Converse v. Panhard Motors Co.

21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345, 1918 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 77

This text of 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345 (Converse v. Panhard Motors Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Converse v. Panhard Motors Co., 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345, 1918 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 77 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

Counsel for plaintiff contends by his motion that there are defenses in the answer contained that are not separately stated and numbered.

There are three alleged defenses which are separately numbered. In the first one there are three or more paragraphs of mere admissions. It has long been common practice to lumber up pleadings with long pages of admissions which are unauthorized improper, and accomplish nothing but to increase the costs.

These admissions are found throughout the pleading. The pleading also contains the common unauthorized form qf denial [346]*346of all allegations not specifically denied or admitted. Such, admissions or denials do not aid the court in performing its duty in stating the issues. The court has to ferret out the controverted facts, and the illegitimate denial and unauthorized form of denial does not help. Only the slovenly trial judge notices them, according to Pomeroy’s Code Remedies. The statement af the issues to a jury by reading the pleadings verbatim ad literatim is not always the best way of placing the facts in issue before it.

The last paragraph in the answer immediately preceding the cross-petition is another useless appendage to a pleading. It is what we have often characterized as an illegitimate form of denial, that is, one not authorized by the code — a denial of all facts not admitted or denied.

The tools provided by the code are special denials, general denials, and new matter constituting defense or counter-claim. A special denial is a most efficient weapon; the more there are the more efficient is the pleading.

The answer and cross-petition is an unnecessarily lengthy pleading and it is somewhat complicated.

Paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 should all be omitted because they are mere admissions.

The first paragraph of the second defense should be omitted; also the second paragraph.

The first paragraph of the third defense should be omitted. So far as it is attempted to incorporate and repeat these useless admissions into subsequent defenses it is wholly unwarranted and improper. No rule is better settled nor better-understood than that one complete or whole defense can not properly be incorporated into another one. Each defense is a separate, distinct entity and must stand alone. Of course where certain allegations may be common to other defenses such particular parts may be properly incorporated by apt words of reference. But in this case all that is found under the head of a so-called defense from “the first line and ending with the * * * line, etc.” is south to be incorporated into another defense. This can not be done, because the matter sought to be incorporated is irrelevant and improper,

[347]*347Paragraphs 1 and 2 in the third defense should be omitted.

The use of words, “further answering the defendant” could be well omitted where there are so many repetitions. Their omission will also avoid useless repetitions and will tend to conciseness and better statement.

The last paragraph in the third defense should be stricken out

“Further answering .defendant denies each and every allegation not hereinbefore specifically admitted to he true.”

No such form of allegation is permissible; it is not authorized, although it is perhaps found in every pleading filed in court. But such practice is precisely like the abuses under the common law which brought about the Code.

As long ago as 1895, in the March number of the American Lawyer, appeared a statement by a member of a committee making a report by the American Bar Association that code practice, as then carried on, had abandoned its simplicity, and is losing its distinctive character, and unless return is made to first principles it will in a short time be subject to all the criticisms made on its predecessor, the common law with but few of its redeeming features.”

The observation of the judiciary is that proper care is frequently not observed in following the simple rules of the Code. The rules of common law and code pleading are kindred in many respects, the changes in procedure made by the code being dessigned to obviate the evils grown up under the old system. The tools provided by the code, that is the pleadings, and the pleas, are unlike those of the common law; these are the instrumentalities that are so often misused.

The facts are to be stated in ordinary and concise language without repetition. We do not think this pleading complies with that rule.

Many pleadings are encountered which consume from one to three or more pages of admissions, which practice is not warranted. The experience of stating the precise questions at issue to a jury presents a different viewpoint. The attitude of the lawyer in preparing the pleading is that of fear that he will [348]*348admit something by failing to deny. Hence the form of "illegitimate denial” of such and every allegation not herein admitted or denied is universally adopted. It is neither a special nor general denial; hence it is plainly unauthorized and improper.

If a party can not properly deny all the allegations, but wishes only to deny certain averments, the special denial should be adopted. As a matter of fact the special denial properly used is more efficient than the common unwarranted practice of admitting certain allegations denying others, then closing with a denial of each and every allegation not hereinbefore admitted or denied.

One of the most important duties of a trial judge in jury cases is the statement of the issues. He can do it more efficiently when the provisions of the code are followed:

Facts are to be stated without repetition; that means not only that each pleader must not repeat facts contained in his pleading, but it also contemplates that the adversary shall not take up each fact which can not be denied, and repeat the same in hi^ pleading, thus encumbering the record with a double statement of the facts, increasing the costs and violating the plain injunction of the Code requiring facts to be stated in ordinary and concise language. Such repetition of the same words as is done by an adversary in the form of repetition by way of admissions, violates the express language of the code; it is not expressing the claims of parties in a few words; the statement is not condensed, brief and compact; it is not the concise style required by the Code.

Neither is such statement made in ordinary language as required by the Code; ordinary language by the dictionary is according to the established order; methodical, common, customary, usual. But as an English jurist stated in Houghton v. Gilbert, 7 C. & P., 701, a general dictionary of the English language is not to be considered an authority to show the meaning of a word. So if the latter part of Webster’s-definition above quoted were to be adopted we would be forced to conclude that the method pursued in this ease was proper; because indeed it is "common, [349]*349customary and usual” among all the members of the bar, as evidenced by all the pleadings filed in court, to violate certain rules. However, the course pursued is not according to the established order fixed by the Code.

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21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345, 1918 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/converse-v-panhard-motors-co-ohctcomplfrankl-1918.