Malone v. Summer & Co.

244 N.E.2d 485, 17 Ohio App. 2d 58, 46 Ohio Op. 2d 73, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 293
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 24, 1968
Docket9143
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 244 N.E.2d 485 (Malone v. Summer & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malone v. Summer & Co., 244 N.E.2d 485, 17 Ohio App. 2d 58, 46 Ohio Op. 2d 73, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 293 (Ohio Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

Troop, J.

A motion to dismiss this appeal pending at the time of oral hearing was submitted for disposition along with the appeal upon the merits. Appellee, Summer & Co., predicates its motion to dismiss on a lack of jurisdiction in this court to hear “an appeal from a” case “that never existed.” The line of reasoning followed by counsel for the appellee needs examination, especially since counsel relies heavily upon Judge Guernsey’s decision in Roof v. National Surety Corp. (1952), 92 Ohio App. 295, in support of his position.

Counsel urges that Summer & Co. filed a motion to strike the pleadings from the file, which motion was upheld by Judge Duncan. The pleading to which the motion to strike was addressed was the petition of the plaintiff in the trial court, C. William Malone, trustee in bankruptcy. Complete accuracy requires that the decision of Judge Duncan, April 29,1968, be reported as “considering defendant’s motion as a demurrer finds it well taken, and is sustained. Case dismissed.”

All too commonly a motion to strike pleadings is used with reckless abandon. The sole function of a motion to strike pleadings is to test the regularity of the filing. In comparision, the demurrer goes to the substance of the *60 pleading testing its legal sufficiency. A demurrer is also appropriate as an attack on the jurisdiction of the court. (See 43 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d, 210 and 211, Sections 196 and 197, and page 285, Section 270.)

Judge Guernsey, in Roof, supra, calls attention to the peculiar facts in the case before him and at the conclusion of his opinion, at page 300, says:

“The practice of courts in treating motions to strike as a means of testing the sufficiency of pleadings has been condemned by the Supreme Court. * * *”

Treating the motion to strike as a demurrer was clearly permissible. The judgment entered by Judge Duncan sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the case was a final appealable order.

The appellee’s motion to dismiss this appeal is overruled.

The plaintiff in the trial court sought to recover a payment made on an antecedent debt of his bankrupt to the defendant in the trial court, Summer & Co. It is alleged that the bankrupt was insolvent at the time of payment. This and other allegations, if established, would bring the claimed payment within the purview of preference as defined in Section 60 of the federal Bankruptcy Act (Section 96, Title 11, U. S. Code). A motion to strike, held to be a demurrer, was directed to the petition, designed to test the jurisdiction of the Franklin County Municipal Court in the action seeking the recovery of money paid to the defendant by the plaintiff’s bankrupt.

A single assignment of error is the basis for this appeal from the final order of the trial court dismissing the plaintiff’s petition. The basic error assigned is that the trial court had jurisdiction and therefore mistakenly sustained the demurrer and dismissed the action. Supporting arguments are, (1) the court did not interpret Section 60 (b) of the federal Bankruptcy Act correctly, (2) Congress may invest Ohio courts with jurisdiction in such matters, and (3) Ohio courts may not constitutionally refuse to exercise such jurisdiction when granted by Congress.

Assignments of error numbered two and three need but passing comment. It goes without saying that the Con *61 gress may confer jurisdiction on state courts. That state courts must exercise such jurisdiction is, however, an entirely different matter. Jurisdiction conferred on state courts by the constitution and laws of the state concerned is the only jurisdictional requirement state courts are obliged to follow.

This discussion is concerned with assignment of error numbered Sub-Topic I and the ramifications thereof. The closing sentence in Section 60(b) of the federal Bankruptcy Act supplies the nub of the problem. It is as follows:

“For the purpose of any recovery or avoidance under this section, where plenary proceedings are necessary, any State court which would have had jurisdiction if bankruptcy had not intervened and any court of bankruptcy shall have concurrent jurisdiction.”

Bankruptcy did intervene in the instant case, so the question becomes simply did the trial court have jurisdiction in such a case, where a plaintiff-creditor’s representative seeks to recover money paid by an alleged insolvent debtor in settlement of an antecedent debt, regardless of such intervention.

The simple question as to whether a Municipal Court is a state court and an appropriate forum presents no particular difficulties. If this is an action for the recovery of money Section 1901.18, Revised Code, provides that a Municipal Court has jurisdiction as follows:

“(B) In any action or proceeding at law for the recovery of money or personal property of which the Court of Common Pleas has jurisdiction.”

Attention is directed to Section 1313.56, Revised Code, by the trial court. The language used in the section appears to provide the reasons for the conclusions reached by the trial court and the basis for its judgment. One sentence taken from the section, emphasized and underlined by the trial court, seems to have compelled the resulting dismissal of the action. It reads as follows:

“In a suit brought by a creditor of such debtor for the purpose of declaring such sale void, a receiver may be appointed * * *.”

The quoted language upon which the trial court relied *62 suggesting the appointment of a receiver, at first blush, clearly destroys the possibility of calling the action simply one for the recovery of money and removes the cause from the jurisdictional limits of a Municipal Court.

By way of introduction to a discussion of the breadth of purpose and possible actions under the statute from which the trial court quotes, it is well to note that a receiver may be appointed who shall take charge of all of the assets of the debtor and administer them for the equal benefit of all of the creditors. The “may” allows a proper court discretion and it follows that it well might choose a trustee in bankruptcy to recover and administer all of the assets for the benefit of all of the creditors especially when his duly constituted function is already just that.

As the trial court quite aptly put it, however, we agree that “this case has ominous legal characteristics lurking in the shadows of certain federal and state statutes which are difficult to identify and categorize.” Nevertheless, this discussion will attempt to survey, in a limited way, some available materials.

Several rather simple direct propositions seem to be clearly established in the language of text materials, congressional enactment, and court decisions, as follows:

(1) The Congress has properly conferred jurisdiction on state courts in suits to set aside and recover preferences and fraudulent transfers.

(2) When a plenary action is necessary to a recovery it is not an integrant part of bankruptcy procedure but is separate and identifiable and may be brought in a state court.

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244 N.E.2d 485, 17 Ohio App. 2d 58, 46 Ohio Op. 2d 73, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-summer-co-ohioctapp-1968.