Dwelle v. Wilson

14 Ohio C.C. 551
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio C.C. 551 (Dwelle v. Wilson) 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
Dwelle v. Wilson, 14 Ohio C.C. 551 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

King, J.

The action was brought in the court of common pleas of Ottawa county, by R. W. Wilson, as the assignee of Wm. Bertsch and Wm. H. Moore, partners as Bertsch & Moore, against B. F. Dwelle, George Moore, Henry Lay, and the [552]*552German Amexican Bank of Port Olinton. The cause of action as set forth in the petition was founded on a bond given in an injunction proceeding.

Some time before the commencement of this action, Benjamin F. Dwelle began a suit in the court of common pleas, against Wm. H. Moore and Wm. Bertsch, individually, and as partners, in which he alleged tt at they were about to set their pound stakes and nets for fishing in Lake Erie, in such a position as to. prevent him from fishing at a place where he had acquired a right to fish by having fished there for many years, and he asked an injunction against them. The probate judge of the county, allowed a temporary injunction, enjoining Bertsch & Moore, from fishing at the place designated in the petition. Upon the filing of the petition in that case and the allowance of the injunction, the condition was made, that a bond be given in the sum of $500. This petition alleges, that that bond was given and the injunction allowed. Within a few days afterwards, a motion was made that an additional bond be given, and the matter was brought tó the attention of the court, and he ordered an additional bond in the sum of $1,500. This petition alleges, that that bond was given, with George Moore and Henry Lay, as the sureties thereon. The petition further alleges, that thereafter, it was finally decided that the injunction ought not to have been granted. It then sets forth the particular items of damage, that it claims the plaintiffs, Bertsch & Moore, sustained; first, that they were compelled to, and did, expend $275.75, in attorney’s fees, and that they had expended money in looking after the lawsuit and attending to it, to the amount of $100 or more; that they had employed a large number of men, anticipating the fishing season, and had provided nets, and pound poles, and other things necessary for fishing, in the vicinity of this particular place, .and had expended for these things and for the wages of the men that they had employed, $1,000; [553]*553and if they had been allowed to go on and set and fish, as they calculated to the string of nets, they would have caught fish that would have been worth,- ard made a profit to them, of $2,500; that they were after that, obliged, in order to use these nets, to put their nets in a place very much further out in the lake, and further away, and it took a great deal longer to go to the place, and had to employ additional tugs, and it took a longer time, and damages are claimed for that. There are other items of damage which I need •not go over.

There was an answer filed, denying all these allegations, substantially.

The case went to trial. A verdict was rendered by the jury in behalf of the plaintiff, who had become assignee of Bertsch & Moore, after the injunction and before the commencement of this suit, in the sum of $1,200; and it is claimed there are errors in that. It is urged by the- defendant in error, the assignee of Bertsch & Moore, that any errors that are set forth in the bill of exceptions cannot be considered, because the bill of exceptions has not been allowed properly, I notice that briefly.

The bill of exceptions in this case, shows that it was signed by the judge of the court of common pleas who presided at the trial, on the 5th day of June, 1897, on the fiftieth day after the overruling of the motion for a new trial. He recites above his signature, that “Plaintiff objects and excepts to the allowance and signing of said bill at this date, upon the ground and claim that jurisdiction to allow and sign the same, has been lost by lapse of time.” But he signed on the fiftieth day. Below his signature, appears this statement:

“The foregoing bill of exceptions submitted to us for- examination by defendant’s attorneys, this 27th day of May, A. D. 1897.
Scott Stahl,
E. G. Love,
Plaintiffs’ Attorneys.”

[554]*554Then, also, a receipt of defendant’s attorney, that he received the bill of exceptions back again. This endorsement is made on the bill:

‘Received this bill of exceptions from defendant’s attorney, W. B. Starbird, June 1, 1897, and time extended for examination by me, to June 10, 1897.
June 1, 1897. S. A. Wildman, Judge.”

It is conceded that the 27th day of May, when this receipt recites that the attorneys of the plaintiff received the bill, was the forty-first day after the overruling of the motion for a new trial, and that the time stated in the endorsement of the judge when he received the bill, is on the forty-sixth day after the overruling of the motion for a new trial.

It is contended that the statute requires bills of exception to be in the hands of opposite counsel, on or before the fortieth day after the overruling of the motion for a new trial, and in the hands of the judge for his allowance, on or before the forty-fifth day after the overruling of the motion for a new trial. Such is the statute, and the holding of the supreme court; but the law does not indicate how these facts are to be ascertained. And we are of opinion, that it does not appear from this bill of exceptions by anything that we may regard, that this bill of exceptions either came into the hands of plaintiffs’ counsel, or into the hands of the court at a time later than that fixed in the statute. There is no provision of the statute by which the evidence of the time when the bill of exceptions is presented to opposite counsel may be preserved, nor is there as to the time when it goes into the hands of the judge. The provision of the statute as to the extension of time is, that the judge may endorse upon the bill of exceptions, an extension of time for his examination, not exceeding ten days beyond the expiration of fifty days, previously provided for, but it does not authorize him to endorse upon the bill when he received it. There is no provision of the statute for that pur[555]*555pose, nor, "as I have^said, is tbere^any^provision^of law by which evidence of that may|be"preserved^and’presented to a reviewing court. We do not say, that]ievidence of it may not be preserved in a proper method, but that method has not been pursued here,

I should say in that connection, that on the 22d day of July, 1897, there was presented to”the judge of the court of common pleas who signed and allowed the bill of exceptions, another bill of exceptions to the signing and allowing of the original bill of exceptions.

This proceeding, as appears from the reading of this bill of exceptions, was a proceeding before the judge. Nobody but a judge can allow and sign a bill of exceptions; it is not a matter for the court. So on the 5th of June, as appears by this paper, there was objection made to signing and allowing the first bill of exceptions by the judge, and it was there conceded that the facts stated before the judge were true, yet the judge allowed and signed that, notwithstanding those objections; and now they have presented this bill of exceptions. There is no provision for taking a bill of exceptions in a matter considered alone by the judge, so that this bill of exceptions has no place upon the record whatever.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio C.C. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dwelle-v-wilson-ohiocirct-1897.