Langrueter v. Iroquois Co.

10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81

This text of 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81 (Langrueter v. Iroquois Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langrueter v. Iroquois Co., 10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

Tbis action is brought against the defendant, company, which operates and runs the hotel known as the Neil House, Columbus Ohio.

[82]*82The petition alleges that one Ben H. Harmon, as the manager of the hotel, for and on behalf of defendant company, on November 13, 1908, maliciously and without probable cause signed and swore to an affidavit, upon which a warrant for the arrest of the plaintiff was issued, served and executed.

The material parts of the affidavit charged plaintiff with putting up at the Neil House, that he did then and there procure lodging and entertainment from said Iroquois Company, which was then and there owner thereof, with the intent then and there to defraud it, etc., contrary to the statute, etc.

That plaintiff was arrested on warrant issued upon said affidavit, and was thereby so arrested and imprisoned unlawfully and by force was so deprived of his liberty, for one day on a pretended charge of so fraudulently procuring such hotel lodging and entertainment.

That on October Í4, 1908, on a full hearing and trial of said charge, the same was dismissed, and plaintiff was acquitted of such charge. That said charge was wholly without foundation and wholly false -as the defendant well .knew.

Then follows allegation as to special and general damages’sustained, with prayer for judgment.

The answer in addition to some admissions and the usual form of denial of all other allegations, set up the defense of advice of counsel upon which defendant claimed to have acted upon before making the charge. .

To this plaintiff repliéd in the form of a denial.

The case proceeded to trial to a jury. . The evidence disclosed that the difficulty arose over a dispute as to the prices of the room occupied by plaintiff. The latter called for a dollar room, which he claimed the clerk assigned to him. It appeared, however, that he was given a $1.50 room, because the dollar rooms were gone, the plaintiff admitting that he had a better room than he had been in the habit of getting for one dollar. Plaintiff had been in the habit of stopping there and had sold merchandise to the defendant on other occasions.

When plaintiff offered to pay his bill, upon finding that the bill rendered him was at the rate of $1.50 he refused to pay it, and tendered and left on the cashier’s desk the amount of the [83]*83bill upon the rate of one dollar per day.. Plaintiff stated that he was going to leave the city for a day, and would leave his baggage, and return in the evening. The manager insisted'upon payment of the bill then and there, threatening prosecution under the statute providing against defrauding hotel keepers if the full amount was not paid.

Plaintiff himself called a policeman and, after considerable altercation, he left the hotel without communicating his intentions as to where he was going to the defendant.

Defendant immediately consulted its own general counsel as also the police prosecutor, laying before them all the facts and acting upon their advice. It appears, however, that a policeman knowing all the facts made the arrest before the affidavit was filed and the warrant issued.

An effort was made by plaintiff in his evidence, by innuendo merely, to show that defendant had something to do with the arrest which was made before the warrant was issued.

Plaintiff attempted to formally offer the answer of defendant which admitted that the arrest was made without a warrant, but it did not admit in any way that defendant had anything to do with making the arrest.

Plaintiff rested his ease with his own testimony and the admission in the answer that he ivas arrested without a warrant. He endeavored to show that the officer for whom he sent in his own interest, was the one who made the arrest, the plaintiff stating in answer to a question to that effect, ‘ ‘ That must have been the man.11

This was not allowed by the court. Counsel, however, insisted that whatever the case might actually be, it ought to be disposed of by one action, that plaintiff ought not be subjected to let the matter go and be at the expense of bringing another action. In other words, counsel for plaintiff was seeking to prove an arrest without a Avarrant, constituting false imprisonment, and still retaining his case for malicious prosecution.

It was sought to show all the facts and circumstances without regard to the theory of the petition, whether of false imprisonment or malicious prosecution, or both, and then amend his petition.

[84]*84It was ruled that the cause was one for malicious prosecution, and plaintiff was held to proof thereof within the limits of the pleadings. There had been an amendment before trial, changing-the theory of the cause from that of false imprisonment to malicious prosecution; it was, therefore, ruled that the case should proceed on that theory. An objection was, therefore, sustained to a question which went to the arrest without.a warrant.

It was urged that actions now under the code are merely actions for money only, and that the distinctions are immaterial; that parties should be permitted to prove their case whatever it may be, and let it accordingly be submitted to the jury. There are, it seems, some who adhere to such a view.

But there seems nothing better settled than that the cause of action should be founded upon a definite theory, which marks the course throughout the case. This was the common law rule, and is still the rule under the code. The rule is designed to present the precise claim in controversy to enable the defendant to meet it, and the court to understand and determine it. The limitation found in the code, that the cause of action shall not be changed by amendment, forbids the changing of the theory first adopted.

In the early history of the code some learned writers, notably Pomeroy, insisted that the reforms would not be fully accomplished if we did not treat the action under the code as a mere civil action for money, or other relief sought as a new form based upon different conditions than those whose place it took. But it was early established that the- formal changes did not affect the substantive distinctions, and that rights of action and causes of action remained the same. And in the sixty odd years in practice under the code procedure, the courts have not departed from this conception of rights and causes of action.

The question raised in this case was whether there was an opportunity to assert a cause for false imprisonment and also for malicious prosecution, provided it could be shown that defendant was instrumental in causing the arrest, without a’warrant.

This is precisely what counsel evidently was endeavoring to do without pleading; or in other words he wanted to offer all the [85]*85proof which would enable him to make such claims, or whatever claims he deemed best under the circumstances, and amend his pleading accordingly. This he was not permitted to do. But finally he rested his ease, with no more evidence than as already shown, with no evidence connecting defendant with the arrest without warrant, and then made the following motion:

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langrueter-v-iroquois-co-ohctcomplfrankl-1910.