Milligan v. Plymouth State Bank

4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 585, 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 136
CourtLogan Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 585 (Milligan v. Plymouth State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Logan Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milligan v. Plymouth State Bank, 4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 585, 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 136 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

In the original action defendant in error was plaintiff and plaintiffs in error were defendants. Their action was upon a note and mortgage. The note was dated July 5, 1902, for $588 with five per cent, interest from date, due on or before July 5, 1902, executed by plaintiffs in error to Ellen and Christopher G. Bollman. On October 25, 1902, the note was assigned for value to defendant in error by the payees. The prayer of the [586]*586petition was to recover personal judgment on the note for the principal thereof with the interest and to foreclose the real estate mortgage securing the same.

The makers of the note answered and alleged that on July 3, 1903, one Jerome Hollopeter duly commenced an action against Ellen and Christopher Bollman, the payees of said note, before one Robert Dow, a justice of the peace of this county, and in said action an affidavit for.attachment was duly filed and the Milligans were made garnishees, and such proceedings were had in said action that on February 20, 1903, the plaintiff therein recovered judgment against defendants therein for $100 and costs, and on the same day said justice of peace ordered said garnishees to pay into court the sum of $112.50 to be applied on said judgment and costs, and, afterward, on June 23, 1903, said justice of peace made another order in said action, ordering and requiring said garnishees to pay into court $115.75 to be applied on the aforesaid judgment and costs, and, afterward, on July 18, 1903, in pursuance of said order of said justice of peace said garnishees did pay to said justice of peace the sum of $115.75. It is further stated that at the time of the commencement of the Hollopeter action ■and at all times thereafter until after the said payment, the said garnishees were not indebted to the said Bollmans in any “At the time of the said judgment before said justice of peace and of the order of said justice as aforesaid, for them to pay said money into court to apply on the claim and judgment of said Hollopeter, the defendants (the Milligans), nor either of them, had no notice or knowledge that the said note had been assigned by the payees thereof,” and that the assignment of the said note and mortgage was never recorded in the recorder’s office of Logan county, Ohio, where the mortgaged lands are situated. Wherefore said defendants aver that the payment of $115.75 in the Hollopeter action is a valid part payment of the debt in the petition described and that in consequence there is due upon said mortgage debt $502.87 and no more, which last-named sum. defendants tendered to plaintiff before the commencement of this action, which tender was refused, and which amounts defendants at all times since said tender have [587]*587been ready and willing to pay. To this answer a general demurrer was sustained and defendants not desiring to plead further, judgment was rendered for plaintiff as prayed in the petition. To reverse this judgment this proceeding in error is now prosecuted.

In support of the judgment of the common pleas it is argued first, that the jurisdiction of the said justice of peace in the Hollopeter action was exhausted by the order made on the garnishees to pay of date February 20, 1903, and that the order of date June 23, 1903, is therefore invalid; second, that even if the justice of peace had jurisdiction to make the order still the order is not sustained by the • facts in the case and compliance with it does not amount to part payment of the note sued upon. We do not find it necessary to determine whether the justice of peace had jurisdiction to make the order upon garnishees to pay of date June 23, 1903. It must be conceded that as a matter of mere jurisdiction the justice of peace had power to make one order. It is not denied that on February 20, 1903, that officer had jurisdiction to order payment, if the facts in the ease warranted such an order. If now the second order is invalid for the reason that the first order exhausted any jurisdiction in that behalf then the first order was one that the justice of peace had jurisdiction to make. This must be so because an ineffectual attempt to exercise a conceded jurisdiction can not exhaust jurisdiction.

It seems necessarily to follow that as matter of jurisdiction the justice of peace had power to make the one order or the ether. If he had power to make the first order and not the second, the garnishees merely paid more than they were or could be required by the justice of peace to pay. If the second order was made in the exercise of jurisdiction the amount paid is proper as to amount. In either case the justice of peace hid jurisdiction to order some amount to be paid and as an amount was paid, the question is whether such payment was to any extent a part payment of the note.

The answer states a defense whether the amount paid shall be held to be a credit on the note for $110.50 as well as if it be held to be a credit for $115.75. Hence the correctness of [588]*588the ruling on the demurrer does not depend upon the mere validity of the second order but does depend upon the validity of either order, and the effect of the compliance by the garnishees with the one that is valid, if either be valid, would be part payment, the extent of the validity in such case as to amount being the measure of the protection to defendant below.

•Defendants’ answer states in legal effect that at the commencement of the Hollopeter action against the Bollmans the latter did not in fact own any claim against the Milligans; the Milligans were made garnishees in the action and for want of any notice to the contrary they believed that they were indebted to the Bollmans upon the note described in the petition. It seems, although it is not directly stated in the answer, that the garnishees appeared before the justice of peace and made answer that they were so indebted to the Bollmans at the time of service of notice, and the justice of peace acting upon this answer of the garnishees ordered them to make payment as heretofore stated. After both the orders to make payment were entered and before any compliance therewith by the Milligans they received notice and acquired knowledge that at the time they were served with notice as garnishees in the action they were not in fact indebted to the Bollmans, but by reason of an assignment of the note by the payees the same was owned and held by the Plymouth bank.

Having such knowledge and notice the garnishees nevertheless complied with the order of the justice of peace and made payment in the Hollopeter action of $115.75 a part of the indebtedness evidenced by the note then owned and held by the bank. Were the Milligans under the circumstances authorized to obey the order of the justice of peace, and did payment in obedience to such order discharge pro tanto the claim against them owned in fact by the bank, are the questions in the ease. These questions have not been decided expressly by our Supreme Court and the side lights supplied by our own cases and the cases decided in other jurisdictions in which similar statutes to our own are in force must disclose the proper rule here.

[589]*589The property sought to be attached was the property of the Bollmaus. This property was a debt alleged to be due or owing to the Bollmans by the Milligans. To secure this property and hold it to be applied in satisfaction of any judgment that might be recovered by Hollopeter in his action against the Bollmans notice was served upon the Milligans. The service of this notice did not confer upon the Milligans any right of property in the debt, nor any power of control of the debt,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 585, 16 Ohio C.C. Dec. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milligan-v-plymouth-state-bank-ohcirctlogan-1904.