Cincinnati v. Hafer

49 Ohio St. (N.S.) 60
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 49 Ohio St. (N.S.) 60 (Cincinnati v. Hafer) 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
Cincinnati v. Hafer, 49 Ohio St. (N.S.) 60 (Ohio 1892).

Opinion

DickmaN, J.

This proceeding in error is instituted to reverse a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Hamilton county against the city of Cincinnati, on an appeal by the city from a judgment in the court of common pleas in favor of George Hafer, defendant in error, and by him recovered in a suit in the nature of a creditor’s bill. There was a finding of facts by the circuit court, from which, the following are shown to have existed :

On the 31st day of May, 1880, George Hafer, on cross-petition in the case of Charles S. Woodruff v. H. B. Teetor, et al, recovered a judgment by the consideration of the court of common pleas, against Sarah L. C. Teetor, wife of H. B. Teetor, for the sum of $301.01, with interest at eight per cent, per annum, from May 10, 1880, upon which judgment no execution was ever issued.

At the time of therecovery of this judgment, a suit — begun in the year 1879 — -was pending in the court of common pleas, in which Mrs. Teetor, as plaintiff, claimed damages from the city of Cincinnati, _ as compensation for a loss sustained by her in consequence of the drainage of sewage from the city infirmary upon her land.

On the 20th day of November, 1880, Mrs. Teetor, having no personal or real property subject to levy on execution sufficient to satisfy Hafer’s judgment, Hafer commenced this suit, in the nature of a creditor’s bill, in the court of common pleas, against Mrs. Teetor and the city of Cincinnati, in order to subject to the payment of his judgment, so much, as would be sufficient, out of the indebtedness of the city to her by reason of the loss by her .sustained from drainage upon her land, as above stated.

Soon after the commencement of this suit, a general demurrer fo the petition in Mrs. Teetor’s action against the city was sustained by the court, and leave was given to her to file an amended petition therein. It was not done with[64]*64in the time fixed by the court, and not until June, 1884, when, by leave of the court, an amended petition was filed, which set out the original cause of action, though in a different manner from the original petition’. Mrs. Teetor thereupon, to-wit, in June, 1884, assigned to A. S. Miller and Sarah Cilley her claim against the city, then in litigation.

The city failed to answer the amended petition of Mrs. Teetor, and on the trial of the issue thus made, she recovered, in October, 1886, on her original cause of action, a judgment against the city for one thousand, one hundred and two dollars; and shortly after the recovery of such judgment, the city solicitor then in office paid the full amount thereof to her assignees, without any knowledge of the pendency of Hafer’s suit against the city — the records and the dockets showing the same, having been burned with the Hamilton county court house in March, 1884.

In Hafer’s suit against the city of Cincinnati, the cits’-, in December, 1880, filed an answer which was a general denial, but nothing further was done in the suit until after the burning of the court house — in which all the papers in the cause were destroyed — when, in March, 1887, the counsel for Hafer, hearing for the first time of the judgment against the city in favor of Mrs. Teetor, obtained leave and filed a copy of Hafer’s original petition; and the city filed an answer thereto, to which answer there was a reply, and the court of common pleas, in July, 1887, upon the pleadings and the evidence, gave judgment against the city.

On appeal by the city, the circuit court found that Hafer was entitled to a decree against the city for a balance due to him from Mrs. Teetor on his judgment against her, viz., for the sum of $449.15, with interest at eight per cent, per annum, and the costs in the action, and rendered judgment against the city accordingly.

The main question arising on the record is, whether Mrs. Teetor’s demand against the city for unliquidated damages, was of such a nature, that before it was reduced to judgment, Hafer, a judgment creditor, could, by a suit in the nature of a creditor’s bill against her and the city of Cincinnati, ácquire a lien in equity on her interest in such [65]*65demand, and become entitled to payment of the same, in the event of succeeding in his suit.

It is contended, that the demand of Mrs. Teetor against the city was for damages unliquidated, growing out of a tort, and was not, therefore, until reduced to judgment, such an interest as might, under the statute, be subjected by the judgment creditor to the payment of his judgment. It is provided by section 5464 of the' Revised Statutes, that “when a judgment debtor has not personal or real property subject to levy on execution sufficient to satisfy the judgment, * * * any interest he has in- * * * any money contract, claim, or chose in action, due or to become due to him, or in any judgment or order, or any money, goods, or effects which he has in the possession of any person, or body politic, or corporate, shall be subject to the payment of the judgment, by action.”

Mrs. Teetor’s demand for damages on account of injury to her land, did not, it is true, rest on a money contract, but it was nevertheless a chose in action. While by a chose in action is ordinarily understood a right of action for money arising under contract, the term is undoubtedly of much broader significance, and includes the right to recover pecuniary damages for a wrong inflicted either upon the person or property. It embraces demands arising out of a tort, as well as causes of action originating in the breach of a contract. As said by Judge Sharswood, in a note to a passage in 2 Black. Com. 396, “there is a very large class of choses in action, which arise ex delicto. My claim for compensation for any injury done to my person, reputation or property, is as truly a chose in action, as where it is grounded on a breach of covenant or contract.”

A thing in action, too, is to be regarded as a property right. One of the well recognized divisions of personal property is into property in possession, and property or choses in action. “A leading distinction, in respect to goods and chattels, is the distribution of them into things in possession and things in action. The latter are personal rights not reduced to possession, but recoverable by suit at law. [66]*66* * Damages due for torts are included under this general head or title of things in action.” 2 Kent, 351.

By section 4975 of the Revised Statutes, it is provided that: “In addition to - the causes of action which survive at common law, cau'ses .of. action * * * for an injury to real or personal estate * * * shall also survive; and the action may be brought notwithstanding the death of the person entitled or liable to the same.” And it was held in Grant v Ludlow, 8 Ohio St. 1, that, a chose in action which is transmissible to an executor or-s administrator, under our law, is assignable in equity. Mere personal torts die with the party and are not assignable, but where, the action is brought for damage to the estate, and not for injury to the person, personal feelings, or character, and the right of action survives to the personal representative, it nlay be assigned so as to pass an interest to the assignee. Jordan v. Gillen, 44 N. H. 424; Railway Company v. Goodbar, 88 Ind. 213; Butler v. Railroad Company, 22 Barb. 110; Purple v. Railroad Company, 4 Duer, 74; McKee v. Judd, 2 Kern. 622; Lazard v. Wheeler, 22 Cal. 139; North v. Turner, 9 Serg. & Raw. 244; Cass v.

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Lazard v. Wheeler
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88 Ind. 213 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ohio St. (N.S.) 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-v-hafer-ohio-1892.