Baum v. Harrison

9 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 257
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 257 (Baum v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baum v. Harrison, 9 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 257 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Gorman, J.

Heard on motion for new trial.

This cause is here on appeal from a judgment of the justice of the peace. The action is one brought by the plaintiff, Jacob Baum, in replevin to recover the possession of a safe. The evidence and the record disclose that the action was begun against the defendant, who is the assignee in trust for the benefit of the creditors of Harry Arenberg, after the deed of assignment was executed, delivered and filed in the Court of Insolvency of Hamilton County, and after the assignee had qualified and was in actual possession of the safe taken under the proceedings in replevin. The constable in ,the action before the justice took possession of the safe, held it until the day set for trial as the statute provides, and on that day, the plaintiff having given the bond required by the statute, turned the safe oyer to plaintiff. No re-delivery bond was ever executed or given by the defendant assignee, and the safe continued to remain in the possession of plaintiff up to the day of trial in this court, and he is still in his possession so far as the record discloses.

On the trial before this court on the appeal from the justice, the evidence brought out showed conclusively that the safe in question was originally sold by the plaintiff to Harry Arenberg about seven months before Arenberg made an assignment for the benefit of creditors to Joseph T. Harrison. The agreement to purchase the safe was in writing and provided that the sale price of the safe should be $400; an old safe of Arenberg’s was to be taken as part payment at an agreed price of $100. Arenberg was to pay $50 cash on delivery of the safe, and the balance in installments of $25 every two months thereafter, until the purchase price was fully paid; and the written agreement further provided that the title to the safe thus sold and the ownership thereof were to remain in the vendor, Jacob Baum, until the deferred installments of the purchase price were fully paid. This agreement was duly signed, witnessed and acknowledged by Arenberg and on December 31, 1907, /oar days after the deed of assignment was filed, this agreement or a copy thereof with the affidavit required by the statute; Section 4155-2, Revised Statutes, was filed with the recorder of Hamilton county, • and before this action was commenced in the justice’s court.

[259]*259The evidence further disclosed that Arenberg never paid the $50 which was to have been paid on delivery of the safe, but that the safe was delivered without receiving this payment some time in April, 1907, and numerous demands were made on Arenberg by plaintiff’s agents to make this- payment. In August, 1907, the defendant executed and delivered to plaintiff twelve promissory notes each for $25 and all dated August —, 1907, about three months after the delivery of the safe and the execution of the contract of sale. One of these notes for $25 was paid by Arenberg before the assignment to Harrison was made. The evidence further disclosed that the plaintiff still has the remaining eleven notes and Arenberg’s old safe, and that he never refunded or tendered to Arenberg or Harrison, his assignee, any money or offered or tendered back the notes or the old safe turned in at $100. The notes given by Arenberg contain a condition similar to that contained in the contract of sale, to-wit, that the title and ownership of the safe were to remain in Jacob Baum until all the notes were fully paid; but neither were these notes- nor copies thereof ever filed with the recorder of Hamilton county.

Upon the close of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant offered testimony which was admitted without objection that the safe at the time it was taken under the proceedings in replevin was reasonably worth $250. There was no other evidence as to the value of the safe when it was taken or at any other time. It was in the possession of Arenberg and his assignee, Harrison, about seven months. There was no evidence offered by defendant as to the reasonable value of the use of the -safe since it was taken in replevin, nor was there any evidence tending to show that the defendant, Harrison, assignee, suffered any damages by reason of the detention of the safe since it was taken by-virtue of the writ issued by the justice on the trial below.

The original contract containing the recorder’s file marks and the notes were offered and admitted in evidence. This was practically all the evidence offered by either of the parties.

At the conclusion of all the evidence the court instructed the jury that inasmuch as the evidence showed the transaction between Baum and Arenberg to be a contract of conditional sale, as provided for in Sections 4155-2 to 4155-4, Revised Statutes, [260]*260and as plaintiff failed, before the commencement of the action, to tender or refund any money, the notes or the old safe, that he could not maintain the action, and that on the plaintiff’s evidence their verdict must be in favor of the defendant; and as provided in Section 6620, Revised Statutes-, the jury were instructed to find the damages which the defendant suffered, which was the value of the safe when taken as shown by the evidence. Under these instructions the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff for $250 and one cent damages for the wrongful detention.

The motion for a new trial is predicated on the ground: That the jury should have been instructed for .the plaintiff and not for the defendant for the following reasons:

First. It is urged by counsel for plaintiff that the failure of plaintiff to tender back any portion of the money, the notes or the old safe was not a condition precedent to the right of plaintiff to maintain the action in replevin, because it is claimed that the old safe and the notes, or at least the notes were not payments, and that aside from the notes and the old safe taken in at $100, there was actually paid but $25, the amount of one of the notes, less than 25 per cent, of the contract price. On this point the court was at the time of the trial, and is still of the opinion that the notes were given and accepted three months after the sale of the safe as part payment, and that the plaintiff was bound to tender back the notes, old safe and the cash payment, less- a reasonable compensation for the use of the safe during the time it was in Arenberg’s possession, before he could take possession of the safe, either with or without process of law. It seems to the court that it was the intention of the Legislature to restore to the vendee what he had parted with under the contract, in case the vendor rescinds the contract by taking possession of the goods and chattels, and to compensate the vendor for the injury, if any, done to the goods and chattels, and allow him a reasonable 'sum for the use the vendee has had of the property while in his possession. A fair and equitable construction of Section 4155-3, Revised Statutes, would lead one to believe that this was what the Legislature had in mind when it enacted this section, and that the thing to be tendered or refunded was not only the actual money paid under the contract, but the equiva[261]*261lent thereof in the shape of 'other property and notes. It wordd be inequitable and unjust to permit the vendor to retain valuable property and notes of the vendee and at the same time recover back the goods and chattels for which, or in part for which, these things other than money were given. This would be a case with a vengeance of one “having his loaf and eating it too.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baum-v-harrison-ohctcomplhamilt-1909.