Cook v. Lehmer

1 Ohio N.P. 146
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedMarch 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio N.P. 146 (Cook v. Lehmer) 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
Cook v. Lehmer, 1 Ohio N.P. 146 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is an action to recover from the defendants as bondsmen of Dudley W. Strickland $7,465.38, with interest. The defendants set up six defenses.

It appears from the evidence that on March 8, 1878, the plaintiffs made a deed of trust to Dudley W. Strickland of a large number of pieces of real estate, but not all of their property, for the following uses and purposes :

“first — To sell the same.

“Second — To apply the proceeds from said sale realized as follows: First, to the payment of the costa herein and of the taxes due from the grantors herein to the state of Ohio. Second, to pay out of the balance equally among their mortgage creditors, and after them among their other lien creditors, in the order of their priority, the just and legal debts of the grantors herein, and each of them.

“Third. — To return the remainder, if any, to the grantors herein, administering said trust in all things according to the statute regulating assignments for the benefit of creditors.”

Whether the administration of this deed of trust was under the laws governing the administration of insolvent estates or whether it was under sections 6328 to 6334, Revised Statutes, is a question I-do not find it necessary to determine.

On the sixteenth of March, 1878, the defendants, J. D. Lehmer, J. G-. Isham and Andrew Pfirman, became sureties in the sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) for the faithful performance by Strickland of his obligations under said deed.

No bond was given by Strickland, as surety, for the faithful discharge of his duties under these two later deeds.

By the consent of the assignors and^Strickland the three assignments were subsequently united in the probate court; the property sold; disbursements made, and one account embracing all sales and disbursements was filed in the probate court; and after exceptions being filed to certain of the items by the assignors, the account showing a balance due from Strickland to the assignees of $7,465.38 was confirmed.

Proceedings in error were then prosecuted by Strickland to the court of common pleas, upon the grounds :

First — That the probate court erred in appointing a referee.

Second — That it erred in confirming the report of the referee.

Third — That it erred in overruling the exceptions of said Strickland to said report.

Fourth — That it erred in sustaining the exceptions of the defendants, as shown in said final judgment.

The common pleas court reversed the judgment of the probate court. But the circuit court reversed tbe judgment of reversal of the common pleas court and affirmed that of the probate court. The language of the circuit court, in its opinion, is as follows:

“The petition in error was filed November 15, 1890. No appeal was taken from this judgment of the probate court, and no motion for a new trial was filed, and no bill of exceptions taken embodying the evidence.
“The court of common pleas could not have properly considered whether what the probate court did was right or not, as the evidence before the probate court could not have been before the court of common pleas, as [148]*148there was no motion for a new trial and no bill of exceptions containing the evidence, and this was necessary in order to bring the matter before a reviewing court to be considered as a matter of law ; so that it seems to us that the only question before the court of common pleas was whether, upon the record, the probate co urt had jurisdiction to render the judgment that it did, viz., that there was in the hands of said Strickland $7,465.38 as said assignee, and ordered that he pay said sum to said assignors.
“That said court had the right to make such a finding upon sufficient evidence, we see no reason to question.
“ It, therefore, was wholly immaterial whether said court properly appointed a referee to take testimony and make a- finding of facts and law. The court itself, afterwards, on evidence found the facts and the law, and, as far as we are able to see, there is nothing in the record which shows that in so doing the court was in error.”

This action is now brought against the defendants as sureties, on the bond given by Strickland, to secure the faithful discharge of the duties of the first trust deed; and the amount sought to be recovered is the total amount found due the assignors by reason of the delinquency in the three trusts.

The plaintiffs base their claim to recover the entire amount upon the principle declared in a number of cases in this state, viz: that where there has been an accounting in the probate court by an executor, administrator, guardian or assignee, and that court has made a finding as to the amount due from such executor or administrator to his estate ; or from such guardian to his ward, or from such assignee to his assignors, that the finding is conclusive against the sureties in an action against them on the bond given by the executor, administrator, guardian or assignee for the faithful discharge of the duties of the trust: Newton v. Hammond, 38 Ohio St. 339 ; Braiden v. Mercer, 44 Ohio St. 435; Schlagel v. Entrekin, 44 Ohio St. 637; Garver v. Tinsinger, 46 Ohio St. 435.

This proposition is undoubtedly the law of this state. But the question in this case is whether the facts of the case, afford an opportunity for the application of it.

Plaintiff’s claim is that the entire amount found in the probate court as due by reason of the receipts and disbursements in the three estates is the amount which they are entitled to recover. They do not undertake to point out the amount which is due by reason of any delinquencies as to the first and only estate in which the bond was given. It is conceded, as I understand, that the three trusts have been so united and confused that it is impossible to do this; and whether this concession is made or not, no evidence has been submitted to me which would enable me to do it. The claim of plaintiffs is for the whole amount found due, or nothing.

It is frequently said by courts that sureties have the right to stand by the letter of their bond, while other courts are disposed to give a more liberal construction to the obligation of the surety. But whatever may be the true rule of construction in this respect, there is no room for argument as to the proposition that a surety can not be made liable for that which falls clearly outside of his obligation of indemnity; and, as in this case, these defendants were sureties only as to the first deed, and in no way concerned with the second or third deed, it is self-evident that they are not liable for any delinquencies of the assignee under the second and third deeds.

What right, therefore, either in law or in natural justice, have these assignors, who, by their own acts, have enabled the’assignee to so unite and confuse these trusts that it is impossible to say to what amount the assignee is delinquent as to the first trust, or whether, indeed, he is delinquent at all, to recover from defendants, who are merely sureties on the first [149]*149bond, a delinquency which appears from the management of the three trusts, taken together as a whole.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio N.P. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-lehmer-ohsuperctcinci-1894.