Hall v. Geyer

7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 436
CourtSeneca Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 436 (Hall v. Geyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Seneca Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Geyer, 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 436 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Bay, J.

The action in the lower court, was by Ida Geyer against . John A. Hall, and was to recover one half the cost of building a party wall, erected on the division line of lots 104 and 105 in the city of Tiffin, Geyer asserted a right of recovery by reason of her ownership of lot 105 and the building thereon, including the wall in question, the right and title of which she acquired directly, by proper conveyances from different persons in line from Eewis Wisler, who was the owner of lot 105, and constructed the building thereon, in 1874-5. She asserts in her petition that before the construction of the building and wall in question, Wisler first obtained an easement or right to construct the party wall from John A. Hall, who was then and now the owner oí lot 104, with the understanding and agreement that Hall was not to incur any present liability on account of the wall or until he used the same for purposes of an adjoining building; at which time and not before, he was to pay one-half the expense of constructing it. She shows that in 1894 Hall did make use of the wall for his adjoining building as a party wall, and that he refuses to pay for the same although requested to do so.

Hall’s answer is first, in effect, a general denial of plaintiff’s claim; denial of the alleged agreement between Wisler and himself, by which he agreed to pay one-half the cost of the wall to the owner of the building, and a denial of all liability in the premises. Pleading further, Hall asserts that Eewis Wisler, the owner of lot 105, and the builder of the wall, while’ such owner released and discharged him of all liability on account of the said wall. There is another defense set up, that of res adjudicata, i. e., that the identical question made in this case was litigated in a former case and determined upon a bearing on the merits, by a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter, so it cannot with propriety (be further litigated. A reply denies a release and discharge of Hall from liability, by Wisler, and denies former adjudication.

The issues thus joined were tried to the court, the parties waiving a jury, resulting in a finding and judgment in favor of Mrs. Geyer for $492.20, after the overruling of a motion for new trial. Hall excepted to all this, secured a proper bill of exceptions containing all the evidence had on the trial, and showing the ruling of the court on the admission of evidence, filed it in this court, with a petition in error, and seeks a reversal of the judgment and a new trial of the case, because of errors, said to be apparent, on the face of the record.

It is said in the petition in error that the court of common pleas erred:

[438]*4381. In admitting and in rejecting evidence on the trial, to which exception was taken and noted at the time.
2. That the finding and judgment is not supported by sufficient evidence, and is contrary to law.

The assignments of error in the petition are nine, as numbered in the petition in error, but they are all properly included and grouped in the two I have stated, viz.: Errors in the matter of ruling as to the admissibility of evidence, and that the finding is not supported by sufficient evidence.

1. As to the errors claimed in the ruling on the admissibility of evidence: Dr. H. C. Wells was offered as a witness in behalf of defendant and asked the question, in substance, “ What, if anything did Eewis Wisler tell you, in 1880, as to any amount due him from Hall for this party wall?” On objection by counsel for plaintiff, the court ruled the witness should not answer the question. It was said, “ if the witness was allowed to testify, he would testify that in 1880, Eewis Wisler told him, that he had donated one-half of the wall of the building to John A. Hall.” There was no error in this. The answer was properly ruled out on, at least, two grounds: 1. It was not competent to show the oral declarations of Wisler discrediting in some degree, the title of property which he, before that time, had owned, and under general covenants of warranty, conveyed away. 2. It was not competent to show a donation of real estate, which this wall is, by the oral declarations of the alleged donor; especially where the alleged donor had before that time, by a proper deed, solemnly executed, conveyed the same real estate to another person.

Again John A. Hall was produced as a witness in his own behalf, and asked the question: “ State if Harry Wisler was present at any time when you and his father, Eewis Wisler, made any arrangement or agreement respecting this party wall?” The question was objected to and the answer excluded, to which ruling an exception was noted. It was stated that Mr. Hall, if permitted, would testify “that he had but one conversation with Eewis Wisler, as to the building of this party wall; that Harry Wisler was not present at that one; and that witness would state the whole contract and agreement between Eewis Wisler and himself; that the agreement was, that Hall was not to pay anything for the stone part of the wall, at any time; that all Hall was to pay, was to be paid to Eewis Wisler, and was to be: One-half the cost of the brick part of the wall, and only of so much of said brick part as Hall might thereafter use, to be paid for when used.” The question itself was a very innocent one and very likely proper; yet the information likely to be elicited by it, could not be important, as bearing on any of the issues in the case, and therefore its exclusion could not be prejudicial. It would seem, from the statement of counsel, as to what the answer would be, that counsel was expecting under cover of a very innocent question, to prove a great deal more than the law of evidence would allow, and very much of which testimony the statute expressly incapacitates Mr. Hall to give. Hall was a party, and plaintiff was claiming as an assignee of a deceased person, and section 5242 Revised Statutes, precludes him from testifying at all, unless he first brings himself within some one of the exceptions stated in that section, which was not done or attempted. In view of the fact that the information called for by the question was not important, had been given by the witness before that, and its exclusion non-prejudicial to plaintiff in error, we cannot find or say the lower court was in error. Hall was further asked, see page 15 of the bill of exceptions, [439]*439whether Mr. Tewis Wisler at any time released him from the obligation to pay for one-half of the wall. This was also properly excluded. Section 5242, as we have seen, made him incompetent. Death had closed the mouth of hewis Wisler, and the law put a seal on that of Hall.

2. Was the finding and judgment not supported by sufficient evidence, and therefore contrary'to law? is the remaining question.

Most of the material facts are agreed upon by the parties, and stated in the bill of exceptions. These facts are, in substance: That Mrs. Geyer owns the lot 105 with the appurtenances, that it came to her by proper conveyances from Tewis Wisler, now deceased; that Hall, then and now, owned lot 104; in 1874 hewis Wisler built on lot 105 a three story brick building, now, and for years, used as a hotel; the south wall of said building stands one-half on and along the south line of lot 105, and one-half on the north line of lot 104. One-half the value of the wall is $592.20.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-geyer-ohcirctseneca-1896.