McClure v. Bowles

5 Ohio N.P. 327
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJune 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 327 (McClure v. Bowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClure v. Bowles, 5 Ohio N.P. 327 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

WRIGHT, J.:

The defendant, John D. Bowles, at a prior term obtained judgment against the plaintiffs upon a promissory note, a copy whereof is thus:

“$100.00. Preston, O., March 16, 1893.
“Eighteen months after date we promise to pay to the order of W. R. Cochran, Jr., four hundred dollars, at Citizen’s Bank, Harrison, Ohio, with — per cent, interest. And we hereby authorize and empower any attorney at law, at any time after this obligation becomes due, to appear for us before any court of record in the state of Ohio, or elsewhere, and waive the issuing and service of process and confess judgment against us, in favor of the payee above named or assigns, for the sum due hereon, interests and costs, and thereupon to release all errors and waive all right and benefit of a second trial or appeal in our behalf.
“(Signed) Barney S- McClure,
“Wm. W. McClure”.

Judgment was confessed by an attorney of this bar. It is claimed by plaintiff that the judgment is void for want of jurisdiction, and ought to be vacated. At the out-set I am bound to say, that courts have no favorable regard for judgments by confession obtained as this judgment was upon the last day of a term and without notice to the judgment debtor. With the close of the term the court was deprived of that supervisory control over its journal which would ordinarily enable it as a matter of course to vacate the judgment and permit the making of a. legitimate defense if one were shown; the very taking of judgment by confession at such times is enough to justify at least a suspicion that the holder of the note is, to some degree, unwilling to meet the maker upon issue fairly joined. If there be no valid defense against the notes, the holder must ultimately prevail and will have lost nothing saving a little time by vacating the judgment; while, upon the other hand, if there be a valid defense the holder ought not in conscience, to prevail ; and the vacating of the judgment will but [328]*328accomplish justice and establish right. Therefore, in so far as questions here presented may be doubtful, they ought to be resolved in favor of the plaintiff in so far as may rightfully be done.

Primarily, it is contended,that the power of attorney undertaken to be conferred is void for uncertainty; that the phrase “any attorney at law.” is insufficient to point out any individual as clothed with authority; is insufficient to designate a donee of the authority undertauen to be conferred. It seems to me,that were this question presented now for the first time, I would find it necessary to declare the point well taken.

The phrase “any attorney” indicates no particular attorney as distinguished from all other attorneys, and therefore fails to identify any person at all as the one clothed with authority; if language be so indefinite as that it identities no person as the one undertaken to be clothed with authority, so indefinite as that it fails to identify him who shall exercise authority, as that it fails to point out a donee, it is to me impossible to understand how that same language is capable of carrying authority to anyone at all; while undoubtedly sufficient to indicate a purpose to grant authority, yet I question that it is any more; a purpose is one thing; execution of it is another thing; contemplation is not the same as consummation; if it were a grant of any thing save of a power, and the grant were to “any attorney,” I take it that no one would be heard to contend that one attorney or another, took under that grant any right in, or any authority over the subject of the grant. A grant to “any attorney” is a grant to no one any more than to another one, and hence is not of such definiteness as to constitute any grant at all.

But 1 am under the necessity of concluding that this question must be held to be foreclosed by the custom of courts of last resort in their dealings with such cases. I am not able to ignore that very many cases of cognovits have arisen wherein the words “any attorney at law” appear to have been used, and wherein the courts have without question assumed the phraseology to be sufficient.

Tell v. Yost, 13 L. R. An., 796; Mikeska v. Blum, 63 Texas, 44; Keith v. Kellogg, 97 Ill., 150; Hall v. Jones, 32 Ill., 38; Poppers v. Mayer, 33 Ills. App., 19; Kuehne v. Goit, 54 Ill. App., 596; Bank of Athens v. Garland et al., 67 N. W. Rep., 559; Cooper v. Shavee, 101 Pa. St., 547; Marsden v. Soper, 11 Ohio St., 503: Spence v. Emerine, 46 Ohio St., 433; Ream v. The Bank, 2 C. C., 43; Cushman v. Welsh, 19 Ohio St., 536; Davis v. Parker, 8 C. C., 107.

I must therefore resolve the first contention against the plaintiffs.

Secondly, it is urged that the phrase “any court of record in the state of Ohio or elsewhere,” is void for the like reason, that is to say, for uncertainty; upon this point it is to be remembered that judgment was obtained, not “elsewhere,” but within the state of Ohio, within the county of plaintiffs’ residence, and within the county where the note was made; so that the question is upon the sufficiency of the language-to authorize judgment in this particular court of Ohio, and is not upon the point of whether a court “elsewhere” could have acquired jurisdiction. It must needs be said that the parties contemplated,at least, a confess'on of judgment in the court of' jurisdiction over the place of the maker’s residence, when that place is co-incident. with the place where the note was made-that the makers so intended must be pre sumed.

Upon this proposition the books seem to-point out that though the language employed to designate the court were even more general than that at bar, yet judgment would be good in some cases; that is-to say, if a note authorized judgment in “any court of record” without specific mention of one state or another, I take it that judgment loithout the state wherein the note was given would be void: upon the-ground that the parties must be said to-have had in mind only the courts of that particular sta’e wherein they happened to-be; but that a judgment obtained within-that state would be held a good judgment, for the same reason.

The case at bar in these respects presents, distinctions from some cited cases and upon, vital points; notably, in that of Carein v. Taylor, 7 Lea (Tenn.), 666. It appears that the note was made in Pennsylvania, the maker resided in Tennessee, and judgment was confessed in the state of Ohio. I must say that at bar, the language employed is sufficient to confer jurisdiction.upon the court here. First National Bank of Athens v. Garland et al., 67 N. W., Rep., 559. But a contemplation of the terms of’ the power, taken together with the endorsement upon the note, brings to light the presence of a question more serious than those suggested and I shall now slate it; the power is this: to “confess judgment against us in favor of the payee above named or assigns;” now judgment was confessed not in favor of the payee, but in favor of John D. Bowles, who is a stranger to the note, and one whose name nowhere appears thereon, either as endorser or otherwise. There is a single endorsement set. down upon the note, that of the payee “W. R. Cochran, Jr., ” an endorsement in blank ; so that the question is, is John D. Bowles, the “assign” of the original payee.

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5 Ohio N.P. 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-bowles-ohctcomplhamilt-1898.