Kerruish v. Meyers

11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 666
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 666 (Kerruish v. Meyers) 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
Kerruish v. Meyers, 11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 666 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Parker, J.

This is a proceeding brought to reverse a decision of the court of common pleas overruling a motion to dissolve an injunction. The action below was brought by Meyers and the law firm of Beard & Beard against the National Union Building Company, and the stockholders of that company and the plaintiffs in error here, the action being to enforce the liability of the stockholders of the company, and thereby to obtain satisfaction of a claim which Meyers and Beard & Beard assert against the company. The plaintiffs in error, it is not controverted, were not stockholders of the company, and as to them the action was one to reach a fund which is said to have arisen by a contribution of the stockholders, paid into the hands of Charles S. Ashley, as attorney for the company, to be applied upon the discharge of this claim asserted here by Meyers and Beard & Beard; and with respect to the plaintiffs in error it is said that the fund has been paid over wrongfully by Ashley to Huntsberger, as attorney for Mrs. Kerruish, and that Huntsberger was about to pay it over to his client, Mrs. Kerruish. Therefore, amongst other things sought was an injunction against Huntsberger to restrain him from paying the fund over to his client, and against Mrs. Kerruish to restrain her from receiving and applying the same upon her judgment against Meyers.

In order that the real question involved may be understood, it will be necessary to give a brief history of a variety of transactions pertaining to the matter.

It appears that on April 8, 1895, Mary E. Kerruish, one of the plaintiffs in error, recovered a judgment against Meyers before Seagrave, a justice of the peace, for $100 and costs; that afterwards, Mr. Meyers, having received an injury which he charged to the negligence of this National Union Building Company, and having made up his mind to sue to recover on account of that injury, employed Beard & Beard as his attorneys, and entered into an agreement with them to pay to them one-third of whatever amount they might recover, if they should bring and prosecute such action on his behalf. After this action was instituted, to-wit, on November 20, 1897, Mrs. Kerruish, anticipating or hoping per[668]*668haps that Meyers might recover something of which she might avail herself for the satisfaction' of her claim against Meyers, instituted a proceeding in aid of execution before Seagrave, justice of the peace, against the National Union Building Company, and Meyers, under Sec. 6680 of the code and the'following sections, providing for such proceedings be-? fore justices. On December 18, 1897, an order was made in that proceeding to the effect that the National Union Building Company should hold and pay over to Mrs. Kerruish upon her judgment so much of any amount that Mr. Meyers might recover against that company in the pending suit, as might not exceed the claim of Mrs. Kerruish against Meyers. That order appears to have remained in force from that time to this. Qn January 16, 1899, Meyers recovered a judgment against the National Union Building Company for $500, and on the same day', in pursuance of this agreement with Beard & Beard, he assigned the judgment to them. He assigned to Beard & Beard the whole judgment, not only the one-third thereof which he owed them in consequence of their prosecution of that action, but the remainder of it, to cover their general account for services theretofore performed by them for him as his attorneys. On April 14, 1899, the National Union Building Company paid to Beard & Beard, as attorneys, for Meyers upon this judgment, $300. On November 17, 1899, nearly two years after the order of the justice of the peace in the proceeding of Kerruish v. Meyers and the National Union Building Company, and ten months after the judgment recovered by Meyers against the National Union Building Company, that ■ company paid about $140, or -the full amount of the judgment of Kerruish v. Meyers, to Huntsberger, as attorney for Mrs. Kerruish. It is to reach that money in the hands of Huntsberger that this action is prosecuted. So far as Huntsberger and Mrs. Kerruish are concerned, they have no other or further interest in this proceeding. The plaintiffs in the action below, i. e., Meyers and Beard & Beard, claim that they should have this money; that such judgment should be entered or order be made as will require the payment of the money over to them, because, they 'say, it was exempt to Meyers under the homestead laws of Ohio; that he had a right to claim it, and still has a right to claim it, and have it set off to him in lieu of a homestead, and hold it as exempt; that Mrs. Kerruish has no right to reach it or recover it; that Mr. Ashley had no right to pay it over to Mr.Huntsberger in order that it might be applied upon the Kerruish judgment.

Upon the application of the plaintiffs below an injunction was allowed. When the matter came on to be heard upon a motion to dissolve the injunction, which motion was made upon the ground that the petition did not state a cause of action or any ground for relief as against Huntsberger and Mrs. Kerruish, and also that the facts did not justify any order of injunction against them, a great many affidavits of the parties were used, and what I shall say as to the facts is derived partly from the averments in the petition and partly from those affidavits. I cannot expect to analyze them, but only to give our conclusions from a consideration of all the evidence.

It fairly appears from the evidence thus presented and the undisputed averments of the petition, that Mr. Meyers, ever since he recovered this judgment against the National Union Building Company, has been a resident of Ohio and not the owner of a homestead, and that he has and had a right to select and hold in lieu of a homestead this balance of the [669]*669$500 which had been paid over to Mr. Huntsberger. But it is contended on behalf of plaintiffs in error that Myers has waived that right, or that he has slept upon it until such time as that, by the payment and actual application of the money upon the claim of Mrs. Kerruish, his right has been lost and defeated by his own laches. It is contended, however, by Meyers and Beard & Beard, that this money has not been actually paid and applied upon the claim of Mrs. Kerruish, but that under the arrangement between Mr. Ashley, as attorney for the company, and Mr. Huntsberger, as attorney for Mrs. Kerruish, Mr. Huntsberger in fact holds this money in trust, and under such circumstances and conditions as that it may be reached by a court of equity,' and he may be compelled to restore it, and allow it to be applied as prayed for by the plaintiffs in the case beiow.

It appears that after this judgment was recovered, there was some discussion from time to time between the various attorneys and parties interested as to who sjaould have it, it being claimed on the one hand by Mrs. Kerruish and her counsel, and on the other hand as against them by Meyers and his counsel, 'Beard & Beard. And it is said that Mi. Ashley, as attorney for the National Union Building Company, agreed that he would hold onto the fund, and allow it to be paid into the court of common pleas in the case of Meyers v. Building Company, and that there should be an interpleader between Meyers and Mrs. Kerruish, so that their respective rights might be determined there.

Even if we were to find that this is true to the extent claimed by defendants in error, we cannot see that Mr. Huntsberger, as attorney for Mrs. Kerruish, or that Mrs. Kerruish, were in any way bound or affected by this arrangement.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio Cir. Dec. 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerruish-v-meyers-ohiocirct-1900.