Bloomberg v. Roach, Recr.

182 N.E. 891, 43 Ohio App. 178, 13 Ohio Law. Abs. 87, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 535
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 891 (Bloomberg v. Roach, Recr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloomberg v. Roach, Recr., 182 N.E. 891, 43 Ohio App. 178, 13 Ohio Law. Abs. 87, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 535 (Ohio Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

*89 SHERICK, J.

It is well settled that the power to punish for contempt is inherent in all courts, for such power is necessarily incident to the exercise of all judicial functions; without that inherent power, courts would be mere puppets and their orders farcical.

As pointed out in State ex Turner, Atty. Gen., v Albin, 118 Oh St, 527, 161 NE, 792, the Legislature has- defined contempt in §12137, GC, but the language of that section is not exclusive, and the statute merely regulates the power of the court to punish for contempt, instead of creating the power.

Examination of the next succeeding section, §12138, GC, discloses how contempt proceedings shall be prosecuted, and, among other things, it is made necessary that a charge in writing shall be filed with the clerk.

Our attention is further drawn to §12143 GC, which regulates the power of the court to punish for contempt in certain cases, upon which the order of commitment in this action is based. This section is as follows: “When the contempt consists in the omission to do an act which the accused yet can perform, he may be imprisoned until he performs it.”

There can be no question that there are four or five alternative remedies when a purchaser at a judicial sale fails to comply with his bid and fulfill his contract of purchase with the court. It is not for the purchaser, however, to dictate the remedy, but for the court and those injured thereby to make choice of the means of redress for the wrong' done by the purchaser’s noncompliance.

It is well settled that a court of equity has jurisdiction to punish for contempt a purchaser at a judicial sale, made under its order, who refuses without reason or cause to complete his purchase according to the terms of the sale when he is yet able and can perform.

Upon bidding at a sale made by a receiver, under an order and decree in chancery, it is contemplated and understood by the purchaser that he bids with full notice that the sale to him will be subsequently reported to the court for its confirmation, and, when the sale to him has been confirmed, and the property ordered sold to him, he subjects himself to the jurisdiction *90 of the court, and becomes a party to the proceedings in which the sale was had, for he has voluntarily submitted himself to that court’s jurisdiction; and the order of a court ratifying and confirming a sale for cash amounts to a decree for the payment of money, and, if that court could not protect the solemnity of its order, it would not be of any force at all. And, considering the order of confirmation as a decree for payment, it must follow that the purchaser who refuses to comply therewith is in contempt of court when he is able to perform and yet gives no adequate reason for his nonperformance.

The complainant herein assorts that there is no order on which a contempt charge in this instance could be grounded, due to the fact that the confirmation and order of sale do not provide that Bloom-berg should pay the amount of his bid into court.

The order is in the usual form; that is, the receiver is ordered to convey the property to the purchaser! upon receipt of the purchase price. Bloomberg and his attorney at time of sale must be held to know the inevitable result of the sale’s confirmation; and it seems to this court that to adopt the construction now insisted upon by the plaintiff in error would be preposterous, for a court may assume that any one who voluntarily submits himself to the court’s jurisdiction will obey its lawful orders. Courts recognize that it is something more than caprice that prompts one to bid at a judicial sale; for one may not trifle with the rights of others, as complainant would here do with the rights of the creditors of the insolvent market company.

It is urged that the judgment of contempt violates Article I, §15, of the Bill of rights of the Constitution of Ohio, in that it is an order of imprisonment for debt. But it must be remembered that this is not a suit to recover a sum of money owed by the defendant to the receiver of the court; nor can it be said to be a claim originally founded on contract express or implied. Its origin is in the wrongful act of the plaintiff in error in causing an order to be made in a proceeding then pending, to which he was not a party, but into which he voluntarily injected himself, and thereafter would obstruct.

■ It is not the nonpayment of the purchase price that is the gravamen of this proceeding; it is the failure of the plaintiff in error in not abiding the court’s order, against the consequences of which the statute was designed. The constitutional provision was, no doubt, induced, and rightly so, to abrogate the harshness of the practice under the common law of imprisonment for debt; but it is just as certain that it was never intended as a shield for one who, as a purchaser at judicial sale, blocks the due course of justice by his wrongful act. The public is not interested in whether or not Bloomberg pays his debt, but it is interested that the due course of legal procedure be not interfered with, and that judicial sales be not made a comedy and the courts rendered impotent to protect the rights of those who seek their protection.

This court has no doubt that the trial court rightfully found the plaintiff in error to be in contempt of court. But, when the punishment meted out by it is considered, a grave question presents itself.

Our Supreme Court in the case of Second Nat’l Bank of Sandusky v Becker, 62 Oh St, 289, 56 NE, 1025, 51 L.R.A., 860, announced that §5646, Revised Statutes, now §12143, GC, must be strictly construed so as to avoid conflict with the inhibitions of Article I, §15, of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution of Ohio.

There is but one conclusion as to the result of the punishment inflicted in this case, and that is that the court’s further order is the equivalent of compelling, under threat of imprisonment, the specific performance of the bidder’s offer to purchase the leasehold. In other words, the court, in the exercise of this extraordinary power, punishment for contempt of its orders and process, is made the vehicle of an equitable remedy to accomplish the purpose of compelling specific performance of the contract of purchase, and this is accompanied by a judgment for costs, and imprisonment until such are paid. It therefore seems to us that the committing court lost sight of the fact in its final conclusion that it was aggrieved, and found that the receiver and the corporate creditors were asking specific performance, and that it was enter - -taming the proceeding for the enforcement of a contract, express or implied, in fact a debt, which it had no power to collect by imprisonment in contravention of constitutional inhibition. Specific performance is not the purpose of contempt proceedings, or of the statutes enacted pursuant thereto.

In Pierce, Assignee v Stewart, 61 Oh St 522, 424, 56 NE, 201, although the question does not seem to have been in issue, it is said: “The punishment, as for contempt of *91 court under §5397, Revised Statutes, (now §11687, GC), is not the equivalent of specific performance, and cannot be made a substitute therefor.”

This rule is likewise recognized in Ex Parte French, 4 W.L.G., 209, 3 Dec. Rep., 175.

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 891, 43 Ohio App. 178, 13 Ohio Law. Abs. 87, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloomberg-v-roach-recr-ohioctapp-1930.