Blinn v. Rickett

3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345, 15 Ohio Dec. 714, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 64
CourtLorain County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 7, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345 (Blinn v. Rickett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blinn v. Rickett, 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345, 15 Ohio Dec. 714, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 64 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Washburn, J.

The case of Blinn V. Rickett comes into this court on a bill of exceptions from the docket of Charles C. Lord, justice of the peace.

It appears from the bill of exceptions and the papers filed in the case, that Mr. Blinn, who is a non-resident of Lorain county, sued Mr. Rickett, who is also a non-resident of Lorain county, upon a note which was given for commercial fertilizer, and that an affidavit was filed, and attachment issued and served upon the railroad company which employed Rickett, and which ran through Lorain county. The railroad company, as garnishee, answered that it had money or funds in its possession belonging to the defendant.

Thereupon the defendant filed the following motion in the justice court:

“Now comes the defendant herein, and moves the court to discharge the attachment issued herein, fqr the reason that the affidavit upon which said attachment was issued is false, and the facts alleged therein untrue.”

[346]*346It appears from the evidence that was submitted to the court upon that motion, that the affidavit was untrue in all of its particulars, except that the defendant was a non-resident of Lorain county; that the claim was not for necessaries; that the defendant was not a single man, but on the contrary was the head and support of a family, wife and children, living with them and supporting them.

The justice upon the submitting of the motion, sustained the motion and discharged the attachment, and thereupon dismissed the case.

And it is claimed now, not that the justice erred in dismissing the attachment, because the evidence is overwhelming that it should have been dismissed; but it is claimed that the justice of the peace erred in dismissing the ease, for the reason that by filing said motion the defendant had entered his personal appearance in the action, and the action should thereafter have proceeded to judgment against him personally, although no property of the defendant was rightfully under the control of the court.

And that raises the question, what constitutes in Ohio an appearance to an action?

Now it is well settled by many adjudicated cases in the Supreme Court of this state, that where a person files a motion, demurrer or answer, which involves the merits of the case in any way, he thereby enters his appearance, although he specifically protests that he does not enter his appearance; that is so, I say, if the motion or other pleading goes to any other thing in the ease, except the jurisdiction of the court over his person; he enters an appearance, if the pleading filed involves the merits of the case in any way. That is, if he should file a motion objecting to the jurisdiction of the court as to the subject-matter, that would be an appearance, personal, and if it was decided that the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, then the party filing such motion would be in court for all purposes.

Now a motion to discharge an attachment is not a motion to the merits of the case; there are some authorities in Ohio, to [347]*347that effect, although at the hearing of this ease none were cited.

In the 7th Ohio Decisions, reprint, page 476, there is a decision by the district court, which was composed of Judges Avery, Burnet, Cox and Longworth. The syllabus of that case is:

“Appearing before a justice and moving for the discharge of an attachment issued on the ground of concealment, so that service can not be made, is not entering an appearance. ’ ’

It appears in that ease, however, and the record recites the fact that the motion contained a protest against entering his appearance. In the decision the court said:

“The defendant came into the court and 'moved that the attachment be discharged, and failed in his motion. In no other way did he enter an appearance. No doubt a party may appear to question whether the court has obtained jurisdiction over his property or person, and for that purpose alone, and the record recites that was the fact.”

It only differs from the case now being considered by the fact that this motion is not limited in its nature.

Then in the 11th Ohio Decisions, at page 418, the syllabus of the case reads:

“An appearance- for the purpose of a motion to dismiss the attachment, upon the ground that as no property has been attached, the court had not acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter, does not confer jurisdiction to render any judgment whatever. ’ ’

The court in deciding the ease said:

' “Upon the hearing came the defendant by his counsel, and ‘without entering his appearance herein, and without waiving any of his rights, and for the purpose oi this motion only, moves the court to dismiss the attachment herein and to release the property claimed to have been attached and garnisheed in this proceeding, for the reason that the said goods are not subject to attachment or garnishment, as the same were in transit at the time of the purported attachment and [348]*348garnishment thereof, and for the further reason that the order of attachment was not made effective by attachment of the property, and the court therefore has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter.’ The magistrate overruled the motion, and found that the appearance of the defendant was entered because of the filing of said motion, and entered a personal judgment against him for $293.59, the amount of plaintiff’s claim and interest and for costs. The defendant prosecutes these proceedings in error, claiming that -the magistrate erred in overruling his motion to dissolve the attachment and in entering personal judgment against him. It is clear that the magistrate could not properly render a personal judgment against the defendant as upon his appearance in court. There is ample authority for a proceeding, such as was defendant’s, to obtain a discharge of the attachment, appearing for that purpose only.”

It will be observed in this case also that the appearance was limited in the motion.

In 2 C. C:, at page 118, is a decision, which was rendered by Judge Shauck when he was on the circuit. In that case a suit was brought, an attachment was issued, and the defendant, Saxton, without submitting himself to the jurisdiction of the court for any other purpose, moved for a discharge of the attachment for reasons stated in his motion. The court overruled his motion to discharge the attachment, and he prosecuted error to the circuit court, and, after the error proceeding was filed in the circuit court, desiring to have his property discharged, he gave a bond, and the property was discharged, and upon hearing it was claimed that by the giving of that bond, and by the motion that the judge passed upon, he entered his appearance, and the court, in deciding it, said:

‘ ‘ The plaintiff in error was not served below, nor did he formally enter his appearance, nor by any act submit himself to the jurisdiction of the' court. He has not acknowledged the validity of the attachment proceedings, nor authorized his adversary to take any step in the belief that their validity would not be contested. We, therefore, find no ground upon which he can be held to be estopped from insisting that his property was wrongfully taken. ’ ’

[349]*349Of course, prosecuting error, unlike appeal, never enters appearance.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345, 15 Ohio Dec. 714, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blinn-v-rickett-ohctcompllorain-1905.