Briggs v. Hutson

160 N.E. 860, 27 Ohio App. 93, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 375, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 336
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 160 N.E. 860 (Briggs v. Hutson) 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
Briggs v. Hutson, 160 N.E. 860, 27 Ohio App. 93, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 375, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 336 (Ohio Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

By the Court.

This case is one in chancery and is here on appeal from the court of common pleas of Fayette county, in which court the plaintiff, Os Briggs, brought a civil action seeking to subject the property of one of the defendants, Rufus W. Hutson, to the payment of several judgments entered upon cognovit notes, praying that the several defendants set up the liens which the record shows they may have upon said property, that the court determine their priorities, and that the property be ordered sold to satisfy the same.

In the answer filed by said Rufus W. Hutson, he alleged that the said cognovit notes, upon which the judgments were based, were not signedby him; that his name which appears on said notes was forged; that there were irregularities in the obtaining of said judgments and that same are absolutely void.

To this answer Os Briggs filed a reply, in which he- alleged that the several defenses set forth by Rufus W. Hutson were put in issue in a certain civil action between the same parties in the Court of Appeals of Fayette-county, and were fully heard, and that the issues thus made resulted in a judgment in his favor.

*95 To this plea of former judgment, Rufus W. Hut-son claims that said judgment obtained in the Court of Appeals was secured by fraud practiced by said Os Briggs, in that he and his attorneys and agents entered into a conspiracy with certain persons who were witnesses in that case to give perjured testimony upon matters material to said trial, and that they did give such perjured testimony. He also alleges in his said answer that the several issues and causes of actidn litigated and decided in said Court of Appeals were not the same as set up in the instant case, and denies that they have been adjudicated.

Substantially the same issues are raised by the pleadings with reference to the cognovit judgment entered upon the note of Malissa Allen.

The consideration of the several pleadings in this case between the several parties has required a great deal of time and patience on our part in order to separate the several issues and to find the relevant evidence in the great mass of testimony which has been submitted to us for our consideration, and we find from such examination and the view we take of the evidence and the law that so far as the judgments of Os Briggs and Malissa Allen are concerned the claims as to the perjured testimony are immaterial and do not in any way affect the legal effect to be given to the several judgments entered in their favor.

From the evidence we find that Homer Hutson, for a good and valuable consideration, gave to Os Briggs and Malissa Allen his several notes, containing powers of attorney to confess judgment against the makers thereof, to which notes, without au *96 thority, he signed the name of his father, Rufus W. Hutson, as one of the makers thereof. After these several notes became due, Os Briggs and Malissa Allen took the several judgments in the court of common pleas on said notes, as stated in their pleadings, and so far as the records of said judgments are concerned they show that said judgments were rendered against the makers of said notes by virtue of said forged powers of attorney.

Later, the suits in equity hereinbefore referred to were brought by Rufus W. Hutson to enjoin Os Briggs and Malissa Allen et al. from enforcing the collection of the judgments rendered against him, on the ground that the powers of attorney attached to said notes were forgeries, and that, therefore, the court of common pleas which rendered said judgments did not acquire jurisdiction over the person of said Rufus W. Hutson and the said several judgments were consequently void.

After the decision in the court of common pleas was given, the cases were taken on appeal to the Court of Appeals of said county, and that court found that Rufus W. Hutson had authorized his said son, Homer, to sign his name to said several notes • and powers of attorney, and that the judgments rendered upon said notes were valid and binding upon said Rufus W. Hutson.

Thereafter, Os Briggs brought the instant case against the said Rufus W. Hutson, and others, in the court of common pleas of said county, which has been appealed to this court, as hereinbefore stated, and has been submitted to this court upon the evidence hereinbefore referred.to.

It is claimed that there were- certain irregularities *97 in the procedure in the cases in which said cognovit judgments were entered; but we are of the opinion that the irregularities would not invalidate the judgments if the notes and powers of attorney were genuine or authorized.

Upon the evidence we have no hesitancy in finding that perjured testimony, which, however, was merely cumulative, was offered, in said other case in the Court of Appeals, and that such testimony related to a fact which the Court of Appeals found to be material, to wit, that Rufus W. Hutson had authorized his son Homer to sign his name to said notes and powers of attorney. But from the evidence before us we find that said original judgments in favor of Os Briggs and Malissa Allen were valid and binding upon Rufus W. Hutson, regardless of the question whether or not he authorized his name to be signed to said notes, and regardless of the question whether or not perjured testimony was introduced at said trial in the Court of Appeals.

The record discloses that said Briggs and Allen notes were shown to Rufus Hutson, and that he employed an attorney, to whom he made known that his signature on each of said notes had been forged by his son, and that after consultation with 'said attorney and members of his family, and after due deliberation, he authorized his attorney to make a proposition to Briggs and Allen and their attorney, which proposition was so made by Rufus Hutson’s attorney in his presence to Os Briggs and his attorney, which proposition was that Briggs and Allen should take judgment upon said notes, the same as if the signatures of Rufus Hutson thereon were genuine, and permit Rufus Hutson to be certified *98 in said judgments as surety, and delay execution and. collection of said judgments for one year, so as to extend the time of payment to Homer and Rufus Hutson and prevent the forced sale of their property and permit them, if possible, to save some of their property. It was the further understanding and agreement that said Rufus Hutson should be secured as such surety'by a chattel mortgage given by Homer to Rufus upon the personal property then owned by Homer, which mortgage was given and filed — all in accordance with said agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
160 N.E. 860, 27 Ohio App. 93, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 375, 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-v-hutson-ohioctapp-1927.