Caldwell v. Brown

9 Ohio C.C. 691
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio C.C. 691 (Caldwell v. Brown) 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
Caldwell v. Brown, 9 Ohio C.C. 691 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

King, J.

The action was first brought before a justice of the peace,

Judgment was recovered by Brown, from which Caldwell appealed. In the common pleas there was filed a petition,and then an amended petition, and to this a motion, a demurrer and an answer. One question is made which I will dispose of at this time. The court overruled a motion to make the amended petition more definite x and certain. This petition seems reasonably definite; but if it were not so, I hardly think an exception is saved here. It appears, from the record, that defendant filed a general demurrer to the amended petition, which was heard at the spring term and overruled; and thereafter filed a motion to-[693]*693make the petition more definite and certain, and that was heard, some time later in the year, and overruled. The filing of the demurrer and the action of the court thereon, would preclude the defendant from taking advantage of defects in the form of the petition by a motion; therefore it was not error to overrule the motion. I want to say, in that connection, that it appears from the papers submitted that the court overruled the motion on the ground that facts were brought to its attention outside of the record, by affidavits — the affidavit of the plaintiff and the affidavit of defendant. Those do not properly come before this court, because no bill of exceptions was taken, and they could not be brought to the attention of this court except by a bill of exceptions. At the same time it is proper to remark that the petition could not be helped out by an affidavit; that the motion to make it more definite and certain must have been considered alone, upon the allegations of the petition as it stood, and if there were other allegations which it ought to have contained,then the motion should have been sustained — ’provided it had been filed in time. The case was tried on the amended petition and the amended answer and reply, and a verdict was found for the plaintiff below. The evidence is not set out in a bill of exceptions, but certain statements are made of what the evidence tended to show, for the purpose of bringing the attention of the court to questions which arose subsequent to the admission of testimony, and there are exceptions to the action of the court upon requests submitted by defendant below to the court to charge the jury and the action of the court in submitting certain questions to the jury, and the judgment of the court upon the verdict of the jury. It is claimed that the jury did not agree upon any verdict. Counsel for defendant submitted to the court and requested the court to give to the jury, in writing, as its special instructions, some fourteen in number; and also asked the court to submit to the jury, to answer when it returned [694]*694its verdict,ten questions, and the court increased the number to eleven, which were submitted. The jury returned a general verdict in favor of defendant; and it also answered as many of these questions as the jurors thought they could answer;, and the answers are consistent with the general verdict, so far as they answered them at all. To the third question, they said they could not agree. To the seventh, they could not agree; and to the eighth, that there was no evidence; their answer that there was no evidence, is borne out by the record, so far as it goes. The record snows that the defendant offered to prove a number of things relating to that question, and that the court sustained the objections to every offer of that kind, so that the record shows that there was no evidence before the jury; that is, as to whether there Had been another action commenced before a justice of the peace and previously dismissed. The jury were warranted in saying that they had no evidence upon which they could act. As to these two answers, where the jury say they cannot agree, it is urged by counsel for plaintiff in error, that that amounts to a disagreement of the jury upon the issues in the case. I may say, briefly, without entering into any discussion upon that subject, that we do not think it does in this case; but in any event the defendant below waived his right now to object, by permitting the jury to be discharged without objection, and not making any further request that the jury be required to make answer to these questions. Of the fourteen instructions submitted by the defendant below after the evidence was in and before argument, in writing, the court gave the most of them. Th® errors relied upon in connection with them are that in giving the fourth and fifth requests, also the sixth and twelfth, the court modified them by oral explanations to the jury; and • also that all of the requests which were given, the defendant below requested the court to permit the jury to take with them Tn their retirement, and that request of the defendant [695]*695the court overruled, and would not allow the jury to have the written requests which it gave.

The fourth request submitted was as follows:

(4.) “ It is not sufficient to charge the defendant with a liability on account of the labor performed by plaintiff’s sons, that the plaintiff show that said sons did work about the houses being constructed by defendant, unless he also show that defendant employed them for sucjh work.”

The court read to the jury the fourth request, and then said:

“The court have added to that the following, which we give you in the same connection: ‘If the defendant saw them,or either of them,at work from day to day for him,and expressed no dissatisfaction thereat, the jury may presume assent on defendant’s part to their so working for him, and allow plaintiff what such work is reasonably woith.’ ”

■ The court then read the fifth request, which is as follows:

. “The mere, fact that the defendant saw the sons of the plaintiff, or his son Bert Brown, at work upon buildings of defendant, is not evidence of employment sufficient for the jury to find an agreement on the part of the defendant to pay for-such work.”

To this the court added:

“But if defendant saw the young men, sons of plaintiff,at work for him from day to day, and expressed no dissatisfaction therewith, and if such labor was valuable to defendant, the jury would be warranted in finding that defendant agreed to pay for such service what it was reasonably worth. ”

And there are additions to the sixth request, and to the twelfth,quite lengthy, which I will not stop to read,but which-, in' the opinion of this court, materially changed the sense of those requests as well as the fourth and fifth, which I have read.

‘ ' And this brings us to the other question submitted upon this record — together with the others which I have mentioned ■ — that the court refused to allow the jury to take these written instructions in their retirement.

[696]*696The statute seems to be plain upon that subject. Sec. 5190, subdivision 5, says:

“When the evidence is concluded either party may present written instructions to the court as to matters of law, and request the same to be given to the jury, which instructions shall be given or refused by the court before the argument is commenced.”

And then subdivision 7:

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio C.C. 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-brown-ohiocirct-1895.