Brinkerhoff v. Smith

57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 610
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 610 (Brinkerhoff v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinkerhoff v. Smith, 57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 610 (Ohio 1897).

Opinions

Bradbury, J.

This action of the court together with the former entry of dismissal constituted a final judgment terminating the action in the court of common pleas. Prom this judgment dismissing their several answers and cross-petitions, each of the dismissed defendants gave notice of appeal. Three of them, Mollie V. Harrison, H. R. Smith and Jenner & Tracy gave bond and perfected the appeal.

The motion to dismiss the answers and cross-petitions of the above named, five defendants was renewed in the circuit court and overruled. A motion was also made to dismiss the appeal, one ground of which was that Joseph Beifield & Co., and The Marker Pocket Book Co., had failed to put in an appeal bond. This motion was also overruled. Thereupon the cause was tried to the circuit court upon its merits. The court finding the amounts respectively due to Mollie V. Harrison, H. R. Smith and Jenner & Tracy on their several notes executed by Mrs. P. L. Harrison, the mortgagor; the mortgage and contemporaneous agreement was decreed to constitute a general assignment for the equal benefit of ail her creditors.

[616]*616To this action of the circuit court, the plaintiff in error excepted, and has brought the cause here for review. The only questions arising on the record of sufficient interest to require consideration relate to the action of the circuit court in overruling the motion to dismiss the appeal, and in finding the amounts due on the claims of Mollie V. Harrison, H. R. Smith and Jenner & Tracy.

Two of the grounds only upon which the motion to dismiss the appeal rested will be considered.

1. Could the plaintiff below, upon coming to terms of settlement with, only a part of the defendants, rightfully dismiss the action as to all of them ?

2. If such right did not belong to the plaintiff, were the defendants who perfected the appeal, proper parties to the action, or were they mere interlopers who had no rights that they could assert therein ?

1. The plaintiffs below and three of the defendants, without the knowledge of the others, entered into an agreement by which they divided among themselves substantially all the proceeds of the stock of goods, and then sought by a dismissal of the action, to preclude further enquiry on behalf of those who had been excluded from participation in the division. If the plaintiff below had the right to dismiss his action, and the dismissal was effectual as to.all the parties, the action was ended when so dismissed, and the circuit court should have respected this right of the plaintiff and dismissed the appeal when its attention was called to the matter as was done by the motion under consideration.

[617]*617Doubtless the general rule is that the plaintiff in an action may dismiss it, and those defendants who have not set forth their claims, by an answer in the nature of a cross-petition, will not be heard to complain. Usually the claim of each defendant in an action, rests upon facts peculiar to it, and those facts differ from the facts upon which the claim of the plaintiff and that of every other defendant is founded. In the ease of a number of mortgages or mechanic’s liens, against the same property, for instance, the rights of the parties grow out of different transactions with the owner of the property, and of necessity, in order to entitle. him to call for affirmative relief, each party must set forth the facts that show his interest or lien upon the property, or its proceeds. If he does not, the record will not disclose the nature of his interest therein and therefore he cannot call on the court for affirmative independent action in his behalf.

This is not so in the action under consideration. The action was brought under section 6343, Revised Statutes, which provides: “All assignments in trust to a trustee or trustees in contemplation of insolvency with intent to prefer one or more creditors shall inure to the equal benefit of all creditors.” * * * qijie right 0f the plaintiff and that of each defendant to have the instruments executed by Mrs. P. L. Harrison declared an assigmment for the equal benefit of all her creditors, rested upon the same transaction. The facts and circumstances to be averred were those which disclosed that, in contemplation of insolvency, she had conveyed the property in question to a trustee with intent to prefer one or more of her creditors. If this was established, the proceeds of the property would be [618]*618divided among ali her creditors, instead of the favored few. The right of each one of them, therefore, depended upon the construction placed' by the court upon the transaction set forth in the petition. The facts and circumstances upon which the court must act having been stated in the petition, to restate them in an answer would seem tobe a work of superogation ; and where the creditors were numerous to require a restatement of them by each might seriously encumber the record, could serve no useful purpose and would not comport with that simplicity, sought to be attained by our code of civil procedure.

Each defendant who answers should, of course, set forth the facts that establish his character of creditor, thus showing he is within the protection of the statute, but we do not think he should be required to restate the facts which show that the conveyance falls within the statute. If content with the averments of the petition in this respect he may adopt, without repeating them.

The prayer to the answer and cross-petition of Joseph Biefleld & Co., as well as that to the answer and cross-petition of the Marker Pocket Book Co., contains the following reference to the averments of the petition respecting the trust character of the instruments in question; “ These defendants pray that the chattel mortgage given by Mrs. P. L. Harrison to R. Brickerhoff as Trustee, etc. * * * may be declared a general assignment for the benefit of all the creditors, etc. * * * The nature of the proceedings in a ease under section 6343, Revised Statutes, as this was, is such that doubtless, the meresettingforthof his claim by a defendant in his answer and cross-petition, would justify anassumption that he had adopted the averments of the peti[619]*619tion respecting the character of the conveyance; his omission to include in his own pleading any averments on the subject is explainable only by that assumption. Being content with the sufficiency of the petition in this respect he may well omit to incumber the record by repeating them. But if some reference to these averments of the petition should be required in an answer and cross-petition then we think the reference contained in the prayer above quoted was sufficient for that purpose, and without the consent of the defendants who had thus answered, the plaintiff could not dismiss the action as to them. Therefore their right to proceed in the action was not affected by a dismissal so had, without their consent and its reinstatement upon their motion was right and proper.

2. Were Mollie V. Harrison, H. R. Smith and Jenner and Tracy proper parties to the action? They were the only parties to perfect an appeal by giving bond. Neither of them had been made parties at the time the action was dismissed. However on its reinstatement upon the motion of Joseph Beifleld & Co. and the Marker Pocket Book Co., the former by answer and cross-petition brought them into the action. This could be done by a defendant as well as by the plaintiff, for a defendant’s right to bring new parties into an action is as perfect in that respect as is the right of a plaintiff.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 Ohio St. (N.S.) 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkerhoff-v-smith-ohio-1897.