Gilligan v. Prudential Life Insurance

127 N.E.2d 883, 70 Ohio Law. Abs. 225, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 312
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division
DecidedDecember 17, 1954
DocketNo. 190289
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 N.E.2d 883 (Gilligan v. Prudential Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilligan v. Prudential Life Insurance, 127 N.E.2d 883, 70 Ohio Law. Abs. 225, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 312 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

OPINION

By BARTLETT, J.

1. Misnomer is not fatal to the jurisdiction of the Court over the person of the defendant whose name is in issue, and such mistake in the name becomes a mere irregularity when the real party sought to be sued, answers to the merits at issue in the case.

. 2. A plea in abatement because of misnomer is a personal defense of the party whose name is in issue, and may be waived by such party; and is not available as a defense to other parties not affected by such mistake in the name.

3. The purpose of pleadings is to define the issues to be determined in a given case and to keep such case within due bounds, and the pleading of collateral matters should not be permitted, since such matters tend to draw away the minds of the jurors from the point in issue and thus mislead them. Each case must be tried upon its own merits, and be determined by the circumstances connected with it.

4. Claims of liability of a contingent nature against another person depending on the outcome of the controversy already before the Court on the pleadings, does not constitute the proper subject of a “counterclaim” as that term is used in §2309.16 R. C.

5. The persons who are made defendant under §2307.19 and 2307.26 R. C., muse be those whose presence is essential to the determination of the controversy before the Court, and where the defendant in the original controversy seeks to have another person made a defendant and to inject new issues into the action by way of cross-petition against such other party, in an effort to litigate matters wholly between themselves and which cannot affect the right of the plaintiff to recover on his petition, the application of such original defendant should be denied where he requests such other person be made a defendant with leave to file such a cross-petition against him.

6. The motion of the Fourth-Naghten Company is sustained, and the previous order of the Court is vacated, wherein the Fourth-Naghten Company was made a party defendant with leave to The Prudential Insurance Company of America, to file its amended answer and its cross-petition against said Fourth-Naghten Company.

7. The Court, sua sponte. orders stricken from the files' the amended answer and cross petition of said insurance company.

This action was begun by the plaintiff filing his petition claiming damages against The Prudential Life Insurance Company (emphasis oursj, in [227]*227the sum of $50,000.00 for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by the plaintiff resulting from her falling on the floor in the office of said company, where she went as a policy holder of the company, to pay a premium owed by her to the company.

Plaintiff claims her fall was due to the negligence of said company in waxing and polishing the floor of its office resulting in slippery spots, etc. on said floor.

Service of summons was made on the defendant in the foregoing name of said company, by serving Sherman Babcock, Manager and agent of Prudential Life Insurance Company (emphasis ours), personally, with a certified copy of the petition.

Interrogatories were annexed to the petition, the first of which requested the name of the person in charge of defendant’s office at 22 Yo'ung Street on the date of plaintiff’s injury. The Prudential Insurance Company of America answered: “Sherman Babcock.”

The petition states defendant’s fall was at the company’s office located at said 22 South Young Street.

The Prudential Insurance Company of America filed its answer to the petition setting up as a first defense the service of summons on it in the name of “The Prudential Life Insurance Company” (emphasis ours), then stated there was an Ohio corporation by this name, but that “this answering defendant is not such corporation,” and asserted its correct name to be, “The Prudential Insurance Company of America.” As a second defense to the petition, the answer averred a general denial.

Later the “Defendant, The Prudential Insurance Company of America,” filed its motion requesting the Court to make the Fourth-Naghten Company a new party defendant herein and to grant leave to this defendant to file its amended answer herein containing a first defense and a second defense of the same allegations as in its answer heretofore filed herein and, as a part of said amended answer, to file its cross-petition against said Fo.urth-Naghten Company, setting up its counterclaim against said Fourth-Naghten Company, arising out of its contract of lease with said Fourth-Naghten Company under authority of which it occupies the premises described in the petition, and to require said Fourth-Naghten Company by a summons, to answer said counterclaim.

Plaintiff’s counsel filed no memorandum opposing said motion, although served with a copy of an affidavit in support of said motion: and this branch of the Court sustained said motion, and its order was journalized.

The Prudential Insurance Company of America filed its amended answer containing the same two defenses asserted in its original answer, and also a cross-petition against the defendant said Fourth-Naghten Company, based upon its lease with said last named company for the premises where plaintiff was injured, being its office. The cross-petition claimed the FourthNaghten Company in said lease reserved to itself janitor service, and that “the floor of which plaintiff complains in her petition was maintained and cared for by said Fourth-Naghten Company, and that whatever treatment, care, repairs and janitor service may have been given to said floor were given, made and furnished by said Fourth-Naghten Company and that said The Prudential Company of America at no time performed or caused to be performed any service or act whatever, having to do with said floor, with a prayer that “in the event a judgment be rendered against it herein in [228]*228favor of the plaintiff, it be given judgment against defendant FourthNaghten Company for the amount thereof” etc.

Summons on the cross-petition was issued and served on the FourthNaghten Company; and thereupon counsel for the Fourth-Naghten Company filed a motion for an order “vacating and setting aside the order making Fourth-Naghten Company a new party defendant herein and granting leave to the Prudential Company of America to file its amended answer setting up its alleged claim against Fourth-Naghten Company.”

The request to set aside the previous order of the Court is based on two grounds, first that the Prudential Life Insurance Company was the only party defendant in this ease, and The Prudential Insurance Company of America, not being a party defendant in this case, has no standing to have others made parties. To simplify, it was claimed A sues B, and C, without being sued, files a motion to make D a party. Let us examine this proposition.

“An answer raising an objection to the merits of the cause of action enters the general appearance of the defendant, though one which merely objects to the jurisdiction of the Court does not.” 31 O. Jur. Pleading, Sec. 178, p. 745.
“Entering a plea constitutes a general appearance where the objection is to its merits.” 3 O. Jur. Appearance, Sec. 9, p. 19.
“1. Where a corporation whose name is composed of several words is sued by a name in which a word in the corporate name is omitted, such omission or misnomer, unless pleaded in abatement, will be disregarded by the court.” State, ex rel. Telegraph Co. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 N.E.2d 883, 70 Ohio Law. Abs. 225, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilligan-v-prudential-life-insurance-ohctcomplfrankl-1954.