Geller v. Puchta
This text of 1 Ohio C.C. 30 (Geller v. Puchta) 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.
Opinion
1. The motion of plaintiff to dismiss the appeal, on the ground that it was not authorized by the defendant, was properly .overruled on the evidence, which shows that'it was appealed at her instance, though she did not sign the bond.
2. Geller sued Puchta before a justice of the peace, to recover money had and received. On an appeal, he filed a petition alleging that the defendant had contracted with Belmont & Overbecke to build a house for her; that the plaintiff had furnished Bélmont & Overbecke labor and material used in said building under a contract with them; that there was [31]*31due him, April 11, 1884, therefor $130; that not being paid on August 11th, 1884, he furnished the defendant a sworn and itemized statement of his account, and that defendant then detained and still detains of the amount due or to become due to B. & O. more than sufficient to pay his claim; that his account against B. & O. was not disputed by them within ten days thereafter, and that they have therefore under section 3199, R. S., assented to the correctness of the account, but on demand they refuse to pay; that the money being due from her to B. & 0., he demanded payment of her, which was refused. No copy of such account is stated to have been filed in the recorder’s office, and there is no allegation that B. & O. were notified hy defendant of the filing of such account within five days, both of which are required by the statute, sections 3195 and 3199, R. S.
Before answer to this petition, the defendant filed an affidavit under section 5016, R. S., that Belmont & Overbecke, without collusion with her, claimed the money, and that she was willing to pay or dispose of it as the court should order. Belmont & Overbecke were notified to appear and maintain or relinquish their claim. They appeared and were made defendants, and Puchta, having paid the money into court, was dismissed from the action. In this there was no error. The action was one founded on contract, viz., for money had and received, and though provided for by statute, was dependent on the contract between the owner and the head contractor. (Braen on Mechanic’s Liens, sec. 58.)
The same course might have been adopted by the defendant before the justice of the peace, by virtue of section 6705, revised statutes, which provides that the provisions of the code of procedure in courts of common pleas, which are in their nature applicable to the proceedings before justices, and in respect to which no special provision is made in the justice’s act, shall be applicable to proceedings before justices of the peace. But if this be not so, still the courts of common pleas, on appeal, may allow such procedure, on proper terms as to costs.
In this case, as Belmont & Overbecke, the head contractors, had not been notified of the filing of the claim, they were [32]*32proper parties to an action brought by Geller to enforce his lien acquired on the fund by the service of notice. The head contractors not having expressly or impliedly assented to the correctness of the claim of Geller, his lien on the fund was only for the amount actually due him from them, or for his pro rata share of it, under the provisions of the statute. And the amount of his claim against them, and therefore against the defendant, as the foundation of his lien on the fund, might well be determined in the action brought by him to subject it to his claim. And the action of the court of common pleas in bringing the parties before the court to have the whole controversy settled, was right. Affirmed with costs.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1 Ohio C.C. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geller-v-puchta-ohiocirct-1885.