Barclay v. Salmon

9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 520
CourtFayette Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 520 (Barclay v. Salmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fayette Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barclay v. Salmon, 9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 520 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Summers, J.

Several questions are presented : first, does the petition state a cause of action ; second, is a bill of exception necessary to bring the affidavit before this court; and third, the sufficiency of the affidavit.

The averment of ownership in the amended petition is based upon the facts slated, for otherwise they are not pertinent, and they are not sufficient to constitute the receiver owner of the property sought to be replevied.

It does not appear that Barclay was a party to the suit in which the receiver was appointed, or that he took the lease lis pendens. It does appear that Barclay rented the land for cash prior to the appointment of the receiver, and this precludes a presumption in support of the judgment that the entire crop was rent.

This conclusion requires a reversal of the judgment, and as the remaining questions are not likely to arise in the new trial, they well might be left unanswered did not the statute require this court to pass upon all the errors as signed.

Is a bill of exceptions necessary ? In this state it seems to be well settled that affidavits filed in support of a motion cannot be considered by a reviewing court, even when copied into the record by the clerk, unless made part of the record by a bill of exceptions. Sleet v. Williams, 21 Ohio St., 82; Goldsmith v. The State, 30 Ohio St., 208; Schultz v. The State, 32 Ohio St., 276. But it is not necessary in order to bring the motion before the reviewing court, to include it in the bill of exceptions, although it is not required by sec. 5334, of the Rev. Stat., to be made a part of the record. Section 550 of the Rev. Stat., authorizes the filing of an affidavit of the fact of the interest, bias or prejudice of the judge, not in support of some motion or application, but as an original paper in the case, and upon its being so filed and the fact noted upon the trial docket, whether true or not, it disqualifies the judge to act in that case, and if he does act, it is one of the original papers which may be filed with the petition in error to exhibit the error complained of, under sec. 6716, of the Rev. Stat.'

This distinction is illustrated in the cases of Sleet v. Williams, 21 Ohio St., 82 and Garner v. White, 23 Ohio St., 192. In each case a motion was made to discharge the attachment because the affidavit, upon which the writ issued, was insufficient, and because it was untrue. Affidavits were filed in support of the motion. In neither case was there a bill of exceptions, and in each case the Supreme Court passed upon the sufficiency of the affidavits upon which the writ of attachment issued, and in each case refused to pass upon the questions sought to be made by the affidavits filed in support of or against the motions to discharge.

But it is contended that the statute does not authorize the filing of an affidavit except when all the judges in the subdivision are interested or biased. If this is so, then the mere filing of an affidavit of interest or bias, in the absence of a showing that all the judges of the subdivision were interested or biased, would not bar the judge from sitting, but the fact would have to be proven, and a bill of exceptions would be necessary to bring the evidence into the record.

Brewer J., in City of Emporia v. Volmer, 12 Kas., 475, 478, says:

“ The statute is silent as to the manner of establishing the fact It declares simply that the change shall be made when the fact exists. The fact must exist. The court must find'the fact to exist. If the [523]*523judge’s personal knowlege is altogether ignored, it will often place him in a position of being compelled to find that to be a fact which he knows not to be a fact, — a fact, too, which carries with it something ol an imputation upon himself. If it were to be determined by simply the affidavit of the defendant, there would be almost numberless changes of venue. Every defendant closely pressed would seek delay in this manner. A change of venue is a wrong to the public, unless the necessities of justice to the defendant require it. It works delay. It causes expense. It endangers a prosecution. A defendant is easily pursuaded of the prejudice of the judge. Adverse rulings convince him of the fact, as shown by the case oí Burke v. Mayall, 10 Minn., 287, (Gill 226). It seems to us, therefore, that this is the true rule; that such facts and circumstances must be proved by affidavits, or other extrinsic testimony, as clearly show that there exists a prejudice on the part of the judge toward the defendant, and unless this prejudice thus clearly appears, a reviewing court will sustain an overruling of the application on the ground that the judge must have been personally conscious of the falsity or non-existence of the grounds alleged. It is not sufficient that a prima jade case only be shown — such a case as would require the sustaining of a challenge to a juror. It must be strong enough to overthrow the presumption in favor of the trial judge’s integrity, and of the clearness of his perceptions.”

But, as will appear from the interpretation given sec. 550 in the consideration of the remaining question, the provision for filing an affidavit is not limited to cases in which all of the judges of the subdivision are disqualified.

It is contended that the affidavit is insufficient because it does not state the fact of bias, but merely that the affiant believes the judge has a biasand further that it does not state any facts showing bias.

An affidavit is a written declaration under oath, made without notice to the opposite party.”

Revised Statutes, sec. 5262.

It is the fact of interest or bias, set forth in an affidavit by a party or his counsel, that disqualifies, and not his belief. In proceedings in attachment, sec. 5522, Rev. Stat. provides that the clerk shall make an order of attachment when there is filed in his office an affidavit of the plaintiff showing, among other matters, the existence of any one of the grounds of attachment. In Coston v. Paige, 9 Ohio St., 397, it is decided that,

' “ The ground for an attachment may be stated in the affidavit in in the language of the statute, without specifying more particularly the facts intended to be alleged.”

An in the following cases, that such an affidavit is insufficient when made merely on belief. Dunlevy & Co. v. Schartz, 17 Ohio St., 640; Garner v. White, 23 Ohio St., 192; Endel v. Leibrock, 33 Ohio St., 254. And as bearing on the question see, Campbell v. Hall & Co., 1 Kas., 488; Atchison v. Bartholow, 4 Kas., 124; Thompson v. Higginbotham, 18 Kas., 42.

At common law, and in this state until a very recent date, only interest required a change of venue or disqualified a judge, and the facts upon which the interest arose had to be set out. Knaggs v. Conant, 2 Ohio 26; State ex rel. v. Winget, 37 Ohio St., 153.

The statute is very broad. The truth of the fact set cut is not subject to inquiry, at least not in that case, and to hold that a party or his [524]*524counsel can disqualify a judge to sit whenever he can bring himself to believe that the judge has a prejudice against him or a bias for his adversary, by making merely such a recusation, might be to open wide the door to very grave abuse. One case has come before us at this term in which a party and his counsel had come from a distance to be present at a trial, and in which on the morning the case was set for trial such an affidavit was filed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brenner v. Weaver
1 Kan. 488 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1863)
City of Atchison v. Bartholow
4 Kan. 124 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1866)
Mound City Mutual Life Insurance v. Twining
12 Kan. 475 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1874)
Thompson v. Higginbotham
18 Kan. 42 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1877)
Burke v. Mayall
10 Minn. 287 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1865)
Knaggs v. Conant
2 Ohio 26 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1825)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio Cir. Dec. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barclay-v-salmon-ohcirctfayette-1898.