Daugherty v. Wilson & Son

14 Ohio Law. Abs. 655, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1410
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 1933
DocketNo 2303
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 Ohio Law. Abs. 655 (Daugherty v. Wilson & Son) 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
Daugherty v. Wilson & Son, 14 Ohio Law. Abs. 655, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1410 (Ohio Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

BY THE COURT

Motion for new trial having been filed and overruled, error is prosecuted to this court.

Counsel not only in the oral arguments, but in their briefs have submitted several very interesting questions and have supported their respective contentions with, what we are pleased to term, unusually helpful briefs.

We have considered the record and these briefs with care, but shall not attempt to quote in detail from the record nor to discuss the many pertinent authorities which have been cited by counsel. We shall content ourselves with announcing the conclu,sion at which we have arrived after a consideration of the record and the briefs of counsel.

In brief, the note sued upon is a cognovit note, payable on demand, dated Washington Court House, Ohio, December 31, 1928. Plaintiff claims to have become the owner of this note on the 12th day of March 1929. Interest was paid on the note May 15, 1929, September 30, 1929 and December 30, 1929, and on June 5, Í929, $2000 was paid on the principal. These payments were made at and to the Bank. The plaintiff, in brief, claims that on March 12, 1929 his brother, Mal S. Daugherty, President of the Ohio State Bank, accompanied by Mr. Clyburn, an Attorney of Washington Court House, went to the office of the plaintiff in the Yuster Building in Columbus. That plaintiff at that time was in Florida. That the Secretary of plaintiff, Miss Carroll, talked to the plaintiff by telephone. The record shows that Miss Carroll talked over the main ’phone and Mal S. Daugherty, the President of the Ohio State Bank, and the brother of plaintiff, listened in on an extension ’phone in the office and participated somewhat in the conversation. As the result of this telephone conversation, plaintiff claims it was arranged that Miss Carroll should turn over to Mr. Clyburn and Mal S. Daugherty $50,000 and that Mr. Clyburn and Mal S. Daugherty should return to Washington Court House and select out of the bank’s notes good notes aggregating the sum of $50,000; that no particular notes were referred to in this conversation but that the notes turned over by the bank in return for this $50,000 should be good notes; that Miss Carroll turned over to Mr. Clyburn and Mal S. Daugherty two checks, one for $30,000 and one for $20,000 and Mr. Clyburn and Mal S. Daugherty returned to Washington Court House and selected from the bank’s notes certain notes aggregating principal and interest a little over $50,100; that the checks of plaintiff were deposited by MaTS. Daugherty in the bank to his account and his check was drawn in favor of the bank for the full value of the notes selected including principal and interest to that date; that the notes so selected were [659]*659turned over to Mr. Clyburn as the agent and attorney of the plaintiff who was to hold the notes until called for by plaintiff; that Mr. Clyburn kept the notes in his safety deposit box at the bank; that all these notes were payable at the said bank; that from time to time payments were made either as principal or interest on these notes at the bank and the bank then notified Mr. Clyburn and he produced the notes and had the payments credited thereon and then returned the same to his safety deposit box.

The defendant did not know of this procedure. The defendant in making payments of interest and principal thought it was dealing with the bank.

The note in question was one of the notes that was included in the arrangement which was perfected by Mr. Clyburn, Mal S. Daugherty, Miss Carroll and the plaintiff during the telephone conversation above referred to.

The record shows that the defendant did not know until after the bank closed that the plaintiff claimed to be the owner of the notes in question. The defendant upon the payment of part of the principal of the note and the installments of interest made after the date the plaintiff claims to have acquired the note in question were made by the defendant at the bank and they say they thought the bank was still the owner and holder of the note in question.

The petition in error contains 14 grounds of error.

Counsel for plaintiff in error, in their brief, have stressed but three of these different grounds of error. They concede that the other errors naturally group themselves around the three grounds of error urged in their brief.

The first ground of error urged by counsel for plaintiff in error is that there was error in suspending or vacating the judgment entered by virtue of the warrant of attorney and permitting the answer tendered by defendant to be filed.

Counsel for defendant in error in their brief suggest that the action of the trial court in suspending the judgment in question and permitting an answer to be filed is not properly before this court for review for the reason that no exception was taken by plaintiff in error to the suspending of such judgment and permitting the defendant below to file the answer which was proffered.

We have examined the journal entry of date September 13, 1930 wherein the motion of defendant to vacate or suspend the original judgment was submitted to and sustained by the court and in which entry the court found that the answer tendered by the defendant stated a good defense to the petition and in which entry the judgment previously rendered was sustained and the defendant ordered to file its answer forthwith and new trial of the issues granted.

This entry is approved by the trial court. It is also approved by some of counsel for both the plaintiff below and the defendant below. It contains no exception to the rulings of the trial court.

The rule is well established in Ohio and requires no citation of authorities to support the proposition that a reviewing court upon a proceeding in error, will review only such alleged errors in the lower court as were preserved by exception.

The journal entry of January 25, 1933, overruling the motion for new trial upon the final hearing and rendering judgment for plaintiff in error in the sum of $527.81; as per the verdict of the jury does contain an exception to the former finding of the court that the answer tendered interposed a valid defense and also-to the order of the court vacating the former judgment in favor of plaintiff in error.

We will assume for the purpose of the case that the question which counsel for plaintiff in error have urged with such force is properly before this court for review.

As above stated, counsel for plaintiff in error seriously insist that the trial court was without authority to suspend or vacate the judgment in question as no valid defense was proffered. Reliance is placed upon §§11636 and 11637, GC. §11637 GO provides that a judgment shall not be vacated on motion or petition until it is adjudged that there is a valid defense to the action in which the judgment was rendered.

In brief, plaintiff in error insists that the answer which was proffered did not contain a defense to the note sued upon;, that the answer merely set forth facts which would constitute a set off as against tho claim of plaintiff. It is contended that the trial court was without authority to suspend the judgment obtained upon the cognovit note in the absence of an answer showing a defense to the note and that a set off does not constitute a defense.

Counsel for plaintiff in error in support of this proposition cite and largely rely upon the case of Bulkley v Greene, 98 Oh St 55.

[660]*660The third paragraph of the syllabus is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio Law. Abs. 655, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daugherty-v-wilson-son-ohioctapp-1933.