Adams Express Co. v. Zimmerman

11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 609, 22 Ohio Dec. 203, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 54
CourtRichland County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedAugust 26, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 609 (Adams Express Co. v. Zimmerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richland County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams Express Co. v. Zimmerman, 11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 609, 22 Ohio Dec. 203, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 54 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Mansfield,- J.

This case comes into this court on error proceedings from the docket from' Jabez Dickey, justice of the peace.

The 'original action was one of forcibly entry and detention in which the defendant in error, the plaintiff below, sought ouster proceedings against the plaintiff in error, the defendant below, from the possession of certain room located on Main 'street, and now occupied by the plaintiff in error, as a place of doing busi-' ness.

The ease was heard before a jury and the jury found for the plaintiff below. A bill of exceptions was taken and the ruling and. judgment of the justice are brought in review by the bill so taken. Rut two errors, are insisted upon in argument: First, that the court had no jurisdiction to enter a final judgment against the Adams Express Company; and second, that the court erred in its instructions to the jury.

[610]*610The record discloses that the property in question was owned in fee by Levi Zimmerman at the time of his death in the spring of 1910, and that the Adams Express Company, the defendant belpw, was in possession of said premises during the life time of said Levi Zimmerman under a written lease which expired September 1, 1910.

' Prior to the death of Levi Zimmerman in February, 1910, an instrument of writing in the form and terms of a lease was executed by the Adams Express Company and Levi Zimmerman for the -same property for a term of three years, commencing on the 1st-day- of September, 1910, and ending on the first day of September, 1913, the commencement of said term immediately following the expiration of the old lease under which the Adams Express Company was then in possession.

By the terms of the. last will and testament of Levi Zimmerman, the property in question passed to and became the property of the grantor of plaintiff below, John Zimmerma-n, and this action was then commenced, as already stated to oust the Adams Express Company from the possession of said premises.

The plaintiff to make out his case in the first instance, established his ownership of the premises in question. The defendant then introduced in evidence the lease above referred to. which had been signed by the Adams Express Company and which bore the signature of Levi Zimmerman. The plaintiff then introduced evidence over the objection of the defendant below, tending to show that at the time of the signing of the lease in February, 1910, that Levi Zimmerman was of unsound mind and incapable of executing and delivering an instrument of-that character.

Much testimony was adduced upon both sides touching this proposition. The defendant below at all times saved their objection to the introduction of any testimony tending to show the incompetency or mental disability of the lessor Levi Zimmerman ; and the question sought to be raised- by such objection and one now urged in this court, is that if Levi Zimmerman was mentally incompetent to execute and deliver the lease in question, before the plaintiff below would have a right to insist upon such an issue being made, he must first come into a court of [611]*611equity and have the instrument or lease set aside upon that ground. That is, it is the contention of the plaintiff in erro that the contract at the best was simply voidable and not void, and therefore, that the plaintiff under the holding of the 78th Ohio State, was bound to establish his remedy in equity before he could raise the issue at law.

In the case of Perry v. O’Neil, in the 78th Ohio State, 200, the Supreme Court has determined'the rule in this state applicable to the question raised in the case at bar. Judge Summers on page 209 of the 78th Ohio State says:

“If a party suing to recover for personal injury admits the execution of a release and seeks to avoid it on equitable grounds,' he must obtain that relief to maintain his action. When.he denies the execution of the release or that it is his act, on the ground of want of mental capacity at the time he signed it, or that his signature to the release was procured by fraud such as misreading, the surreptitious substitution of one paper fpr another, or obtaining by some other trick or device an instrument which he did not intend to give, he may maintain his action without obtaining a decree. In other words, if a release is void he may ignore it in his petition, and if it is plead as a bar in the answer he may in his. reply plead the facts that make it void, and if it is not void, only voidable, he must to maintain his action obtain its rescission or cancellation.”

On page 223 of the same opinion, the court commenting along the same lines says:

“In the present case it will appear by examination of the reply, that the plaintiff avers that she is illiterate, unable to read or write except to sign her name, and that in signing said paper writing she did it under a mistake 'as to its contents and upon the misrepresentations of the defendant, its agents and employes she thought it was a mere receipt for service hire as aforesaid, and under the impression that she was signing a mere.receipt and while she was physically and mentally incapacitated for acting in the matter.”

The court says:

“The-above averments are all facts which if proven would show the release was not voidable but void, ’ ’

[612]*612So that whatever may be the holding in other jurisdictions, it is very apparent in this state that the Supreme Court has held that where one has not mental capacity to make an instrument, where the minds of the parties could not meet, the contract is not merely voidable but is absolutely void, and such showing and issue can be made in a direct proceeding as one in law.

"We think the justice was warranted over the objection of the defendants below in permitting' the plaintiff to introduce evi dence as to the mental condition of Levi Zimmerman at the time of the execution or the signing of the contract in question.

The other question presented in the argument was that of the charge of the court, and it involves directly the construction of the statute governing the recording and acknowledging of leases where more than three years expires from the time of their execution up to the time of the expiration of the term of the lease.

It may be said as "a general proposition that a justice is not required to charge a jury in any respect, but when he does charge the jury he is bound to charge the law, and if in so doing he fails to charge the law and such charge is prejudicial to either party, the party who is so prejudiced may properly predicate his right to review acts of the justice by a proceeding in error.

In the case at bar, the justice among other things said to' the jury:

“A lease for the rental of property, not to be performed within three years from its date, the law requires to be witnessed and acknowledged by an official. If you find that was done in this case, then it would be a valid lease, at least so far as the paper writing is concerned, the fact of it. If you find it is not. so, it is void as a lease.”

The court then charged them upon the question of mental capacity as it affects contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 609, 22 Ohio Dec. 203, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-express-co-v-zimmerman-ohctcomplrichla-1911.