Davis v. Packer

8 Ohio C.C. 107
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio C.C. 107 (Davis v. Packer) 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
Davis v. Packer, 8 Ohio C.C. 107 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Swing, J.

There are two actions in this court between the same parties on error to the judgment of the court of common pleas. In that court the defendant in error brought his actions on two promissory notes. The following is a copy of one of them, the other being similar :

“Chicago, Ill., Aug. 12, 1892.
“Sixty days after date, for value received, we promise to pay to the order of John Kloeber, two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars, at 172 Lake street, Chicago, with interest of six per cent, per annum after maturity until paid, and to secure the payment of said amount, we hereby authorize irrevocably [108]*108any attorney of any court of record to appear for us in such court in term-time, or vacation, at any time hereafter, and confess a judgment without process, in favor of the holder of this note, for such amount as may appear to be unpaid thereon, together with costs and $100 attorney’s fees, and to waive and release all errors which may intervene in any such proceedings, and consent to immediate execution upon such judgment, hereby ratifying and confirming all that our said attorney may do by virtue hereof.
$2,250. “ Joseph J. Davis,
Josephine R. Davis.”

The following was endorsed on said note :

“ For value received, I hereby sell and transfer this note to C. P. Packer, before maturity, and without recourse on me.
“John V. Kloeber.”

On November 22, 1892, Packer, the transferer of said notes, filed his petitions in the court of common pleas on said notes, and also filed said notes in said court, and on the same day the following judgment was rendered in aid cause :

. “This day came plaintiff, by his attorney, also appeared in open court, for and on behalf of said defendant, W. A. Hicks, an attorney at law, of this court, and by virtue of the warrant of attorney annexed to the note, attached to the petition in said cause, shown to have been duly executed by said defendants, entered the appearance of said defendants, and waived the issuing and service of process in this action, and confessed a judgment on said note, against said defendants, and in favor of said plaintiff, for $2,250, * * * and waived all exceptions, errors, and right of appeal in the premises, * *."

On November 30, the defendants filed a motion to set aside the judgment, no reasons being assigned. At the same time affidavits were filed. These affidavits contained statements to the effect that Josephine R. Davis was the wife of Joseph J. Davis, and that the notes under consideration were given in [109]*109satisfaction of a transaction in the city of Chicago, and which transaction, it was alleged, was a gambling transaction ; and Mrs. Davis further stated that she was induced by said Kloeber to sign said notes under the promise of said Kloeber that they were merely accommodation notes, and that he would hold them in his own 'possession ; and further, that she did not know that she was signing any power of attorney by which a judgment could be entered against her. The motions to set aside the judgment were overruled on December 3, 1892. At the same time the plaintiff offered to remit one and thirteen one-hundredths dollars, which remittenter was entered, it having appeared that the judgment was originally rendered for that much more than was due. To the overruling of this motion defendants excepted.

On January 4, 1893, being at a subsequent term, plaintiffs in error filed a motion to set aside said judgment, and alleging as a ground that there was irregularity in obtaining the same.

This motion was afterwards overruled, and a bill of exceptions was taken containing the note, pleadings, affidavits and certain statutes and decisions of the state of Illinois.

It seems to us that the only thing brought before us upon this record is, whether or not the court of common pleas had jurisdiction on those notes. The well settled principle of law applicable to such instruments is, that “all authorities of this sort must be strictly pursued:” 8 Durn. and East, 257. In the 46 Ohio St. 441, after reviewing a large number of cases decided by our Supreme Court, the court say : “ The decisions have all been based upon a strict interpretation bf the power granted, without aiding any omission or defect in its terms by liberal intendment or construction.”

The first question that suggests itself to our minds is, whether the notes having been executed in Chicago, Illinois, and made payable in Illinois, it authorized the taking of a judgment in Ohio.

It will be observed that this power has no limit as to where [110]*110judgment might be taken. It might be in any court of record either in term-time or in vacation.

If the phrase, “ any court of record,” means any court of record outside of the state of Illinois, it would include any court of record on the face of the globe. It might be in Ohio or any state of the United States, or it might just as well be in Russia, India, Mexico or Chili.

For the different states of the United States, as far as their local laws are conceimed, are all as foreign to each other as foreign states.

In the case of Corlin v. Taylor, 7 Lea., 666, which was a case where the power of attorney was in the following words: “ I hereby empower any attorney of record within the United States, or elsewhere, to appear,” etc., the Supreme Court of Tennessee held the power void for uncertainty, saying at p. 668, “ It is void for its comprehensive uncertainty.”

Nothing could be more comprehensive in its terms than the one under consideration.

It is, “any attorney of any court of record.”

It seems to us as bordering on the absurd to suppose that the parties to these instruments intended that judgments might be rendered on them in any court of the United States, or any court in the world. The note is made payable at a particular place in the. city of Chicago, in the state of Illinois. It would seem strange that, after providing particularly as to place of payment, they had provided that judgment might be taken in any court' of the world.

Mr. Freeman, in his work on judgments, says, at section 545: “While a warrant of attorney .may doubtless be so drawn as to authorize a confession in another state, yet the intention to give authority to act beyond, the state is not presumed, and though some of the words used are sufficiently comprehensive to justify the attorney in acting in any state or country, yet if there are words which appear to limit the authority to the state in which the warrant was executed, they will prevail.”

[111]*111The general propositions stated here, we think, should be the law, although the cases cited by the author do not, as we think, fully bear him out. He cites, 3 Dunn. 257, which case warrants the doctrine laid down in 5 Hill, 497, which case affirms 3 Hill, 461. In the case in 5 Hill, which was on a warrant of attorney, which was in these terms: “To I.D. Smith, attorney of the court of common pleas at Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, or to any other attorney of the said court, or of any other court, there or elsewhere, or to any prothonotary of any of the said courts,” the court say: “The authority to confess a judgment without process must be clear and explicit, and must be strictly pursued.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio C.C. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-packer-ohiocirct-1894.