Board of Education v. Cosgrove

5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 343, 11 Ohio C.C. 163
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 343 (Board of Education v. Cosgrove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education v. Cosgrove, 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 343, 11 Ohio C.C. 163 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

CaedwEEE, J.

In the summer of 1891, Cosgrove was employed to superintend the schools in the village of Glenville. He commenced his employment, and was paid along until April, 1892. When the pay roll was passed in May, on the 5th of May, 1892, Cosgrove’s order was passed the same as all the others that the board was then to act upon, and he was allowed his order of $90.00. The treasurer, Moser, refused to pay the $90.00, .and he brought an action to compel Moser to pay him the money on the order issued by the board. That was commenced in this court and tried here, and the court required the treasurer to pay the money to Cosgrove, $90.00. Cosgrove went on and taught during part of that year, until the summer vacation, and the board didn’t allow him to teach the coming year. His employment was for two years, commencing in 1891, and ending in 1898. And he brought an action, and this is the action, for his pay for the year in which they did not allow him to teach, which was the second year of his employment.

The same defense is set up substantially to this action that was set up in the other action, that at the time that he entered upon the performance of the contract he was not capable of performing it — legally capable of performing the contract, in that he had no certificate covering the branches that he was to teach; and that being true, that he was not capable of carrying out the contract, and the board had a right to set it aside.-

To this, in reply, the plaintiff set up the judgment that he bad obtained in regard to the $90 — the suit involving the payment to him of the $90, and showed that although that suit was against Moser, the treasurer of the board, and this suit was against the board, yet he undertook to set out such facts as would make the board the real party in the first suit, and plead the first judgment as res judicata in this second suit. He [344]*344obtained his judgment in the common pleas court, and the board of education brings the.action here to have that judgment reversed.

The questions that we have not already decided in this case arise largely out of the introduction of this record into the evidence. Exceptions were taken to its introduction, and at various parts of the record as they were introduced, and it is claimed here that it was error to introduce it, and that the matter should not have been presented to the jury as it was by the court, and that allowing the record in the former case to go before the jury, by the court, was error, and various parts of the charge to the jury are excepted to by the village, and claiming there was error. But all these claims of error involve the one question, whether or not it was proper to plead as res judicaia a judgment to which the board was not nominally a party. Simply the treasurer was the party to that suit. And those questions are the only ones that we intend to say anything about in this opinion.

The question of the legality of the certificate was determined in the former action. The question of the nature of the contract and the construction of the contract between Cosgrove and the board of education was determined in the former action. As to whether his employment was that of a teacher, or that of merely a superintendent, that was' all determined. Whether the board required him to teach certain branches in their employment, or at any time during his employment, was determined in the former action. So that all those questions and all those is-' sues have heretofore been determined by us, and our opinion is furnished us in this case, and we are satisfied with it, and content with it as it stands.

That leaves then simply for consideration now the question of' whether it was proper to plead the judgment that was rendered in that case as a bar to the school board in this case when the school board was not nominally a party to that action. It was contended by Cosgrove below, that while the school board was not nominally a party to that action, yet the school board really conducted the defense of Moser, its .treasurer; employed the counsel, paid the costs of the action, determined how it should be finally disposed of — whether error should be takeú to the supreme court or not; and in fact it was claimed that the board of education took the matter entirely out of the hands of Moser by some resolutions it passed on the 2d day of June, 1892, before the disposition of that suit. The board got together, and after reciting the circumstances as the board understood them — that Cosgrove had no legal certificate; that the board of education had required him to teach certain branches that he was not qualified by law to teach in that he had no certificate to teach them, and that his being unable therefore to comply, or being unprepared to comply with his contract; that the board, set aside all relations between Cosgrove and the board. . Resolutions to that effect were passed, and the judge charged the jury below that these resolutions were broad enough to cover the $90.00 then in litigation between Moser and Cosgrove, and that it was virtually taking the matter entirely out of the hands of Moser, its treasurer, by canceling really the order that the board had issued and which Cosgrove was. seeking to have the treasurer pay.

Now, those resolutions, passed on the 2d day of June, were not before this court on the former trial, so that the suit then proceeded as ¿hough the board still had outstanding the order to Cosgrove for the $90.00, and that Moser, as treasurer, was refusing to pay it. Whereas, [345]*345the real facts, as they appear by this bill of exceptions, that existed at the time we decided that suit, was that the board of education had met on the 2d of June, and had canceled that order, so far as they could, by resolution; had canceled that order that they had issued to Cosgrove and which he was seeking to have paid; and by so doing it was contended below that the board of education had taken upon itself the control of that order, had wrested it from the hands of the treasurer, had canceled all authority for him to pay it, as it had canceled the order and he could only pay on an order, and that the board assumed the conduct of the trial from that on; that they appeared and testified in the case, they employed counsel; that they undertook to dispose of the case finally by having the costs charged to the board. Now, there is evidence in this record tending to show that. And the only question, the only legal question in the case, is this: whether a party may so identify himself with the case, that although he is not a party to the record in that case yet may so identify himself with it, and so participate in it, that that judgment in that case he may set up in his favor, if it is really in his favor, or that it may be plead against him if it is really against him.

We have examined the authorities on this question very extensively, but I will not undertake to go into them now. They are cited in Wells on Res Adjudicata and Stare Decisis, sections 15, 16,17, and in Herman on Estoppel and Res Judicata, sections 156, 157, 158, and Black on Judgments, section 540, and in other places.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 343, 11 Ohio C.C. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-cosgrove-ohcirctcuyahoga-1896.