, and when registered shall operate as a lien or charge upon and bind the land covered thereby for the period ending twenty-one years after the maturity of the last secured debt or obligation. (Emphasis added).
And § 5309.48 provides that the county recorder must, when a mortgage is filed, enter “a memorial accurately stating the purport and nature of the lien or charge created.”
The Morgesons’ certificate of title notes five charges, and the location of the instruments creating the charges. One charge is an easement against the property. Although the certificate notes the easement exists, the certificate does not give a description of the exact location or the use of the easement. Similarly, a prescriptive covenant binds the Morgesons’ land. The certificate of title notes the covenant, but again, does not state how the covenant binds the land.
Although the Ohio courts have not interpreted the meaning of the word “accurately” as used in §§ 5309.47 and 5309.48, in practice, it appears that a memorial noting the existence of a lien or charge is accurate so long as it is properly identified (i.e. mortgage, easement, etc.) *804 and the location of the recorded underlying document is correctly set forth so that a party may determine the extent of the lien or charge. Both the purport, or “meaning synthesized or synopsized,” Merriam-Webster Third New Int’l Dictionary 1847 (1986), and the nature of the lien or charge are then accurately memorialized.
Accredited’s reliance on Ohio Revised Code § 5309.77, which states that a mortgage instrument dealing with registered land takes effect only as a contract and as authority for presentation to the county recorder to place a memorial on the proper certifícate of title, does not lend support to its position. Since the mortgage deed takes effect as a contract between the parties, the deed must be interpreted according to Ohio contract law.
Tina Morgeson signed the document as “spouse, signing only to release her dower interest.” The notary also signed the document, acknowledging that Tina Morgeson was signing only to release her dower interest. “In construing a written contract, the court’s paramount objective is to ascertain and give effect to the parties’ intention.”
Rosepark Prop., Ltd. v. Buess,
Nevertheless, Accredited contends that even if the underlying mortgage is considered, there is, at best, a dispute of fact as to Tina Morgeson’s intent due to inconsistencies within the mortgage document itself. Specifically, Accredited points to language in the mortgage that defines “Borrower” as both David and Tina Morgeson. The mortgage then provides that “[B]orrower is the mortgagor under this Security Instrument.” Accredited argues that these provisions are inconsistent with the typewritten notation below Tina Morgeson’s signature that she signed only to release her dower interest. The Panel disagrees. A dower interest is an alienable interest that may be conveyed as security for a loan.
Cf. Standard Fed. Bank v. Staff,
Further, Accredited was a party to the contract. Accredited failed to object to the language restricting the release of Tina Morgeson’s one-half interest at the time the contract was executed. In opposing the Trustee’s motion for summary judgment, it was incumbent upon Accredited to present some evidence that would rebut the presumption arising from the clear language of the mortgage instrument that Tina Morgeson’s intent was only to release her dower interest. To the extent that the certificate of title reflects a mortgage that encumbers the entire interests of both debtors, such is not evidence of Tina Morgeson’s intent to encumber her *805 full one-half interest because she was not responsible for placing that notation on the certifícate. 2 As stated above, the notation on the certificate of title serves to place bona fide purchasers on notice that the property is subject to an encumbrance. The notation on the certificate of title does not serve to enlarge an encumbrance beyond the mortgage deed.
Accredited also argues that the bankruptcy court lacked jurisdiction to correct any error made by the county recorder because the time for appealing the action of the recorder had run. 3 Accredited relies on Ohio Revised Code §§ 5309.43 and 5309.83, which authorize appeals to the Ohio court of common pleas by persons aggrieved by the county recorder’s action. Such persons “may, within three days thereafter, file with the recorder a written notice of intention to appeal, and shall, within ten days thereafter, file in the court of common pleas a petition setting forth the matter complained of....” Ohio Rev. Code § 5309.83. However, as one Ohio court explained:
While conferring upon [the county recorder] full power-judicial or otherwise-to render the initial decision as to what shall and what shall not appear upon the records of his office, the legislature carefully refrained from giving him the power to adjudicate the rights of the parties. Under no circumstances does his decision preclude the assertion of a title. The claimant may appeal as provided in section 8572-79, General Code [now Ohio Revised Code § 5309.83], but is not required to do so in order to preserve his title. By section 8572-87, General Code [now Ohio Revised Code § 5309.91], 4 he may assert his title at any subsequent time by civil action as though no hearing had taken place before the recorder. All section 8572-79, General Code, does is to vest the recorder with administrative power and provide for a judicial review of his action. And we are of the opinion that the limitation of time of notice to the recorder of intention to appeal was not imposed as a condition upon invoking the jurisdiction of the court, but rather as a provision to protect the recorder and to enable him to efficiently administer his office. The action of the recorder in canceling the memorial has none of the attributes of conclusiveness and finality under any circumstances that are the hallmarks of culminating judicial action. While imperfectly expressed and leaving much to implication, it seems that the purpose of the provision was to establish a continuity in the proceeding and thereby prevent the intervention of the rights of innocent transferees that might take place before a lis pendens could be created by recourse to the ordinary remedies .... To hold that failure to file notice within three days was intended to close the door to the court by appeal and at the same time leave every other approach to the court open would seem to *806 be attributing to the legislature an intent contrary to the general spirit of the land registration law.
Pa. R.R. Co. v. Kearns,
Y. CONCLUSION
Accredited’s claim that the certificate of title is conclusive over the underlying mortgage document, thus extending its mortgage to both debtors’ one-half interests in the subject property, is without merit. Ohio’s Land Registration Act protects bona fide purchasers from “hidden liens and secret equities.”
Curry,
Notes
. In setting forth the memorials of lesser estates and liens, the certificate of title states that "PRESENT OWNER [is] INDICATED WITH O.” The certificate then sets forth a memorial of a mortgage in favor of Accredited as follows:
MORTGAGE
DOCUMENT: 02-112947
FAVOR OF: ACCREDITED HOME LENDERS, INC. SAN DIEGO, CA
AGAINST: (O) SECURES $106,200
(J.A. at 74-75.) Although indicating that the mortgage is against "present owner” appears ambiguous where there is more than one owner, Accredited, as well as the bankruptcy court, interpret this designation as referring to both owners. As it does not affect the Panel's ultimate decision in this case, the Panel will assume, for purposes of this appeal, that "present owner” refers to both David and Tina Morgeson.
.It is not clear to the Panel that the memorial on the certificate of title stating that the mortgage is against the “present owner” means that it is against the entire interests of the present owners. To the extent that "present owner” refers to both owners where the certificate of title reflects more than one owner, and where one owner conveys only a dower interest, as in this case, the mortgage is still against both owners’ interests, although not both owners’ entire interests.
. As discussed in the previous footnotes, it is not clear that the county recorder actually did err by stating that the mortgage is against "present owner.”
. Section 5309.91 provides that "[a]ll charges upon registered land, or any interest in such land may be enforced as provided by law, except as provided by section 5309.02 to 5310.21.”
