Bausch v. McConnell

13 Ohio C.C. 640
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio C.C. 640 (Bausch v. McConnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bausch v. McConnell, 13 Ohio C.C. 640 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Haynes, J.

In this case a motion has been submitted to this court to strike out from the second amended petition certain portions of the petition. This raises a question of considerable interest in regard to the extent to which amendments may be allowed in appeal cases after the cases have arrived in this court.

The amended petition is,in substance, the original petition with the addition of a single party and a single averment in regard to him. It sets out, in substance, that the plaintiff recovered a judgment against William W. McConnell, for a certain sum of money, and issued execution upon that judgment, which has been returned “no property found.-’ It then avers that Catherine A. McConnell, who was deceased before the commencement of the action, during her lifetime was the owner of the undivided one-half of three lots in Oliver’s addition to Toledo, Lucas county, Ohio. “That she was a partner and had an interest with defendant, Bridget O’Neill, in operating a flour and grist mill at Toledo, Ohio, under the firm and style of McConnell & Company, said defendants being the only proprietors,’’ That she died in 1890; that at the time of her decease she was the owner in fee simple of the above described property; that is, of the undivided half, and that she was, with the defendant, Bridget O’Neill, operating said flour and grist mill at the place and in the manner aforesaid. That she died intestate, leaving to her husband, William W, McConnell, a dower interest in said real property, and to her daughter, Clare Taylor, the fee pimple title in said real property. That the rents and profits arising from said real property are now and ever since decedent’s death have been enjoyed and received by said JVlcConnell or said Clare Taylor, or both of them, concerning which plaintiff is not informed. That said flour and grist mill is still conducted under the firm name and [642]*642style of McConnell & Company, and that said McConnell is now, and ever since decedent’s death has been enjoying and receiving the profits and shares arising from said business which said Catherine A. McConnell, deceased, would be entitled to, were she now alive, That said McConnell has a dower interest in said real estate and also an interest in said flour and grist mill business; that the defendant, Clare Taylor, is the only legal heir and legatee of said Catherine A. McConnell,is the owner in fee simple of said real estate, and has an interest in said flour and grist mill business; that said Bridget O’Neill owns and holds an undivided one-half of lots No. 346, etc,, and that Milton Taylor claims some interest in the property. “Wherefore plaintiff asks that said defendants and each of them may be required to answer this petition and fully and truly set up, account for and disclose their respective interests and properties aforesaid; and that said dower interest of said William W. McConnell may be assigned to him, and the same or the rents and profits arising therefrom together with all the rights and interests of all the defendants therein be subjected to the payment of the judgments and costs of this suit, and for all other and further relief, orders and judgment to which the plaintiff may in equity be entitled.”

Now, a judgment having been rendered for the defendants upon the trial of the case upon that petition, the plaintiff below appealed to this court, and after the case was filed here, and at the last term of this court, the plaintiff obtained leave to file an amended petition, denominated a second amended petition.

In that petition they proceed to set out the judgment that was obtained, and then proceed to give a history of the transaction wherein they say that this note upon which the judgment was rendered was executed by a firm known as McConnell & Rockwell, and they claim that McConnell was a partner with a certain party in Findlay, Ohio, for many years under the firm name of McConnell & Rockwell, running a grist mill there; that that firm became insolvent and made an assignment, and the mill property at Findlay was sold and purchased in the name of Mrs. Catherine McConnell, with another party by the name of Kirk, and that it was bid in for a certain sum of money, perhaps $5,500, and a mort[643]*643gage was given, and thereafter the business was carried on under the name of Catherine McConnell and this man Kirk, but that the whole business was done and the work all performed by William W. McConnell, and, although the property was taken and carried on under the name of Catherine McConnell, William W. McConnell was the real party who carried on the business. That this business was profitable, and with the moneys and profits arising from that business they were able to pay off the mortgage and accumulate money; that finally, some years afterwards, that property was sold at such a price that the McConnells received something like $20,000, and thereafter came to Toledo and purchased this property and an arrangement was made whereby the business was carried on there under the name of Me-' Connell & O'Neill — the property being taken in the name of Catherine McConnell, and the business carried on in the name of the firm as I have stated, but that the purchase price was paid out of the $20,000 aforesaid, and that the business was carried forward from that time until the death of Mrs. McConnell by William W. McConnell, who did all the work and labor,and who had the whole supervision and control of the same as if it had been his own,

In 1890 Mrs. McConnell died, and the business was still continued — Mr. McConnell carrying it on, and the firm name was unchanged; but an undivided one-half of the property devolved by descent upon Mrs. Taylor, and that McConnell had one-third interest in the property. It avers that this whole business was carried on from the beginning to the end in the name of Mrs. Connell — so far as the Mc-Connells were concerned, was put in her name with intent to defraud creditors and with the purpose of keeping it from the creditors of William McConnell. It avers, also, I think, that it was in trust for him — was held for him; that it was his property all the way through; and they pray for a sale of the whole property and that it may be subjected to the payment of the plaintiff’s debt.

Now, the defendant, Mrs. Taylor, prays the court to strike out all that which relates to the fact that the real estate was held in trust for the plaintiff, or all the averments which seek to subject her interest, in the legal title to the property, and the payment of the debts of McConnell, and state that the [644]*644suit was originally brought simply to subject the dower interets of William McConnell to the payment of this judgment, so far as the real estate was concerned, and not to allow the claim under the averments of the petition, which bring into controversy the title to the whole of the land, which is, in effect, the bringing into the case of a new cause of action after it has come into this court, and they set out that the only jurisdiction of the court is an appellate jurisdiction; and that the bringing into the action of a new cause of action is not the exercise of the appellate jurisdiction of the court, and that this court has no right to assume any such jurisdiction.

The case is a close one, and the question is an interesting one, and perhaps, I may say, a difficult one.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio C.C. 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bausch-v-mcconnell-ohiocirct-1895.