Kirchner v. Smith

18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 45, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 22
CourtScioto Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 45 (Kirchner v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Scioto Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirchner v. Smith, 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 45, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 22 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

WALTERS, J.

In the common pleas court, the plaintiff in error, William E„ Kirchner, filed against Lloyd E. Smith, the defendant in error, a petition, to which a demurrer was sustained by that court; subsequently he filed an amended petition,, to which a demurrer was interposed by the de[47]*47fendant, and in determining this demurrer in favor of the defendant, it was held that the action, both on the original and amended petition, was barred by the four years’ statute of limitations; and thereupon the plaintiff filed a petition in error in this court.

Was there error in this decision of the common pleas court? If the four years statute, Rev. Stat. 4982 (Lan. 8497), applies, then the action was not brought in time; but if the six years statute, Rev. Stat. 4981 (Lan. 8496), applies, then it was brought in time.

The original petition below was upon an account for one-half of the purchase price of the undivided one-twelfth interest in an oil and gas lease on a tract of 105 acres of land, situated in Tyler county, West Virginia, and belonging to Elisha P. Snyder.; which said one-twelfth interest was owned by the said Smith and Kirchner, each owning one-half thereof, and was on October 10, 1897, sold by said Smith for $1,151.04; and said Smith then received and converted to his own use the whole of said purchase money, including $575.52, which belonged to plaintiff in error; the interest on said $575.52 from, October 18, 1897, till September 15, 1902, is $177.95, and the total is $753.99. There are no credits on said account.

'Wherefore, plaintiff prayed for judgment against the defendant in the said sum of $753.99, with interest thereon from September 15, 1902.

The amended petition sets up the same transaction: the ownership of the lease by the plaintiff and the defendant, each owning one-half of the undivided one-twelfth of the oil and gas lease and described the land more particularly by metes and bounds, but as being situated in the same county, and the same number of acres; and it avers that in October, 1897, the defendant wrongfully sold and converted to his own use the proceeds of the sale, $1,151.04, and it asks judgment for the one-half of the proceeds of the sale so received by the defendant.

1. The first contention is, that the amended petition states a different cause of action than that in the original petition; that the identity of the cause of action stated in the original petition is not the-same as that described in the amended petition. The original petition, in form, was upon the account so stated. The consideration of the account is the one-half of the one-twelfth of the oil and gas lease in Tyler ’ county, West Virginia, upon a tract of 105 acres of land, which one-twelfth the defendant sold on a certain day, and that he received $1,151.04, and that he has refused to turn over the one-half; and he asks judgment in money for the one-half of that.

The amended petition states the same facts in a little more-[48]*48elaborate manner, describing particularly by metes and bounds the 105 acres as being situated in Tyler county, West Virginia, and that each of them (plaintiff and defendant) was ,the owner of the one-half of the one-twelfth of this oil and gas lease, and that the defendant on a certain date, 1897, the tenth of October, sold, with his own, this interest of plaintiff, and that defendant had, and received $1,151.04; and the plaintiff asks judgment for the one-half of the proceeds so received by Smith.

There is a complete identity of the causes of action. There is no departure — if departure it can be called — which is usually a term applied to where the reply of the plaintiff departs from the cause of action stated in the petition. •

But it is alleged that there is a different cause of action. And whether or not there is a different cause of action is to be determined by certain tests.

First. The same evidence would support both pleadings. The same evidence that would support the original pleading in this case would support the cause of action in the amended petition. The petitioner owned the one-half of the one-twelfth of the oil and gas lease in Tyler county, West Virginia, upon 105 acres of land; the defendant sold the whole twelfth, October 10, 1897, and converted one-half of the proceeds — money—to his own use; and the plaintiff demands the one-half of that certain sum so received — the. proceeds of the sale. Now, would not the same evidence'support the amended petition that would support the original petition ? Is not the identity of the cause of action the same in regard to the one-half of the one-twelfth of the oil and gas lease on 105 acres, in Tyler county, West Virginia? The amended petition says that same thing. The same evidence that would be introduced to support a cause of action upon the account in the petition would be, and could be, the only evidence that could be introduced upon the amended petition. This makes an identity of the causes of action.

Second. The same measure of damages applies to each of them. The same amount was asked in the amended as in the original petition, viz., one-half of the $1,151.04. The identity is therefore complete; and the recovery would be the same on .each pleading.

Third. A recovery upon the amended petition would bar a recovery upon the other pleading. Would not a recovery on the amended petition of the one-half of the one-twelfth of an oil and gas lease of the proceeds of that .sale — bar the right to recovery upon the original petition which counts upon the same thing? Therefore, the identity of the causes of action is the same. It is the same subject-matter, and the [49]*49same interest in the gas and oil lease, owned by the same parties; the proprietors, in the same tract of land, in the same county, are averred, -and the same amount is asked in both. Therefore, we must necessarily conclude that the identity of the causes of action is the same. The form of action is perhaps changed from that on the account in the original petition of that of money had and received in the amended petition,- but this is an immaterial difference.

2. Is the cause of action barred by the statute of limitation? Is the cause of action stated in the petition and also the one stated in the amended petition a cause of action in ex delicto, and not on implied contract? If it is upon an implied contract, the statute of limitation is six years, and therefore the action is not barred. If the action is for a tort, then the statute of limitation of four years bars this action.

We hold that the amended petition, being for the same identical cause of action as the original petition, that the statute of limitation ceased to run at the filing of the petition in this case, and not at the filing of the amended petition. But does the statute, four years’ statute, or the six years’ statute, apply?

When one person receives the property of another, if he illegally and unlawfully or wrongfully obtains the property of another, the law implies an obligation upon his part that he will refund to the owner that property so unlawfully coming into his possession. Therefore, there arose an implied contract on the part of the defendant when he sold this oil and gas lease for $1,151.04, and received the whole of it, if the half of it belonged to the plaintiff in this case — there was an implied obligation upon the part of the defendant — to pay over, to the plaintiff one-half of the same so received by him.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 45, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirchner-v-smith-ohcirctscioto-1905.