Baltimore & O. R. v. Weedon

78 F. 584, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 471, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1698
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 2, 1897
DocketNo. 263
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 78 F. 584 (Baltimore & O. R. v. Weedon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & O. R. v. Weedon, 78 F. 584, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 471, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1698 (6th Cir. 1897).

Opinions

TAFT, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts). Certain of the findings of fact of the circuit court are really findings of law. Thus, the court found that, as matter of law, it was the duty of the clerk to receive ánd file the petition in error and prsecipe. The court found as matter of law that it was the duty of the attorney to supervise the- action of the clerk in filing the.petition and the prsecipe and [587]*587issuing summons (hereon. Tlie court: found, as matter of fact that the clerk did not tile the praecipe, and did not issue summons; and that, after handing the clerk the petition and praecipe, the plaintiff paid no further attention to the same. As a further fact the court found that the loss resulted from the failure of the clerk to issue the summons, and of the plaintiff’s attorney to supervise his doing so; that is, from the concurring negligence of both the clerk and the plaintiff’s' attorney. The plaintiff excepted to the finding that it was the duty of the plaintiff or its attorney to see that the summons was served, or that it was negligent in this regard. If it was not plaintiff’s duty to supervise the clerk’s performance of his duty, then there was no negligence on plaintiff’s part, and the finding that the loss was occasioned by plaintiff’s supervising or concurring negligence was erroneous. We have presented, therefore, on this record, for review, the question whether, in a suit for neglect and default by the clerk in issuing summons on a praecipe, it is a defense that the plaintiff did not, after handing the praecipe to the clerk, give attention to the clerk’s performance of Ms duly, and see to it that it had been performed. It is true that the findings of law and fact are hardly responsive to the issues raised upon the pleadings, but, as no objections and exceptions to the introduction of evidence were preserved for our consideration, we may properly assume that the evidence upon which the findings were made was introduced without objection, and that the court then proceeded, as it had the right to-do under the rules of code pleading in Ohio, to hear and decide the case on the issues made by the evidence, rather than upon the pleadings. Railway Co. v. Whitcomb, 31 U. S. App. 374, 381, 14 C. C. A. 183, and 66 Fed. 915; Hoffman v. Gordon, 15 Ohio St. 211, 218.

Was it the duty of plaintiff to see to it that the clerk issued the summons, or had he the right to rely on the clerk’s doing his duty? Or, to put it in another way, can the clerk excuse his default by saying, “You ought to have anticipated my negligence and provided against it”? We think that the questions mast be answered by a consideration of the provisions of the Ohio Code of Practice and the decisions under it. Section 6713 of the Revised StaLufes of Ohio provides that proceedings to reverse a judgment shall he by petition in error, filed in the court of error; that “thereupon a summons shall issue and be served, or publication mack;, as in tbe commencement of an action, and a service on the attorney of record in the original case shall be sufficient.” Section 67.14 provides that: “The summons mentioned in the last section shall, upon the written praecipe of the plaintiff in error or his attorney, be issued by the clerk of tbe court in which the petition is filed, to the sheriff of any county in which, the defendant in error or his attorney of record is found; when the writ is issued to a foreign county, the sheriff thereof may return it by mail to the clerk and shall be entitled to the same fees as if it had been returnable to the court of common pleas in which such officer resides; and the defendant in error or his attorney, may waive in writing the issue or service of the summons.” Under the title “Procedure in the Courts of Common Pleas and Superior Courts and in Circuit Courts on Appeals,” the specific duties of certain officers are [588]*588prescribed. By section 4959 it is required that “all writs and orders for provisional remedies and process of every Mnd shall be issued by the clerks of the several courts; but before they are issued a praecipe shall be filed with the clerk demanding the same.” This provision appeared in the statutes of Ohio as early as 1824. In State v. Caffee, 6 Ohio, 150, the supreme court of the state held that “no clerk is bound to issue process without a praecipe in writing filed as his authority and indemnity.” By section 4958 he is required to enter the issue of a summons, and to record in full the return thereon. By section 4960 the clerk is required to “file together and carefully preserve in his office all papers delivered to him for that purpose in every action and proceeding.” And it has been decided by the supreme court of Ohio that a paper is considered filed when delivered to and received by the proper officer. King v. Penn, 43 Ohio St. 57, 1 N. E. 84. By section 4966 the sheriff is required to indorse upon every writ or order the day and hour it was received by him; and by section 4970 to execute every summons, order, or other process, and return the same as required by law. By section 4967, w'hen the sheriff is interested in an ¿ction, the process is to be served by the coroner. By section 6713, already quoted, it is provided that summons in error shall issue as in the commencement of an action. Hence the proceedings to begin an action are in pari materia with those beginning suits in error. By section 5035 a civil action is to be “commenced by filing in the office of the clerk of the- proper court a petition and causing a summons to be issued thereon.” Section 5036 requires that “the plaintiff shall also file with the clerk of the court a praecipe stating therein the names of the parties to the-action, and demanding that a summons issue.” Section 5037 provides that “the summons shall be issued and signed by the clerk, and be under the seal of the court from which it is issued; * * * it shall be directed to the sheriff of the county who shall be commanded therein to' notify the defendant that he has been sued and must answer at a time stated therein.” Section 5041 provides that the summons shall be served by the officer to whom it is directed. Section 5043 provides that an acknowledgment on the back of the summons or petition by the party sued, or the voluntary appearance of a defendant, is equivalent to service.

We have thus reviewed at some length the statutory requirements in Ohio for the beginning of original suits and for the beginning of suits in error, and those which describe the exact duties of the officers. We may take judicial notice of what the actual practice under these statutes is. The language of the statutes, and the actual practice, leave no doubt in our minds that the policy of the state of Ohio from the beginning has been to have process issued and served by a public officer, indifferent between the parties, and not to leave it to the agent of the party plaintiff, as in so many other states. It is the clerk’s duty to issue the process to the sheriff; it is .the sheriff’s duty to serve it, and return it to the clerk; it is the clerk’s duty to receive the return and record it. The whole machinery is put in motion by the praecipe of the.moving party to the action, but after that, the law provides no place for the intervention of the party. [589]*589We think this elaborate and detailed provision for the machinery of .service and return was for the very purpose oí relieving the private party who should properly set it in motion from any responsibility as to its due operation, and that thereafter he has the right to rely on the public officer’s performing his duty, secured as it is by his oath and official bond.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 F. 584, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 471, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-o-r-v-weedon-ca6-1897.