Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Hollenberger

76 Ohio St. (N.S.) 177
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1907
DocketNo. 9738
StatusPublished

This text of 76 Ohio St. (N.S.) 177 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Hollenberger) 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
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Hollenberger, 76 Ohio St. (N.S.) 177 (Ohio 1907).

Opinion

Davis, J.

It is enacted by Section 5022, Revised Statutes, that an action for the recovery of a penalty, with certain exceptions, must be brought in the county in which the cause of action, or some part thereof, - arose. The petition does not show that the violation of the statute, for which the recovery of a penalty was sought, occurred in whole or in part in Seneca county, where the action was begun and prosecuted. The defendant did not demur to the petition nor answer as to the jurisdiction. It is conceded by the counsel for the plaintiff, defendant in error here, that the petition was demurrable and that it might have been dismissed upon a plea to the- jurisdiction of the court; but it is contended, and it was so held in the circuit court, that under such state of the pleadings and after a verdict and judgment against it, the defendant could not be permitted to raise the question of jurisdiction. The argument is based on the following language of Section 5063, Revised Statutes: “And if no objection be taken either by demurrer or by answer, the defendant shall be' deemed to have waived the same, except only the objections that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject of the action, and that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” On the part of the defendant in error the contention is, that the words “subject of the action” are so much narrower in their meaning than “subject-matter” that they apply only to property and tangible objects in being, such as real property in Section 5019. In other words, it was argued and [180]*180decided in the circuit court, that a cause of action, for a penalty arising from a violation of a statute was not the “subject of the action.”

If a violation of a statute resulting in a liability to pay a penalty to the party aggrieved was not the subject of that action, then what was the subject of it? For it is not conceivable that an action can be maintained with no subject of controversy or inquiry to be determined by the court. If the subject of the action is not necessarily a tangible object having a definite location, as in the cases mentioned in Section 5019, but may be the the substance of a judicial inquiry which might, or might not, terminate in a judgment for a penalty, then this judgment is in plain conflict with Section 5063, as well as established principles of the common law. •

The phrase “subject of the action” occurs in the code of civil procedure in a number of places besides Section 5019 (see Sections 5016, 5058, 5061, 5062, 5063, 5069, 5076 and 5089), and in some of these it just as distinctly refers to something which is not a tangible object as'that is does refer to real estate in Section 5019. Take for example Section 3089, in which it is provided that a counterclaim or set-off “may become the subject of another action” ; or take Section 5069 which defines a counterclaim to be a cause of action arising out of the contract of transaction set forth in the petition, or a cause of action “connected with the subject of the action.” Construing corresponding language in the New York Code, the court of appeals said: “The present case falls under the last of these instances. ‘A subject’ is that on which any operation, either mental or material, is performed; as a subject for contemplation or controversy. The subject of an [181]*181action is either property (as illustrated by a real action), or a violated right. In the present instance, the subject of the plaintiff’s action was the expression ‘Number 10/ of which he claimed ownership as a designation of his business. The defendant’s counterclaim is a cause of action against the plaintiff growing out of his infringement of' the defendant’s right to the same expression, which he asserts belongs- to himself. It is closely united to the matter in controversy; it is, in fact, inseparable from it. In the language of the' code it is ‘connected’ with it.” The Glen & Hall Mfg. Co. v. Hall, 61 N. Y., 236. Compare The Zinc Carbonate Co. v. Bank, 103 Wis., 139, where it is said: “There is but one subject of action — the conspiracy to defraud and its consummation to the damage of plaintiff.” Also Hamlin v. Tucker, 72 N. C., 502, in which it was held that the subject of the action was “interference with the marital right of the plaintiff”; and Solomon v. Bates et al., 118 N. C., 311, 316, in which case there were Several causes of action in tort and the court said: “There is the same subject of action throughout, i. e., the plaintiff’s loss of his deposit.” Enough has' been said to show that the notion that the subject of an action must be a tangible thing of property, based on Section 5019, arises from a hasty induction and is not sound.

In their proper meaning, the terms “subject-matter,” “subject of the action” and “cause of the action” are not strictly synonymous, although they are often used interchangeably. The subject-matter of an action is the abstract subject of judicial inquiry, for example, the infliction of a penalty for violation of a statutory duty. The subject of [182]*182an action, in its strict sense, is the subject-matter applied to a particular case, as, the right of the plaintiff in the case to recover a penalty for violation of the statute. A cause of action is “the right to bring a suit.” Black’s Law Dictionary. These distinctions, we believe, are scientifically definite and in accord with good authority. The Chicago & Atlantic Ry. Co. v. Sutton et al., 130 Ind., 405; Hunt v. Hunt, 72 N. Y., 217, 229-230; Bliss on Code Pl., (3d Ed.), § 126; Pomeroy Code Remedies (4th Ed.), § 369. The author last cited is of the opinion that the term “subject of the action” was used by-the authors of the code and by the legislature as synonymous with, or rather in place of, “subject-matter of the action”; and this view is in harmony with the definitions which we have given. The importance of it will be seen further on. In Rodgers v. Mut’l Endowment Assessment Assn., 17 S. C., 406, 410, the court distinguishes between the subject of the action and the cause of action, and says: “The subject of action is what was formerly understood as the subject-matter of the action”; and this was quoted with approval in Box v. C. R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 107 Ia., 660, 666.

With the help of the conclusions which we have reached let us proceed to determine what rights are saved, under Section 5063, to a defendant who has neither demurred nor answered in respect to the jurisdiction of the court.

The term “subject-matter” does not occur in our code of practice, at least we have not discovered it; but it has nevertheless long been a universal rule that an objection to the jurisdiction of the “subject-matter” can not be wraived; because, while paities may voluntarily submit their persons to the juris[183]*183diction of a court which has jurisdiction over the cause, they cannot confer power on the court as to the subject-matter, for the reason that the court can derive its general jurisdiction only from the power which created it, the sovereignty. The statement of this principle and illustrations of its application may be found in the following cases. Gilliland v. Admrs. of Sellers, 2 Ohio St., 223, 228; McCleary v. McLain, 2 Ohio St., 369; Dayton & Western Railroad Co. v. Marshall, 11 Ohio St., 497, 501; Steamboat Gen. Buell v. Long, 18 Ohio St., 521, 533.

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Related

Hunt v. . Hunt
72 N.Y. 217 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
Hamlin v. . Tucker
72 N.C. 502 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1875)
Solomon v. . Bates
24 S.E. 478 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1896)
Glen & Hall Manufacturing Co. v. Hall
61 N.Y. 226 (Commission of Appeals, 1874)
Chicago & Atlantic Railway Co. v. Sutton
30 N.E. 291 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1892)
Box v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
78 N.W. 694 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1899)
Zinc Carbonate Co. v. First National Bank of Shullsburg
79 N.W. 229 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Ohio St. (N.S.) 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-v-hollenberger-ohio-1907.