Brady v. Palmer

19 Ohio C.C. 687
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. 687 (Brady v. Palmer) 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
Brady v. Palmer, 19 Ohio C.C. 687 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

The above-entitled cases come into this court on error, and are very much alike. They were all actions brought by the defendants in error respectively against Brady, in the court of common pleas of this county, to recover judgments upon alleged judgments theretofore obtained against him in the circuit court of Grant county, Indiana. The answer in each case is a general denial and a plea of mil tie! record.

Some evidence was submitted of what purported to be a record of the proceedings in that court, and in each case the plaintiffs below recovered judgment for the amount of the judgment that appears to have been obtained by them respectively in the circuit court of Grant county, Indiana, with interest to date.

The plaintiff in error urges various grounds for the reversal of these judgments. As my time is limited, I will go over them very rapidly, taking them from the plaintiff’s brief. It is said that:

“First: The petition in the Palmer case recites that Palmer, on the 19th of November, 1896, recovered a judgment in the Grant county circuit court of Indiana, on a cross-petition wherein John W. Cooper was plaintiff and Frank E. Brady and the plaintiff Palmer were defendants. There is no proof of this fact. The transcript does not show any suit pending wherein Palmer was a defendant or that he at any time filed a cross-petition in any action in the circuit court of Grant county, Indiana, against Frank E. Brady. The transcript of the record, at the top of the first page thereof, shows that [689]*689Palmer commenced a suit against Brady by filing his complaint and causing a summons to be issued. There is nothing to show that service was ever made on Brady, yet if Palmer made any recovery in that suit or in the Grant county circuit court of Indiana as shown by the transcript of the record m this case, it was on his complant as plaintiff, and not as a cross-petitioner, as alleged in the petition now before this court. We claim all of this shows a variance between the pleading and the proof, which, under the plea of nul tiel record, is fatal.”

It appears, as stated by counsel in his brief, that the action was entitled “ Palmer v. Brady”, and that the judgment was in fact recovered in favor of Palmer in the case of Cooper v. Brady. But the case of Cooper v. Brady was a case made up of many other cases consolidated, including this case of Palmer v. Brady and we think that the petition or complaint in the case of Palmer v. Brady, after the consolidation of these eases, amounted in fact and in substance to a cross-petition in the case of Cooper v. Brady — the consolidated- cases. There are some very technical rules in some jurisdictions, and were at common law, respecting the variance between the allegations and the proof, especially upon the plea of nul tiel record; but we do not think that these rules in their strictness apply or should apply under the civil code. See Revised Statutes, sections 5294 and 5295. We regard this variation, therefore, as immaterial: we think that the proof substantially sustains the allegations.

“Second: The petitions filed in the four cases at bar recite that the Grant county circuit court of Indiana ‘had acquired jurisdiction by personal service on the said Prank E. Brady.’ The transcript of the record of the Grant county circuit court of Indiana in evidence does not show that a summons was issued for Prank E. Brady in any of these cases on any cross-petition or in any other manner. The only summons that purports to have been issued was on the Palmer complaint, and no return of that was ever made. We insist that this is a fatal variance.”

Now, that statement of facts appears to be correct. But the petition also contains the averment that the parties appeared, and that these several judgments were entered- upon their agreement, which is a part of the record. This is disclosed by the record, and this allegation is made good by the proof, and therefore we think that the allegation as to personal servioe became immaterial and that it did no good and did no harm in the case. .

“Third: In the lower court the petitions were amended over the objection of the plaintiff in error, by interlineation, as follows: ‘By virtue of an agreement executed by the said Prank E.Brady to have judgment rendered against the said Prank E. Brady’, in the sum of, etc. The transcript of the record does not show such to be the case. The agreement set up in the transcript of the record, if any, was for a judgment against Prank E. Brady and George S. Calvert, not against Frank E. Brady alone, as alleged in the petition as amended. We insist that is a variance that is fatal on nul tiel record.”

Now, counsel is mistaken in saying that it is averred that this agreement was with Frank E Brady alone. Frank E. [690]*690Brady is the only one mentioned, it is true. It is averred that the agreement was with him and the judgment against him, btst it is not averred that the agreement was with him alone,or that the judgment was against him alone, and we think that the fact appearing that the agreement was with George S. Calvert also, and that the judgment went against George S. Calvert also, is immaterial.

“Fourth: The transcript of the record introduced in evidence shows that there were many more parties to the Indiana suit than alleged and set forth in the peFtion in these cases, making a variance between the pleadings and the evidence”.

That statement of fact is also true, and the same remark applies to it. Under our view of the matter, it is immaterial that there were other parties than those mentioned in the pe^ ion.

“Fifth: The transcript of the record taken in connection with the clerk’s answer to the fourth question in his deposition, shows clearly that the complete and final records in these ases have not been made. No pleadings are found in the transcript — simply ‘h. i.’, meaning ‘here insert.’ ”

And that is true. It runs all through the ' record. A great deal is omitted, the pleadings are omitted; but we think sufficient appears,, since the agreement to enter the judgment appears, and tha.t the judgment was entered in accordance with he agreement also appears.

“Sixth: The transcript of the record shows that there has been a mixture of suits and the clerk’s certificate shows that he certifies that the transcript is of the case of John W. Cooper v. .William H. Brady, whereas these suits are against Frank 33. Brady. ’ ’

Now that also is true, and we aré not able to understand j recisely how it happens that what is apparently the same has different titles; but the 'case is identified both in the transcript submitted and in each of the journal entries making a part of the transcript, and in the certificate of the clerk as case No. 8151 in the circuit court of Grant county. We presume it has een given different titles because it is a consolidated case and that instead of giving in each instance all the titles of all the oases, it has been given only the title of one of these cases mentioned in the journal entry. But there is sufficient we t hink to identify this record as the record pleaded in the peti • ion and as the same as that certified to by the clerk.

“Seventh: That there is no proof that the Union Supply Company and the National Supply Company are corporations, either foreign or domestic, and if foreign, as alleged in the petition, there is no proof that they have complied with the laws of Ohio.”

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-palmer-ohiocirct-1899.