Alliance First National Bank v. Spies

158 Ohio St. (N.S.) 499
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1953
DocketNo. 33024
StatusPublished

This text of 158 Ohio St. (N.S.) 499 (Alliance First National Bank v. Spies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alliance First National Bank v. Spies, 158 Ohio St. (N.S.) 499 (Ohio 1953).

Opinions

Taft, J.

Plaintiff argues that, since the warrant of attorney in the note expressly authorizes confession of judgment against defendants “at any time after this obligation becomes due” and authorizes the attorney so confessing “to execute a release of all errors or right of appeal, ’ ’ the attorney confessing judgment was authorized to confess such judgment after the statute of limitations had run; and that, even if it was error to do so, such attorney was authorized to waive such error.

If this argument of plaintiff were sustained, then, [501]*501by delivering a note incorporating such a warrant of attorney, the effect upon the maker of the note would be substantially the same as if he had promised at the time of such delivery not to plead the statute of limitations. Generally, such an undertaking is regarded as against the public policy of the statute of limitations and consequently unenforceable. See 1 Williston on Contracts (Rev. Ed.), 584, Section 183.

It is well established that a warrant of attorney to confess judgment on an obligation, even if it does contain such provisions, does not authorize a confession of judgment after an action on the obligation has become barred by a statute of limitations. 31 American Jurisprudence, 111, Section 471.

Section 11221, General Code, provides:-

“An action upon a specialty or an agreement, contract or promise in writing shall be brought within fifteen years after the cause thereof accrued. ’ ’

Therefore, except for the payments claimed to have been made on the note, an action thereon would have-been barred when the petition of plaintiff in the instant case was filed.

However, Section 11223, General Code, provides:

“If payment has been made upon any demand founded on a contract, or a written acknowledgment thereof, or a promise to pay it has been made and signed by the party to be charged, an action may be brought thereon within the time herein limited, after such payment, acknowledgment or promise.”

In support of its position plaintiff argues (1) that, in the hearing on defendants’ petition to vacate the judgment, the burden of proof was on defendants to establish by a preponderance of the evidence (Bulkley v. Greene, 98 Ohio St., 55, 120 N. E., 216; Interstate Life Assurance Co. v. Raper, 78 Ohio St., 113, 84 N. E., 754) that the payments, which the notations on the note indicate were made within fifteen years of the filing of plaintiff’s petition, were not made [502]*502as indicated by those notations, (2) that those notations, because apparently made before the statutory period of limitations had elapsed, represent declarations against interest by plaintiff and were therefore admissible as some evidence of the payments indicated (see annotation, 59 A. L. R., 914), (3) that the Common Pleas Court, as the trier of the facts, could disbelieve the testimony of the interested defendants and determine as it did that they had not sustained the foregoing burden of proof (see 39 Ohio Jurispurdenee, 812, Section 188), and (4) that the Court of Appeals, by in effect rendering final judgment for defendants on their petition to vacate, has improperly substituted its conclusions on questions of fact for the conclusions of the trial court on those questions (see Henry v. Henry, 157 Ohio St., 319, 105 N. E. [2d], 406).

In our opinion, these arguments do not justify a reversal of the judgment rendered by the Court of Appeals.

Plaintiff can not prevail in any event unless mere payments by an obligor on a cognovit note operate not only to extend the time within which an action may be brought on the note for 15 years, as provided in Section 11223, General Code, but also to extend the time within which an attorney is authorised, by the warrant of attorney in such cognovit note, to confess a judgment against such obligor.

A warrant of attorney in a cognovit note, authorizing an attorney to confess judgment against the maker, is only a grant of authority by the maker as principal to such attorney to act as his agent in confessing such a judgment. Ordinarily, where one grants authority to another to act as his agent for him, the authority so granted may be revoked at any time and, if not revoked, must be exercised within a reasonable time. However, a warrant of attorney incorporat[503]*503ed in a promissory note has been said to represent a grant by the maker of such note of a “power coupled with an interest” and therefore to be irrevocable. Swisher v. Orrison Cigar Co., 122 Ohio St., 195, 171 N. E., 92. But cf. Hoffmaster v. G. M. McKelvey Co., 88 Ohio St., 552, 106 N. E., 1061, and Haggard v. Shick, 151 Ohio St., 535, 86 N. E. (2d), 785, holding such power to be revoked by death. Apparently, the power granted by such a warrant of attorney was so described in order to justify the characteristic of irrevocability inherent in it during the life of the grantor, a characteristic likewise inherent in a power coupled with an interest. However the real reasons why the power conferred by such warrant of attorney is irrevocable during the life of the grantor of the power are that the parties to the note, in which said warrant is incorporated, are considered as a matter of law to have agreed that the power, granted by such warrant, should be irrevocable, and there is consideration for the agreement of the grantor so implied as a matter of law.

Thus it is said by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall in the court’s opinion in Hunt v. Rousmanier’s Admrs., 8 Wheaton, 174, 201, 5 L. Ed., 589:

“As the power of one man to act for another depends on the will and license of that other, the power ceases when the will, or this permission, is withdrawn. The general rule, therefore, is, that a letter of attorney may, at any time, be revoked by the party who makes it; and is revoked by his death. But this general rule, which results from the nature of the act, has sustained some modification. Where a letter of attorney forms a part of a contract, and is a security for money, or for the performance of any act which is deemed valuable, it is generally made irrevocable in terms, or if not so, is deemed irrevocable in law. Although a letter of attorney depends, from its nature, on the will of the person making it, and may, in general, be recalled at [504]*504his will; yet, if he binds himself for a consideration, in terms, or by the nature of his contract, not to change his will, the law will not permit him to change it. Eousmanier, therefore, could not, during his life, by any act of his own, have revoked this letter of attorney. But does it retain its efficacy after his death? We think it does not. We think it well settled, that a power of attorney, though irrevocable during the life of the party, becomes extinct by his death. ’ ’

The implied agreement of the defendants, that the grant of authority involved in the cognovit provisions of the note should be irrevocable, is in an “agreement * * * in writing,” within the meaning of Section 11221, General Code, and so governed by that fifteen-year statute of limitations. However, Section 11223, General Code, does not provide for an extension of the time within which such warrant of attorney may be exercised.

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Related

Hunt v. Rousmanier's Administrators
21 U.S. 174 (Supreme Court, 1823)
Swisher v. Orrison Cigar Co.
171 N.E. 92 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1930)
Kerper v. Wood
15 L.R.A. 656 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1891)
Haggard v. Shick
86 N.E.2d 785 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1949)
Commonwealth Loan Co. v. Firestine
73 N.E.2d 501 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1947)
Cross v. Moffat
11 Colo. 210 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
158 Ohio St. (N.S.) 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alliance-first-national-bank-v-spies-ohio-1953.