Lowellville Coal Mining Co. v. Zappio

80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 458
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1909
DocketNo. 10980
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 458 (Lowellville Coal Mining Co. v. Zappio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowellville Coal Mining Co. v. Zappio, 80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 458 (Ohio 1909).

Opinion

Price, J.

The defendant in error brought suit against the plaintiff in error, before William B. Moore, a justice of the peace for Poland township, Mahoning county, to recover compensation in the sum of three hundred dollars for injuries alleged to have been sústained by him while he was in the employ of said company as a coal miner. The bill of particulars was filed on the 23d day of April, 1906; a summons for the defendant was issued and served. In addition an endorsement appears on the writ as follows: “Defendant accepts service. Jacob Stambaugh, President.” The return day was April 27, 1906, at 9 o’clock a. m. By consent of parties the case was continued to May 1, 1906, same hour. The record shows that on that day the parties appeared and by consent the case was continued to May 2,1906, 1 o’clock p. m. On that day, as the transcript shows, the following occurred: “May 2, 1906. Emil J. Anderson appeared as attorney for the defendant and confessed judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $300 and against defendant and for costs and gave notice of appeal. It is therefore considered and adjudged by me that plaintiff recover from defendant the sum of $300 debt and costs herein taxed at $-. W. B, Moore, Justice of [460]*460the Peace.” On the 28th of May, same year, defendant moved that the docket entry be corrected to read: “Judgment by default” instead of “confessed judgment.” This motion was overruled on May 31, and defendant excepted.

On the day judgment was entered, the defendant filed an appeal bond which was in due form and which was approved by the justice on the 10th of May, 1906. On the 31st of May, 1906, a transcript from the docket of the justice was filed in the court of common pleas. On August 3, 1906, the plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, which was sustained on the 22d of September, 1906, and the appeal was dismissed. On October 12, 1906, the defendant filed a motion for rehearing, which was sustained October 18, same year, and cause reinstated, and on January 11, 1907, the court overruled the motion to dismiss the appeal.

The record shows the next step was taken May 6, 1907, when the court dismissed the action for want of prosecution. The entry reads: “The plaintiff failing to file an amended petition, the court for that reason dismisses the action for want of prosecution,” to which plaintiff excepted. Judgment was rendered against pla’intiff for costs.

Thereupon Zappio filed his petition in error against the plaintiff in error in the circuit court of Mahoning county, to reverse the judgment and orders of the court of common pleas. The errors assigned in that court were: “First. The court erred in overruling the motion of plaintiff in error to quash the appeal. Second. The court erred in assuming jurisdiction in the premises, other than, to dismiss the appeal and render judgment for [461]*461costs. Third. The court erred in rendering judgment against the plaintiff in error.”

The circuit court reversed the judgment of the common pleas and rendered the following judgment:'“It is therefore considered by this court that the judgment and decision rendered_ by the said court of common pleas be reversed and held for naught at costs of defendant in error, and the court further proceeding to render such judgment as the court of common pleas should have rendered, find that the motion to quash and dismiss the appeal is ■ well taken and hereby doth grant the same. It is therefore considered by the court that the motion to quash the appeal be sustained and the appeal taken from the magistrate court to the court of common pleas be dismissed at costs of defendant. To all of which judgment and order the defendant in error excepts.”

The coal mining company prosecutes error in this court to reverse said judgment.

We are disposed to consider the several points of error involved in inverse order to that adopted in the brief of the plaintiff in error, because from any viewpoint, the validity of the judgment rendered on confession of the coal company by its attorney, is necessarily to be determined. If the judgment so rendered upon its face is invalid; if an attorney could not legally confess judgment for his client in the case then pending before the justice, the same was not only irregular but void, inasmuch as the justice had no authority to recognize the effort of the attorney and enter such a judgment. In that event the judgment on its face would appear to be void, and might be wholly disregarded or collaterally impeached. On the other [462]*462hand if such confession was apparently within the authority of the attorney, a judgment so confessed is not void on its face, and while in force must be treated as other judgments on confession.

The transcript from the docket of the justice shows that on the day to which the case had been continued by mutual consent of the parties, “Emil J. Anderson appeared as attorney for defendant and confessed judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $300 and against defendant, and for costs, and gave notice of appeal.” The defendant had been regularly summoned and one continuance had to May 1st. On that day the ■ “parties appeared and by consent case was continued to May 2d at 1 o’clock p. m.” On that day the confession was made. The justice had obtained jurisdiction over the subject-matter and of the defendant, and this jurisdiction was unquestioned when the judgment was rendered. According to the foregoing entry immediately following the judgment so entered on confession by the attorney, he gave notice of appeal. That act was not repudiated, for we see that an appeal bond was given and-approved, and with it a transcript of the docket entries, etc., were duly filed in the court of common pleas.

If the judgment so rendered is considered as a “judgment rendered on confession” then no appeal from it could be lawfully taken to the court of common pleas. In other words, such judgment is final. Section 6596, Revised Statutes, provides that an appeal shall not be allowed in a case where judgment is rendered on confession.

What then is the standing of the judgment under consideration? It is not governed by Section 588, Revised Statutes, for that relates to a [463]*463party appearing before the justice without process and confessing an indebtedness, in which case on the application of the creditor judgment may be rendered for the amount confessed.

In answer to the foregoing question we are of opinion that in a case attended by the facts appearing in the record and which have been quoted- from the transcript, an attorney has power to confess judgment for his client, and that such power will be implied, where nothing to the contrary appears, and the record of the judgment is prima facie evidence that the attorney who confessed it was properly authorized. See 4 Cyc., 936. And in 23 Cyc., 701-2, it is said that “as a general rule a confession of judgment can be made only by defendant himself, or by some person duly authorized to act for him in that behalf. The authority of an attorney at law appearing in open court will be presumed until the .contrary is shown, but this is not so in the case of an attorney in fact. An agent acting within the scope of his authority and- to the extent of it, may confess judgment against his principal.”

The latter proposition -is made by no less authority than Black, author of the treatise on judgments.

It has not fallen to the lot of this court to pass directly on this question, but we may infer support from both statute and decision..

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowellville-coal-mining-co-v-zappio-ohio-1909.