Jones v. Ludlow

6 Ohio C.C. 57
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio C.C. 57 (Jones v. Ludlow) 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.

Bluebook
Jones v. Ludlow, 6 Ohio C.C. 57 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The question submitted to us is, whether the plaintiff on. the evidence adduced, is entitled to an order or judgment requiring the defendant as assignee, to allow in the settlement of his trusts, four notes held by the plaintiff against the firm, of Harris, Hunt & Co., assignors.

The admitted facts in the case are these: The firm of Harris, Hunt & Co., was composed of C. M. Harris & T. E. Hunt. At the time of the assignment to Mr. Uudlow, Harris, one of the partners, had by purchase became the owner of these four obligations of the firm. Shortly after the assignment, he indorsed and delivered them to The Union National Bank of this city, as security for a judgment held by the bank against another firm of which Harris was also a member, time being given for the payment of such [59]*59udgment as a consideration for the transfer. After the assignment of Harris, Hunt & Co. to Mr. Ludlow, The Union National Bank. presented to him, as such assignee, sundry claims against the firm for allowance; four of them were on notes of the firm, which were allowed by the assignee, the fifth was this judgment rendered against the other firm of which Harris was a member, but on which the firm of Harris, Hunt & Co. was.not liable. This last claim was rejected by the assignee, and a suit was brought in the court of common pleas, No. 71,197, to compel him to allow it. The original petition was filed Aug. 29, 1884, and the claim thereby made undoubtedly was for the allowance of the claim of this judgment, no mention whatever being made of the notes held by the bank as security therefor.

But for some cause this petition was afterwards amended, and it is upon the form and structure of this amended pleading that the principal question in this case, that is whether it is res judicata, arises.

The amendment filed, in express terms made the original petition, and all of its allegations, a part of it, and then, “as a first cause of action,” it alleges that it is the owner and holder of a note of the firm, describing it, and on which it is averred a certain amount is due. “ And for a second cause of action ” it sets out its ownership of a second note, and the-amount due thereon, and so for the third and fourth cause of action.

For a fifth cause of action it avers the recovery of the judgment against the other firm of which Harris was a member, for $3503.25, and, except a small payment thereon, that the whole thereof is due, stating the amount, bearing interest from a day named. That in order to secure the payment of this judgment the four notes before described, had been deposited with the bank as security. That they had presented their claim on this judgment to the assignee for allowance, and that he had rejected the same, and the petition sets out in hceo verba the language in which the claim thereon had [60]*60been presented, and a judgment was prayed “that said assignee, defendant, allow its said claim against the estate in trust, for the full amount thereof, as appears in the proof thereof filed with him, and by him rejected, and as shown in this pleading.” The -answer of the assignee was a general denial.

On a trial of the case on this issue, the judgment, so far as •‘t is necessary to state it, was in this form :

“Upon consideration of all which the court finds that said, deed of assignment was an assignment only of the firm of Harris, Hunt & Co., and of its assets alone ; that it was not • an assignment of the individual members of said firm, or of the separate assets of said individuals composing-the same, and by virtue thereof said assignee is the assignee of said firm alone and of its assets, and is. not the assignee of the individual members thereof, or of their assets. The court further finds that the claim set forth in the pleadings of plaintiff is-upon a judgment against one of the individual members of said firm, and because said; assignee is not the assignee of said-individual member, but of the firm only, the said judgment claim should not be allowed in these proceedings. Wherefore it is considered by the court that this action be and the-same is hereby dismissed.”

Was this a bar to the successful prosecution of this suit?' We are of thei opinion that the claim of the bank asserted in the first action, was for the allowance of the judgment as a-claim against the assignment, and not on the notes which it held as security therefor, although it must be conceded that the allegations as to their being five causes of action in the-petition, is well calculated to raise a doubt as to this, and the reason for any such allegations are not apparent. But on a careful consideration of the original amended petition, and of the claim which was presented to the assignee, which is incorporated into and made part of the petition, we think that the action was not to compel the allowance of, the notes. The claim so presented simply sets up- the judgment, and avers [61]*61that the bank holds the four notes as security, and is willing to turn them over to any person on payment of the judgment, and asks for no allowance of the notes.

But in addition to this, there is a finding- by the court in the first case in which the defendant Ludlow; and the assignor of the plaintiff were parties, that the claim set forth in the pleadings of plaintiff was on the judgment, and not on the claims held as security therefor, and this is a binding adjudication against both. And it is further apparent from the judgment itself, that this was the sole ground of the decision of the court; for if the claims to be allowed were predicated ■upon the notes, the judgment gf the court'was utterly inconsistent with itself. And to hold that the judgment in that case should operate to defeat the claim in this, would be manifestly unjust, and should not be allowed, unless it is clear that it must be done. But such is not the case.

If this action is not barred, we see no legal reason why the assignee should not allow these claims. It is admitted that they are just claims, and owing by the firm of Harris, Hunt & Co. They were purchased from the owner by Harris, who before their maturity transferred them to the bank, and the plaintiff is the legal owner thereof. Even if they were transferred after their maturity, or if Harris now held them, and was asking for their allowance as valid claims, we think the assignee should allow them, and the question would then remain for determination in the proper court, whether the holder of them, simply standing in the shoes of Harris, a member of the firm, and liable for all of its debts, could be entitled to any dividend until all of the other creditors of the partnership were fully paid. We suppose it probable that he would not be. But this does not prevent him from having his claim allowed, if it is a just one. But in this case, the notes having been transferred before maturity, a wholly different result might follow, and it may be that the-holder of negotiable paper transferred to him before maturity, and for a good consideration, though with knowledge of the in[62]*62solvency of the makers, and their assignment for the benefit of creditors, would be entitled to a dividend with other creditors. But this question is not before us, and can only be settled in the probate court, on the distribution of the assets or the partnership. All we decide is that the claim is a valid one, and that the plaintiff is entitled to its allowance by the assignee.

A. B. Champion,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio C.C. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-ludlow-ohiocirct-1891.