H. A. Stahl Co. v. Euclid Arcade Building Co.

19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 193, 1916 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 88
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 193 (H. A. Stahl Co. v. Euclid Arcade Building Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. A. Stahl Co. v. Euclid Arcade Building Co., 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 193, 1916 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 88 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Foran, J.

This ease comes into this court on error from the municipal court. The plaintiff in error was plaintiff below. In its statement of claim it says it is an Ohio corporation. That sometime during the month of October, 1912, H. A. Stahl & Company entered into a contract with the defendant to find or procure a tenant for the entire basement of defendant’s building located under the Euclid Arcade, in consideration of certain compensation to be paid to it; and that about the 8th of November, 1912, said H. A. Stahl & Company did secure a tenant in accordance with the terms of its contract, but that the defendant wrongfully, and without just cause or excuse, refused to abide by the’ terms of its contract or accept said tenant; and, further, that [194]*194for a' valuable consideration the claim of the said H. A. Stabl & Company was assigned to the plaintiff; and that the defendant, though often requested, refuses to pay the compensation provided for in that contract, or any part thereof.

The defendant, in its statement of defense, specifically and in detail denies all the statements and allegations in plaintiff’s statement of claim, the statement of defense being practically a general denial.

I have twice read the record and exhaustive briefs of counsel in the case, and perhaps an apology is due the litigants for this tardy expression of the court’s views. The questions involved, however, present unusual difficulties in view of what I am strongly inclined to believe will be the ultimate or final result of the litigation.

The claim of the plaintiff that the defendant, during the month of October, 1912, employed H. A. Stahl & Company to find a tenant for the basement of the Euclid Arcade Building, is not-conclusively shown by the record; that is, the evidence offered by the plaintiff can not be said to be evidence which precludes contradiction; nor can it be said to possess such weight and force as not to admit of contradiction. But I think the sole question before the court is this.- Does the evidence disclosed by the record, though not necessarily conclusive, yet not having been contradicted, warrant the court in holding that it is or was sufficient to call for the intervention of a jury to reach the conclusion the plaintiff claims the evidence justifies?

The case is one involving the right of a broker to collect commissions from a client on a. contract of employment for services rendered. It is purely an action at law, triable by a jury, but the -right to jury trial was waived and the ease was tried to the court. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, counsel for the defendant interposed this motion: “I request the court to make a finding for the defendant, and further move that the court enter judgment for the defendant upon its finding.” This motion was sustained or granted. The record is silent as to the reasons given, if any were given, by the court for its action. But it is claimed by counsel for the plaintiff in its brief, and not denied by counsel for the defendant, that the court below [195]*195granted the motion for the reason that the plaintiff had failed to show any authority in the officers of the defendant company to enter into a contract of agency with the plaintiff company -for the renting of the rooms or space in question in its building. If counsel for defendant had submitted the case to the court on the plaintiff’s testimony, a reviewing court would not disturb the finding or judgment of the trial court, unless such finding or judgment was manifestly against the weight of the evidence, and that can not be said in view of all the evidence in this record. It must be held, however, that the motion of counsel for defendant was in effect a motion to direct a verdict, or what .is sometimes called a non-suit.

It is quite evident, if the court denied or refused the motion of defendant’s counsel to make a finding and on that finding enter judgment for the defendant, counsel who made or interposed the motion would be at liberty and would have the right to introduce evidence and make his defense. Ordinarily counsel who invoke the iron rule of the non-suit, which is practically a démurrer to plaintiff’s evidence, are not willing to take the chances of the submission of the ease on the plaintiff’s evidence, and no fault can be found for this evidence of caution. The practice of cautious and prudent attorneys is to ask or- move for a non-suit or verdict by direction, reserving the right to be heard if the motion is adversely decided. Any other course would, as a rule, be dangerous and hazardous. There are cases, however, where the courage of conviction is profitable, and the case before us we think naturally falls into this class.

It is well settled that in actions at law the rule as to non-suit or a verdict by direction is the same where the trial is by the court or by a jury. 139 Cal., 392; 61 App. Div. (N. Y.), 453. In a trial before a judge sitting without a jury, in a case where the right to trial by jury exists, a motion for non-suit or judgment for the defendant should be denied where the evidence and inferences reasonably rising therefrom are legally sufficient- to prove the material allegations of the plaintiff’s declaration. Weston E. I. Co. v. Benecke (N. J.), 82 Atl., 878. This in effect means that a motion for a non-suit or request for a finding and judgment for the defendant admits the truth of [196]*196the plaintiff’s evidence and every inference of fact that can be legitimately drawn therefrom, but denies its sufficiency, and the court can not grant such motion unless it can be fairly said there is no evidence in support of the material allegations of the plaintiff’s petition. The judge sitting in or trying a case involving questions of fact without a jury, when a motion for non-suit is interposed, before deciding the defendant is entitled to a judgment on the plaintiff’s evidence, would have to weigh the evidence as would a jury, and thus probate its value; and this, under the law in this state, he may not do. The court below evidently proceeded upon the assumption that the case was before him as upon final submission, or did not pause to consider the distinction between deciding a question of law and a question of fact.

Undoubtedly it is well settled that a corporation for profit can not act so as to be legally held liable except through its board ol directors or some one duly authorized by the board or by the regulations of the corporation to act for it. Corporations are held, however, where it appears that by a course of general conduct it has permitted a person to act-for it and has subsequently ratified the act of such person. The plaintiff claims its contract was made with one Edward C. Kenney, a member of its board of directors, who it claims was the manager of the defendant company. The evidence seems to clearly indicate that Mr. Kenney, in October, 1912, was in charge of the Euclid Arcade Building, in the sense that he was the only person on the premises representing the defendant. He was engaged in doing some construction work on the building and was located in what might be termed the defendant company’s office most of the time, though he says he also had a private office of his own. He unquestionably had such control over the premises as to prevent trespass thereon or therein, consult with tenants and others having business with the defendant company, and see and consult with prospective tenants. Whether he had authority from the board of directors to lease or rent rooms or space in the building is clearly a disputed question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 193, 1916 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-a-stahl-co-v-euclid-arcade-building-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1916.