Cin., N. & C. Railway Co. v. Wood

1 Ohio N.P. 198
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio N.P. 198 (Cin., N. & C. Railway Co. v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cin., N. & C. Railway Co. v. Wood, 1 Ohio N.P. 198 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Sayler, J.

Frederick W. Wood, receiver of the Maryland Steel Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Maryland, the plaintiff below, filed a petition against the Cincinnati, Newport & Covington Railway Company, setting out the receivership ; that the Maryland Steel Company, in the. months of March and April, 1898, sold and delivered to the said The Cincinnati, Newport & Covington Railway Company steel rails to the value of $29,162.75 in two shipments, one on March 27, 1893, and one on April 14, 1893; that by the terms of the sale the said defendant agreed to pay interest upon said accounts at the rate of six per cent per annum if the same were not paid within thirty days of the date of sale ; that the said accounts were not paid by the said defendant when they became due, but on January 17, 1894, the said defendant paid the principal of said accounts, with interest from January 2,1894, and refused to pay interest on the accounts from the date the same became due to January 2, 1894, and has not paid the same, and the plaintiff below asks judgment for the amount of said interest.

The defendant below filed answer in which it admits the receivership and the purchase of the rails, with a small correction as to amount; and that they were purchased upon thirty days’ time, with an agreement that if not paid at the expiration of said thirty days, the defendant was to pay six per cent, interest on said amount until said amounts were paid. And ‘’defendant says that it was at all times prepared and ready and willing to pay said amounts according to the terms of said contractbut defendant says that before said amounts, or either of them, became due, the plaintiff was appointed receiver of said company by the Circuit Court of Baltimore, Maryland, and that, as such, receiver, he claimed to be the owner of said accounts, and notified the defendant of said claim ; that on the twenty-ninth day of April, 1893, a suit was brought in this court in case No. 46850, Naylor & Co. against the said Maryland Steel Company and others, in which the nlaintiff claimed that the defendants were indebted to them in a large sum of money, but in which case said Wood, receiver, was not made a party ; that on said day an order of attachment and garnishment was issued in said case, and the writ of garnishment was served on the said the Cincinnati, Newport & Covington Railway Co., garnisheeing in its possession all the moneys, etc., due, or to become due by it to said Maryland Steel Company, and requiring them to answer in said case as required by law ; that on the first day of August, 1893, a suit was brought in this court in ease No. 47027 by the Manhattan Company against the Maryland Steel Company and others, in which the plaintiff claimed that the defendants were indebted to it in a large amount, but that said Wood, receiver, was not made a party to said case; that on said day a writ of attachment and garnishment was issued in said case and served on this defendant, as in the former case. -And the said defendant further says that it filed its answer as garnishee in both of said cases, admitting its indebtedness to the Maryland Steel Company, and pleading that prior to the writ of attachment in either of said cases the said Wood had been appointed receiver of said company by the Circuit Court of Baltimore, Maryland; that he claimed to be the owner of the said amount owing, and that he notified it, the said The Cincinnati, Newport & Covington Railway Company, of his said claim of ownership, and that he would claim the payment of said sum from it to himself, as receiver, and that it prayed the direction and protection of the court as to whom it should pay said money. And the said defendant further says that by reason of the said receiver not being a party in said cause, it could not tender or pay said monéy into court; that after its said answers, as garnishee, were filed, the said Wood, receiver, caused himself to be made a party defendant in said causes, for the pur[200]*200pose of moving to dissolve and discharge said attachments, and that he did make said motions, and that the court dissolved said attachment in the case No. 46850, but that in the case No. 47027 the court overruled the motion, and ordered this defendant, as garnishee in said cause, to pay to the plaintiff $25,645, with interest from January 2, 1894, and to pay the residue of the fund so garnished to said Wood, receiver; that this defendant, pursuant to said order, paid said amount to the plaintiff in this case, and paid to the attorneys of said Wood $8,461.30, being the residue with interest from January 2, 1894, the date of said judgment, and that it was thereupon dismissed from all further liability ak garnishee. And the said the Cincinnati, Newport & Covington Railway Company further says that by reason of these matters and things it is not liable for interest on the sums attached in its possession from the date of said attachment .proceedings to January 2, 1894, and having fully obeyed the orders of the court in said causes, it should be dismissed with its costs.

A demurrer was filed to this answer, which was sustained by the court, to which judgment the defendant below excepted.

Thereupon the defendant below filed an amendment to said answer, in which it re-affirms the allegations therein contained, and further says : “ That during the pendency of the suits, Nos. 46,850 and 47,027, of the Superior Court of Cincinnati, set out and alleged in the original answer of this defendant, this defendant was at all times ready, able and willing to pay the money garnisheed in its possession, in said causes, as in said original answer stated, to the party or persons who might by said court be determined to be the owner of said money, or, as this court might, under this defendant’s prayer for protection in said causes made, direct said defendant to pay said money.”

A motion was filed by the plaintiff below to strike the amended answer from the files, and for a judgment.

The court granted this motion and gave judgment for the plaintiff below for the amount claimed, to all of which the defendant below excepted.

The defendant below, as plaintiff in error, seeks to reverse said judgment of the court below.

The plaintiff in error, the Cincinnati, Newport & Covington Railway Company, claims that it is not liable for interest, because it occupied the position of stakeholder during the pendency of the attachment suits.

It claims that it was at all times prepared, ready, able and willing to pay the amount of said indebtedness; that before it became due the payment was stopped, not at its election, but by operation of law; that as soon as it was ordered to pay in the attachment proceedings, it paid the amount ordered, and paid the balance over to Wood, receiver; that it could not pay into court in the attachment proceedings, as Wood, receiver, was not a party. And it is claimed, as these matters are admitted by the demurrer, it must be taken as an admission that the railway company had the money in its possession, and was ready and willing to pay it out at any time it could do so with safety to itself.

It seems to us that the rights of the parties herein are to be determined by the rules laid down by the Supreme Court in the case of Candee et al. v. Webster, 9 Ohio St. 452. In that case the court holds: “ In attachment proceedings the garnishee is not, during the pendency of the same, thereby necessarily exempted from an ¡existing liability to pay interest upon his indebtedness to the defendant in attachment.”

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1 Ohio N.P. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cin-n-c-railway-co-v-wood-ohsuperctcinci-1895.