McDaniels v. Robins

25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 315, 1921 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67
CourtClark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 21, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 315 (McDaniels v. Robins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDaniels v. Robins, 25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 315, 1921 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Geiger, J.

The petition seeks the partition of real estate , owned - by Frank E. McDaniels and James O. Robins, who formerly were engaged in the contracting business under the partnership designation of Robins & McDaniels,- — Robins having since deceased.

[316]*316The Merchants & Mechanics Savings & Loan Association ánd' the state of Ohio, ex rel Attorney General on - behalf of Alburtus B. Swank, intervene. .....

On December 18th, 1912, the M. & M. Association loaned to Robins & McDaniels, the individual members of, the partnership, $6,000, and as security therefor took a mortgage upon the real estate sought to be partitioned, which mortgage wa£ duly recorded. ■ . ,

-■ On .July 6th, 1916, Robins & McDaniels, doing 'business as a partnership, were engaged in the construction of a public highway, under a contract with the state of Ohio, through' its highway commissioner, having employed in such work five or 'more workmen, and not being subscribers to the State Insurance Fund, and not having elected to pay direct to injured workmen.

Alburtus B. Swank, one of their employees, was so injured that he was found by the Industrial Commission • to be permanently disabled, and such Commission determined lie was entitled to receive Twelve Dollars per week so long as he might live, and the Commission further ascertained that the value of his claim against the defendants , was $12,829.

The employers having failed to pay this amount, judgment was secured against them in that sum, by virtue of Section 27 of the Workmens Compensation Act, now Section 1465-74 General Code.

A portion of such judgment was paid, but there yet remains due thereon the sum of $7,205.25.

The controversy is between the association, on its mortgage claim, and the state of Ohio, on the judgment thus secured.

The claim of the state is that by virtue of the provisions of Section 1465-77, directing that a judgment obtained under the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, shall'have the same preference as judgments for taxes, the judgment.'-on behalf of Alburtus B. Swank is entitled to be paid in the present action upon the sale of the real estate, first after.-,the judgment for costs, and before the mortgage of the association. ■ ¡.

[317]*317-The association claims that its mortgage is a valid lien, the priority of which is fixed by the laws in reference to mortgages in force at the time the mortgage was given, and that to hold otherwise will be violative of Section 28, Article II, of the Constitution of Ohio, which provides that the General Assembly shall have no power to pass retroactive laws, or. laws impairing the obligations of contracts.

The State, in answer, insists that the Legislature in the- ex-erices of its police powers, is not hampered by contracts made-by individuals in regard to matters touching the public weal, but that contracts of that nature are made subject to the, possibility that even if they were -valid when made, the Legislature may, by the exexcise of its power, render them invalid.

The police power is that power inherent in the state to prohibit all things hurtful to the comfort, axxd welfare of society,- and this power may le exercised even though it may affect the liberty axxd property of individuals. .. -..

Anything that is reasonable and necessary to secure the peace, safety and morals of the commonwealth may be done under the police power, and private rights exist subject to-the public welfare.

Judicial inquiry is necessarily limited to determining whether the particxxlar regulation is reasoxxable and impartial,- -and within the limits of the Constitxxtion. For a general discussion of the exercise of the police powers of the state as they relate to the Workmen’s Compensation Act, see State, ex rel., v. Creamer, 85 O. S., 349; Fassig v. State, ex rel., 95 O. S., 232; Thornton v. Duffy, 99 O. S., 120. . .

See also, Wessell v. Timberlake, 95 O. S., 21.

It is- not necessary to enter into a discussion as to whether or not the General Assembly has exceeded its general police powers in the passage of the section now under examination, as the question may be disposed of on other principles.

Article II of Section 35 of the Coxxstitution, adopted, September 3, 1912, empowers the General Assembly to pass laws to establish a state fund for compensation of injured workmen, through compulsory contribution by employers.

[318]*318By the power thus granted, the General Assembly is authorized to include all such “reasonable” provisions as are necessary to make the law effective and to accomplish the purpose . expressed in the constitutional provision referred to.

It is claimed by the M. & M. Association that the section giving to the judgment in behalf of the state the same preference as is given to judgments for taxes, is unconstitutional.

The court will not hold an act unconstitutional unless .it is clearly required to do so; neither will the courts hold an act to be retroactive unless the language used will not permit any other interpretation.

Is it necessary, in the present case, to hold that the General Assembly intended by Section 1465-77, that judgments recovered on account of an accident oceuring in 1916, shall affect a contract made in 1912, and then valid by the existing laws of the state?

A retroactive law is one which, by its terms, takes away or impairs vested rights acquired under an existing law, or creates a -new obligation, or iznposes a new burden, or attaches a new disability or additional burden in respect to trazisac-. tions already passed.

All laws intended to affect the conduct or acquisitiozi of rights by citizens, shall have a prospective affect only. This is the principle izzherent izz our constitution izihibitizzg retroactive laws, and finds a place in every enlightened system of jurispzmdeziee. Gager v. Prout, 48 O. S., 89, p. 106.

The conti’aet under which the association made its loan in 1912 was controlled by the laws then existiizg, and such laws entered into and beeazne a part of the contract.

Section 6072 provides that assessizients upon the business of trafficing in intoxicating liquors shall attach azid operate as a lien upon real estate on and in which such business is conducted, and a number of cases have beezz decided under this section, which seenzs to the court to- be somewhat analogous to the case at bar.

The ease of Pioneer Trust Company v. Stitch, 71 O. S., 479, holds that an assessment under the above section becomes a lien upon the property superior to that of the mortgage exe[319]*319euted prior to the entry of the tax, and prior to the beginning of the traffic on the premises.

This case 'discusses at large and incorporates the substance of the opinion in the case of Peoples B. & L. Association v. Hanson, 5 N. P. 162, in which it was held that the Dow tax is made superior. to a prior mortgage, but that such tax is superior to such prior mortgage for only the amount of the tax, which the act in force called for at the time the mortgage was filed, that the mortgage was superior to -that part- of the tax which was an increase over the amount provided for at the time the mortgage was created.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 315, 1921 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniels-v-robins-ohctcomplclark-1921.