Mogle v. Black

3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 27
CourtDarke Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 27 (Mogle v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Darke Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mogle v. Black, 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 27 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

■Stewart, J.

The first point made in the case Is as to the sustaining of the demurrer to the counterclaim set up in the answer. It is claimed in support of the judgment of the court below that the matter therein set up does not constitute a counterclaim within the definition given in sec. 5072, Rev. Stat., which reads as follows:

“The counterclaim ® ® * must be one existing in favor of a defendant, and against a plaintiff, between whom a several judgment might be had in the action, and arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the petition as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim,, ■or connected with the subject of the action.”

[28]*28One of the requisites of a valid counterclaim is that it must contain such facts as are recognized by courts of law or equity as constituting an existing cause of action, and which would have entitled the defendant to a judgment or decree in a separate action. Hill v. Butler, 6 O. S., 207. The other is that it must arise ‘lout of the contract or transaction set forth in the petition as the foundation of the plaintiff ’s claim, or be connected with the subject of the action.” No claim is made but what the facts stated in this answer conform in every ■respect to the first of these requisites.

There are authorities to be found in other states which hold that the claim made by the defendant m this action fails to fulfil the other requisite of a counterclaim, and therefore furnish authority for the judgment of the court below. While these authorities are persuasive, they should not be allowed to control, even in the absence of a decision upon this precise question by our courts, if they seem to contravene the spirit of the Code, and are at variance with the recorded opinions of eminent jurists in our own state.

Before calling attention to their opinions, an analysis of this section of the statute will show that they are founded, we think, in the better reason. It is evident that there are thre'e different subjects embraced in its terms.

1. Cases in which the cause of action alleged as a counterclaim arises out of the co7i1ract'set forth in the petition.

2. Those cases in which it arises out of the transactio7i set forth in the petition.

3. Those cases in which it is co7mected with the subject of the action. Pomeroy’s Remedies & Remedial Rights, sec. 768.

The same author says in sec. 769:

“Tlie difficulty in arriving at the true interpretation of the term “transaction” lies in the fact that it had no strict legal meaning before it was used in the statute. Being placed in immediate connection with the word “contract,” and separated therefrom by the disjunctive “or,” one conclusion is certain at all events, namely: that the legislature intended by it something different from and in addition to “contract.” The most familiar rules of textual interpretation are violated by the assumption that no such signification was intended."

It would seem hardly necessary to cite authorities to support such a plain interpretation of this statute ; but Mr. Pomeroy devotes many pages to establish what to us is self-evident, and says that he is required to do so', because some courts have taken such a narrow view of this statute as to hold the words “contract” and “transaction” to be synonymous. .

Where words are used in a statute which have acquired a fixed legal significance, the legal presumption is that the legislature meant to use them in this legal sense. Turney v. Yeoman, 14 O., 207, 218; Grogan v. Garrison, 27 O. S., 50, 63.

But where the words used have no such “fixed legal significance,” the legislative intent can only be arrived at by giving to them their ordinary and natural import, and in this way make their meaning consistent with the common sense of the community at large. Allen v. Little, 5 O., 65, 71; State v. Peck, 25 O. S., 26.

A “transaction” is defined by Webster, “that which is done;” “an affair.” Thus; any primary right of the defendant which is violated in “that which is done,” or “the affair’ set forth in the plaintiff’s petition, or connected with it, is, if we give the ordinary meaning to the^words of the statute, a proper matter of counterclaim.

In the state of New York the strict construction has been given to the words of the statute, and it was held in the case of Schnaderbeck v. Worth, 8 Abb., 37, that '“in an action for assault the defendant could npt, by way of counterclaim, allege an assault by1- the plaintiff on the defendant at the same time and growing out of same quarrel.” That this is not the law of Ohio is apparent from what is said by Minshall, J., in the case of Barholt v. Wright, 45 O. S., 177. This was an action for damages for an assault and battery, and it was claimed as a defe7ise [29]*29to the action, that the plaintiff and defendant had fought by agreement, and the injuries were received during that fight. The court held that these facts did not constitute a defense; but at page 181 of the opinion it is said : “It would seem that under the code the right of each combatant to damages might be determined and measured in the same action” — exactly the contrary of the holding in Schnaderbeck v. Worth, supra.

Judge J. R. Swan in his Pleadings and Precedents, which he says was written “to enforce and illustrate the difference between common law pleading and pleading under the Code, a difference radical and irreconcilable frequently overlooked — some times perversely disregarded,” says in a note under sec. 94 of the Code (now sec. 5072, Rev. Stat).

“No doubt, it is contrary to all tbe rules of the common law, that a jury should adjust the damages between two parties who have been guilty of assaulting each other at the same time; and yet it is precisely what should in justice be done; and where the plaintiff sues for an assault, and the defendant at the same time and in the same quarrel, was assaulted by the plaintiff, the two causes of action are so connected together as to come directly within the counterclaim provisions of the Code. * * * The object of the Code was to settle, as far as practicable, all controversies between parties, as is manifest in its rules as to joinder of causes of action, as to judgments between parties to actions, and in its allowance of a cross or counterclaim in causes of action arising as well in contract as any transaction, provided the counterclaim was connected with the subject of the acfion. The tastes of common law pleaders should not be permitted to interfere with these salutary provisions of the Code. They have their limitations and restrictions, which are to be found in-the Code, and not elsewhere.

“The application to counterclaims of the rules of the common law relating to defenses is impossible, because a counterclaim itself not only introduces for trial a second cause of action, but that cause of action is confessedly no direct answer, in fact or law, to the claim of the plaintiff. Two independent issues and causes of action may thus be introduced for trial. The common law did not tolerate such a procedure, and has no rule in relation to it, but that oí condemning it, and pronouncing it, as pleading, absurd. * ® * But absurd as the Code counterclaim must be admitted to be, when tested by the rules of common law pleading, it would be still more absurd to restrict and limit it by the application of those rules.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mogle-v-black-ohcirctdarke-1890.