Miller v. Beard

136 N.E.2d 366, 73 Ohio Law. Abs. 10, 1955 Ohio App. LEXIS 721
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 1955
DocketNo. 566
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 N.E.2d 366 (Miller v. Beard) 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
Miller v. Beard, 136 N.E.2d 366, 73 Ohio Law. Abs. 10, 1955 Ohio App. LEXIS 721 (Ohio Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

[12]*12OPINION

By HORNBECK, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment for plaintiff for the sum of $420.00 with interest and costs entered on a verdict of a jury. Plaintiff sued upon an alleged oral contract between herself and defendant whereby she agreed to clean up a farm house into which she and her husband were moving for which services she was to be paid reasonable compensation. She prayed in her petition for $450.00 and the jury awarded her $420.00. Defendant answered by a general denial and in a cross-petition asserted that plaintiff and her husband were joint tenants under a farm lease with defendant for a period beginning March 1, 1951. The dwelling upon which plaintiff claims to have done the work was the residence on the farm rented. Defendant pleads a complete settlement between himself and the Millers on .December 4, 1953 for two years ending March 1, 1954. He then recites the terms of the lease under which he claimed the parties operated and in the first cause of action sets up certain charges against the Millers and in the second cause of action pleads other charges against them; in the third cause of action avers that the tenants threaten to terminate the rental agreement without keeping their year’s tenancy and the feeding of livestock which is ready for sale. The prayer of the cross-petition is for an accounting and for damages totaling $600.00 and for such other relief as he is entitled in law or equity. Defendant also moved to consolidate this case with another case on the docket of the Common Pleas Court of Greene County wherein Roger Miller was plaintiff and Elmer Beard was defendant in which it was asserted the same subject matter was involved as in the instant case all of which required an accounting. This motion was overruled.

It further appears that in the instant suit the plaintiff in answering the defendant’s cross-petition, admitted that she and her husband were tenants on the farm of defendant until March 1, 1954 and so continued to operate the farm until February 1955. This was assigned as further reason for the consolidation. After the cause came on for trial, defendant moved for leave to amend her answer by deleting that portion thereof which admitted that she was a tenant with her husband on the farm of defendant. This was granted and the amendment was made.

During the progress of the trial, plaintiff introduced her Exhibit No. 1 headed “Greene County Farm Lease” wherein the defendant was designated as the landlord and Roger L. Miller as the tenant, which was signed by defendant and Roger L. Miller and witnessed by plaintiff and her son and bears the date of August 31, 1951. Testimony was offered tending to show that this purported farm lease was not the original and controlling lease between the parties but that the real agreement was oral in which both plaintiff and her husband were to be the tenants. Considerable testimony wras forthcoming to the effect that plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1 was prepared for the accommodation of plaintiff in con[13]*13nection with a loan which she or they, the Millers, were receiving from a farm agency.

The trial judge refused to give defendant’s special charge No. 1 requested to be given before argument, and ruled that the cross-petition was not proper and could not be considered by the jury and in the general charge said to the jurors:

“In this case defendant’s pleading contains a cross-petition which the court has ruled, is not proper in this case and the jury should not consider the cross-petition for the reason that the only signature on the lease was that of Mr. Miller.”

Appellant assigns nine errors which we will consider chronologically.

The first and second assignments assert that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to consolidate the instant case with the case of Roger Miller against Elmer Beard. The instant action was based upon the claim that there was an express oral contract between the plaintiff and the defendant whereby she was to render the services, the subject matter of .her suit. In it no suggestion that she was a tenant of defendant was made. The husband’s action likewise was based upon the contention that he was the sole tenant. Defendant claimed that both the Millers were his tenants but Roger was not a party to the action on trial. Even though plaintiff was a joint tenant on the farm, that relationship, in itself, would not necessarily include the obligation of plaintiff to perform the service for which she seeks payment.

. The test as to consolidation of action is: Does it clearly appear that the parties are the same and the causes of action identical? Brigel v. Creed, 65 Oh St 40; Trout v. Marvin, 24 O. C. C. 333.

The court did not err in refusing the consolidation at the time the motions were overruled.

The third assignment is that “the court erred in sustaining a motion permitting plaintiff to file an amended answer to defendant’s cross-petition on the morning of the trial taking defendant by surprise and requiring him to his prejudice to go into the immediate trial to the jury.”

This assignment is not well made. If the plaintiff desired to amend her answer to conform to the facts as she expected her testimony to prove that was her privilege. The inconsistency in her statements in the former and the amended answer were proper questions for consideration of the jjury and no doubt were well developed in the presentation of the casé.

The contention of appellant that he was surprised by the amendment to his prejudice is not well made. The motion to amend was sustained three days before the trial, the record does not disclose that the defendant urged this contention of surprise in the trial court or requested a continuance of the trial.

The fourth error is that the court erred in accepting certain evidence on the part of the plaintiff which should have been excluded.

This assignment is directed to the admission of plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1, certain testimony of Sarah Coy and the reference by plaintiff to a calendar upon which dates were circled indicating when she had worked and the admission of this calendar as an exhibit.

Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1 was properly admitted; it bore the indicia, [14]*14in particulars, of a farm lease between defendant and Roger Miller and it was contended by the plaintiff that it was such and that it was prepared and executed for that purpose and that the reason that it was not more complete, in setting forth the terms of the lease, was because defendant had indicated that he did not want the farm agent who was making the loan to the Millers to know the full terms. In any event, it was probative of the fact that the plaintiff was not a party to the tenancy and that her husband was the sole tenant.

Plaintiff’s Exhibit A was also properly admitted not as a book-account because plaintiff was not suing on a book-account or contending that the exhibit was such, but as a memorandum of the days she claims to have worked and as supporting her other testimony on the subject.

The testimony of Sarah Coy was properly admitted.

Error No. 5 is the refusal to admit certain evidence tendered by the defendant.

All of this testimony, if admitted, would have related to the success or non-success of the Millers by reason of their operations of the farm of defendant during the tenancy. It had no material bearing on the issues drawn between the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 N.E.2d 366, 73 Ohio Law. Abs. 10, 1955 Ohio App. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-beard-ohioctapp-1955.