Dash v. Fairbanks, Morse & Co.

195 N.E. 413, 49 Ohio App. 57, 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 504, 2 Ohio Op. 232, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 237
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1934
DocketNo 2459
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 N.E. 413 (Dash v. Fairbanks, Morse & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dash v. Fairbanks, Morse & Co., 195 N.E. 413, 49 Ohio App. 57, 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 504, 2 Ohio Op. 232, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 237 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

*505 OPINION

By HORNBECK, PJ. •

We have been favored with the opinions of the- trial court on sustaining the demurrers, and in support of the action of the trial court we are cited to the following cases:

Agricultural Society v Grenner, 122 Oh St, 560;

Lindemann v Eyrich, 21 Oh Ap, 314; (4 Abs 645).

Goebel v Hummel, 21 Oh Ap 486 (4 Abs 376);

Morris v Woodburn, 57 Oh St, 330;

Village v Gilbow et, 81 Oh St, 263.

We are also referred to certain other cases outside of Ohio and certain nisi prius opinions in Ohio. Our attention is particularly directed to a recent opinion by the Appellate Court of the Seventh District in the case of Davies v Seasley, etc, et (unreported) .

Plaintiff in error cites Young v Hornbeck et, No. 132,433, Franklin County Common Pleas Court, in which case Judge Scarlett overruled a demurrer based upon misjoinder of parties; also:

Knight, Admrx. v Schlachter, 28 Oh Ap 70 (6 Abs 196).

Maumee Valley Railways & Light Co. v Montgomery, 81 Oh St, 426.

B. & O. R. R. v Bailie, 112 Oh St, 567.

Maloney v Callahan et, O. Law Bulletin, Feb. 12, 1934, p. 305.

Sayles v Cabell, 15 O. Law Abs, 568.

The gist of the cases cited, wherein it has been held that defendants could not .be properly joined, is that the wrongdoers did not act in concert in the execution of a common purpose, and did not maintain the same relationship toward the plaintiff.

There are many acts sounding in tort, such as assault and battery, seduction, rape, abortion, trespass, conversion, waste, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, wrongful arrest, kidnapping, as fvell as negligence, both wilful and common.

It is appropriate to speak of concert of action and common purpose in actions wherein volition or purpose is one of the essentials. Such expressions have ready application to all those torts above named, including wilful negligence, excepting common negligence, in which it is difficult to get the concept of concert of action and execution of common purpose by wrongdoers. Common negligence is a failure to exercise ordinary care and the purpose of the wrongdoer has nothing whatever to do with its commission. One may act in the best of good faith and with the highest purpose and yet be chargeable with negligence, even gross negligence, although not with wilful negligence. Upon examination the cases, in the main, which lay down the principle of concert of action and common purpose have to do with those torts wherein an action of the mind or volition can properly be brought into play. In Ohio there are cases wherein the courts have held that defendants could not be joined because the defendants’ obligations to the ¡plaintiffs were of a different character, such as those growing out of statute and those growing out of common law obligation to exercise ordinary care.

In the instant case it is the manifest theory of the plaintiff that the separate acts of negligence of the defendants combining and concurring caused the single injury to the plaintiff. Under our liberal code of procedure there is a well-defined purpose of the courts to avoid multiplicity of suits even at law and to permit, in so far as possible, all issues to be adjudicated in one action. If the defendant, Hood, was negligent and her negligence proximately caused the injuries to the plaintiff without contributory negligence of plaintiff, she is liable to the full extent of the damages suffered by plaintiff. This likewise is true as tq the other doferjdants. There can be *506 no division of the damages suffered by plaintiff. The issues if drawn in this ease by the joint defendants would in all probability be simple and could be adjudicated without prejudice to any of the parties. In this situation technicality should not be invoked to preclude the plaintiff working out his rights against all these defendants in one action.

The third syllabus of Agricultural Society v Brenner, supra:

“Joint liability for tort only lies where wrongdoers have acted in concert in the execution of a common purpose and where the want of care of each is of the same character as the want of care of the other.”

This proposition of law, of course, has application to the facts in the case there under consideration.

In the second proposition of the syllabus it is noted that the responsibility of the Agricultural Society to the plaintiff was limited to conditions which were known, to the society. The Agricultural Society had leased its premises to another defendant, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and De Michele was under contract with the defendant, Veterans of Foreign Wars, to furnish a fireworks display. Chief Justice Marshall, points out out that there is no privity of contract between the Agricultural Society and De Michele. If the Society was negligent, its want of care was of a different character from that charged against De Michele. It is true that it is said at page 573:

“There .is joint liability only where there is concert of action and a common intent and enterprise.”

We doubt if this expression can have application to a joinder of two defendants whose obligation is a common obligation to plaintiff and whose combined and concurrent negligence causes the damage complained of.

In Bello v Cleveland, 106 Oh St 104, this language is employed:

“Where separate tortious acts have been separately done, and only a single injury inflicted, the parties must be sued separately.”

This statement taken alone and without relation to the facts under which pronounced clearly would support the sustaining of the demurrer in the instant case. However, in the Bello case Judge Marshall, immediately after making the above cited statement, illustrates that the defendant Bar-dons & Oliver if it had committed any tort it consisted in want of ordinary care, whereas, if the city had committed tort it was in failing to discharge the duty imposed by statute, namely §3714, GC. That is to say, that the rights of the plaintiff against the defendants were of different relationship, one growing out of common negligence, the other out of failure to observe statutory obligation. The text books, in considering our question, set forth the principles controlling.

47 C. J., 79:

“In the absence of any express provision to the contrary, in jurisdictions having codes of procedure or practice acts, as at common law, where a tort is committed by two or more persons as joint tort-feasors, they are regarded as being jointly and severally liable therefor, and plaintiff at his election may sue all, or one, or any intermediate number of such joint tort-feasors.”

There are cited in support of the text many cases from many of the states of the Union. Illustrating the principle is Chicago Great Western R. Co. v Hulbert, 205 Fed. 248:

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Bluebook (online)
195 N.E. 413, 49 Ohio App. 57, 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 504, 2 Ohio Op. 232, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dash-v-fairbanks-morse-co-ohioctapp-1934.