Haggard v. Shick

86 N.E.2d 785, 151 Ohio St. 535, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 535, 39 Ohio Op. 336, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 459
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1949
Docket31678
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 86 N.E.2d 785 (Haggard v. Shick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haggard v. Shick, 86 N.E.2d 785, 151 Ohio St. 535, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 535, 39 Ohio Op. 336, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 459 (Ohio 1949).

Opinions

Taft, J.

One of the four makers was deceased at the time the judgment by confession was taken. Therefore, if the warrant of attorney is construed as authorizing merely the confession of a joint judgment against the makers, there was no authority to confess any judgment against any one or more of the makers. Hoffmaster v. G. M. McKelvey Co., 88 Ohio St., 552, 106 N. E., 1061. On the other hand, if the warrant of attorney is construed as authorizing confession of a joint and several judgment, then the warrant might have justified confession of judgment against the plaintiffs herein who were sui juris at the time of execution of the note and alive at the time of confession of the judgment. Frey v. Cleveland Trust Co., 143 Ohio St., 319, 55 N. E. (2d), 416.

Defendant contends that the warrant of attorney, when given a reasonable construction, authorized confession of a joint and several judgment against the four makers. In support of this position, defendant argues that a note, signed by several parties as makers and containing the words, “I promise,” etc., was held to be a joint and several obligation before the adoption in this state of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act. Wallace v. Jewell, 21 Ohio St., 163. Such a note is now so construed because of the provisions of *538 that law. Section 8122, General Code. Defendant then points out that, if the note is read as though nothing were to go into the blanks, the result is as follows: “* * * I promise to pay * * * and hereby authorize.” It is contended that it is just as if the word, “I,” had been inserted in the blank before the words, “hereby authorize”; and that, since the words, “I promise to pay,” on a note signed by several parties result in a joint and several obligation, the words, “I hereby authorize,” appearing in a warrant of attorney signed by several parties, authorize the attorney to confess a joint and several judgment against those parties.

The contention of the plaintiffs is that the authority given by a warrant of attorney to confess judgment against a maker or makers of the note must be clear and explicit and strictly pursued and no supposed words omitted by the parties may be supplied. It is argued that, if such construction is given to the warrant, then it did not authorize confession of a several judgment.

In Cushman v. Welsh, 19 Ohio St., 536, the syllabus reads in part:

“2. A warrant of attorney to confess judgment must be strictly construed, and the authority thereby conferred cannot be exercised beyond the limits expressed in the instrument.
“3. A warrant of attorney attached to such sealed note or bill, authorizing a judgment to be confessed thereon ‘in favor of the legal holder’ thereof, does not authorize a confession of judgment on such note in favor of the owner and holder thereof, without an indorsement thereon by the payee transferring the legal title to such owner and bolder of the note.”

In the court’s opinion in that case it is said:

“* * * the plaintiff below became the owner and holder of the note by purchase of Rickley & Brother, *539 and paid them therefor the full amount of the note. Though he might, as the owner of the note in equity, have brought an action thereon, under the provisions of the Code, in his own name, against the makers of the note, it does not follow that he could obtain judgment by confession on their warrant of attorney attached to the note.”

In Spence v. Emerine, 46 Ohio St., 435, 21 N. E., 866, 15 Am. St. Rep., 634, the syllabus reads in part:

“1. A warrant of attorney to confess judgment should be strictly construed.
‘ ‘ 2. A warrant of attorney attached to a sealed note payable to the payee or bearer, authorized ‘any attorney at law, at any time after the above sum becomes due, with or without process, to appear for us in any court of record in the state of Ohio, and confess judgment against us, for the amount then due thereon, with interest and costs, and to release all errors and the right of appeal.’ Held,-.

(a) Such warrant of attorney conferred no authority to confess judgment against the maker of the note, in favor of the holder to whom the payee had transferred the note by delivery.”

In the court’s opinion it is said:

“* * * the sealed note now under consideration became negotiable by statute * * *. It is provided by Section 3171 of the Revised Statutes,, that * * * ‘ * * * all such instruments payable to a person or bearer shall be negotiable by delivery.’
“ * * * it is an established principle, that an authority given by warrant of attoniey to confess a judgment against the maker of the note, must be clear and explicit, and strictly pursued, and we cannot supply any supposed omissions of the parties. * * *
“The plaintiff in error, in executing the note, might be presumed to have authorized an attorney -to enter *540 up a judgment against him in favor of the payee, when he would not be presumed to have consented to stand in the relation of judgment debtor to a stranger or adverse holder, to whom the payee might indorse or ■deliver the note. The maker might well insist upon a strict construction of the power granted, when the payee, by transferring the note before maturity, might preclude a defense which he might have at maturity. 'The power of attorney attached to the note in controversy, does not, in express language, authorize a ■confession of judgment in favor of any one, not even ■of the payee; but if such authority might be implied as to the payee, we cannot, under the rule of a strict interpretation, extend that implication in favor of the defendant in error to whom the note was transferred by delivery.
“* * * where it has been adjudged by the court that a power of attorney to confess a judgment may be executed in favor of a party other than the payee, it has been in cases where authority was expressly conferred to confess a judgment in favor of a legal holder ■or holder of the note. The decisions have all been based upon a strict interpretation of the power grant■ed, without aiding any omission or defect in’its terms by liberal intendment or construction.”

Defendant in the instant case relies on First National Bank of Findlay v. Trout, 58 Ohio St., 347, 51 N. E., 27. That case involved a judgment taken by confession against two makers of a note the provisions of which were identical with those of the note in the instant case except that there were immaterial variations in punctuation and the word, “costs,” near the end •of the power of attorney provision in the Trout case, is “cost” in the instant case. In the Trout case

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 N.E.2d 785, 151 Ohio St. 535, 151 Ohio St. (N.S.) 535, 39 Ohio Op. 336, 1949 Ohio LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haggard-v-shick-ohio-1949.