Bogart v. Cox

4 Ohio C.C. 289
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio C.C. 289 (Bogart v. Cox) 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
Bogart v. Cox, 4 Ohio C.C. 289 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Cox, on the 5th day of May, 1888, filed his petition in the court of common pleas, against the plaintiff in error, seeking to recover a judgment against him for a balance of $1,314.66, with interest thereon from January 7, 1887, claimed to be due on an account for boarding, working, and care rendered by him to defendant’s intestate, in his life-time, commencing January 7, 1877, and ending January 7, 1887, at the rate of $3.00 per week. The account, on which the action appears to be founded, states the account for each year separately, in this manner;

“ From January 7, 1877, to January 7, 1878, 48 weeks, at $3.00 per week, $144.00.

And it gives credit for each year separately, thus, varying as to the amounts credited each year:

“ 1877. Dec. 31. By cash and labor, $25.45.”

The answer of the administrator admits that Sells did board with the plaintiff a part of the time claimed, but denies that he was there for so long a period, as was charged. 2nd, it charges that the plaintiff was fully paid by Sells, in his life-time, in cash and groceries, for all his claim, and, 3rd, it alleges that each item of the account prior to April 28, 1882, was barred by the statute of limitations. The reply of the plaintiff denied these allegations of the answer.

It is assigned for error in this proceeding, first, that at the trial of the case, the court allowed the plaintiff to testify as to what he claimed was his account book, and that the book itself was then received in evidence.

The fact is, as shown by the bill of exceptions* that Cox, without objection, testified that the book in question was [291]*291his^book of original entries’,; that the entries therein were made by him at the time they purport to have been made. The book itself was then admitted against the objection of the defendant.

If the claim of the plaintiff was founded on a book account, as it evidently was, (for the proof offered in the case that the parties had agreed on the price to be charged for boarding, did not change the nature of the suit, or make the items enclosed, improper subjects of a book account), Cox was a competent witness against the administrator, to testify in regard to its being his book, as he did.

There is a serious question, however, whether his own evidence, taken in connection with the book itself, justified the court in admitting it to go to the jury, under the authority of paragraph 6 of sec. 5242, Rev. Stats. The charges against Sells were by the week, while in the book produced, they do not purport to have been made until the expiration of the year during which the boarding was furnished, and although the plaintiff testified that the entries were made at the time they purport to have been made, not a single one of the charges against Sells has a date to it., and the credits appear only under the months. And the charges so made in gross, after the expiration of the year, during which the boarding, so charged for, was furnished, were not so contemporaneous with the transaction purporting to be recorded, or so much a part of the res gestae, as to make them either of weight as evidence of such weekly or daily transactions, or which, according to the authorities, is requisite to constitute it a valid book of accounts. See 1st G-reenleaf on Evidence, sec. 118, and cases there cited.

But if the court erred in admitting this book on the evidence of Cox alone, there was other evidence subsequently offered, which rendered it admissible. Two other witnesses testified that during the running of the account, the book itself was frequently seen and examined by Sells. That when any money was paid to the wife of Cox, or groceries furnished, the plaintiff would enter the credit therefor in the book, often in the presence of Sells himself. That he thus had the opportunity of seeing the charges therein [292]*292against him, and the credits given to him. If this be true, and he made no complaint as to these entries, this would'be evidence tending to prove his assent to their correctness, and-in such case the book was competent to be seen and considered by the jury, that it might thus know just what it was that Sells had seen and assented to. And although the book may have been improperly received when it was, yet, if afterwards it became competent; no prejudice resulted to the defendant from the action of the court complained of.

Was there error in any of the rulings of the court as to the issue made as to the statute of limitations? One question which is raised by the evidence, and the charge of the court given and refused is, as to the effect to be given to payments made by Sells, by groceries or cash, to Cox, where the latter had a running account against him, and nothing appears to show that at the time of such payments anything was said or done by Sells to indicate that he knew the' amount or items of charges against him, or that it was part payment of a larger sum then due. There is no satisfactory evidence to show that Sells at the time of the payments, which are claimed to have the effect to give the right of action for six years, from the time of such payments on the items of the account, which would otherwise have been barred, examined the account, or knew its amount, or stated that it was in part payment of the whole thereof. The only testimony which tends to show any knowledge even of the charges, is that which says that at various times he had the book and examined it. But we think this was not sufficient to show that he made the^payment on the account as contained in the book,!;when he saw it, even if it then was in the same condition as it now is, which from its appearance and other circumstances disclosed in the case, we greatly doubt.

It must be conceded under the*decision in the case of Courson, ex'r v. Courson, 19 Ohio St. 454, that each item of this account, which accrued prior to May-5, 1882, was barred by the statute, unless the payments claimed to have been made by Sells within the six years prior to the commencement of the suit, prevented this. Sec. 4992,]Rev. Stats.,provides, that “when [293]*293payment has been made upon any demand founded on contract, or a written acknowledgment thereof, or promise to pay the same has been made and signed by the party to be charged, an action may be brought thereon within the time herein limited, after such payment, acknowledgment or promise.”

We are of the opinion that a simple payment under the circumstances stated, did not have this effect. It is to be noted that both the acknowledgment of, and the promise to pay the debt (which have precisely the same effect as a payment), are required to be in writing. As stated by Judge Day in deciding the case of Marienthal v. Morton, 16 Ohio St. 570, “it is apparent that the legislature did not intend to enlarge the facilities for taking cases out of the statutory bar. Before this can now be effected by the acknowledgment of an existing debt, or a promise to pay the same, it must be in writing, signed by the party to be charged thereby. No change is made in the effect of a part payment of a debt.”

We must look, then, to the authorities to see under what circumstances payment has been held to have this effect. One of the clearest and most explicit cases we have seen on this point is that of Vaugh v. Hankinson’s Adm’r, 55 N. J. L.

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4 Ohio C.C. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bogart-v-cox-ohiocirct-1890.