Cleveland Retail Grocers' Ass'n v. Exton

18 Ohio C.C. 315
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio C.C. 315 (Cleveland Retail Grocers' Ass'n v. Exton) 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
Cleveland Retail Grocers' Ass'n v. Exton, 18 Ohio C.C. 315 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

There are three motions that we have before us. The motion in the case of the Cleveland Retail Grocers' Association against Sarah A. Exton is to strike the bill of exceptions from the files. In the case of Wm. E. Gbdfrey against the same party, there is the same motion; and in the case of the Cleveland Retail Grocers’ Association against Godfrey, there is a motion by the plaintiff in error for an order to the clerk to amend the journal entries.

This case was tried in the court below, and judgment given, and, after that, a motion was filed for a new trial, which motion was pending for some time, and the motion [316]*316was finally passed on by the court, and a petition in error was filed in this court and journal entries which showed the judgment, but did not show the overruling or any action of the court on the motion for a new trial. The case then stood in this court on a petition in error, and time passed on until six months had elapsed, when the plaintiff came in and asked for an order to the clerk to amend the journal entries by placing in the journal entries the overruling of the motion for a new trial and, if this goes into the journal entries, then the jdurnal entries will show that the case is yet within the statutory limits when the action in error may be commenced and the journal entries filed; but, if this motion is not allowed, then the bill of exceptions should properly be stricken off. In this case, it was not filed in time, as shown by the journal entries we have. That raises the question that has been discussed, and the only one here to pass upon — whether the journal entries in a case can or cannot be’ amended after the time limited by statute for commencing proceedings in error has elapsed.

The supreme court has passed upon this matter in two different cases, to which our attention has been called:

First. In the case of Townsend v. Harrison, 58 Ohio St., 398:

“Where all the assignments of error, in a petition in error, are founded upon a bill of exceptions taken in a lower court, but not filed in a higher court within six months after the rendition of the judgment in the court below, the judgment should be affirmed, but such state of the record is no ground for dismissing the petition in error.”

That simply decides this question, that where the petition in error says certain matters of error, all of which are founded upon the bill of exceptions, which bill was not filed within the six months with the court, it is proper to strike off the bill of exceptions, but not proper to dismiss the pe^ tition in error, especially if there are other grounds than those that are founded in the bill of exceptions.

[317]*317I will not pay much attention to that case, because we have another here where the discussion is more directly in point.

In the 41st Law Bulletin, page 9, The Second National Bank of Bucyrus v. Moderwell et al.,

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Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio C.C. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-retail-grocers-assn-v-exton-ohiocirct-1899.