Northern Ohio Power & Light Co. v. Smith

186 N.E. 712, 126 Ohio St. 601, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 601, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 382
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1933
Docket23717
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 186 N.E. 712 (Northern Ohio Power & Light Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Ohio Power & Light Co. v. Smith, 186 N.E. 712, 126 Ohio St. 601, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 601, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 382 (Ohio 1933).

Opinion

Allen, J.

It is not necessary to discuss the personal injury action filed by Texanna C. Smith out of which the judgment arose which was set aside upon the ground of fraud by the trial court in the instant case, except to state that in that action it was alleged in substance that Texanna C. Smith had suffered a serious and permanent injury while riding on one of the street cars of the Northern Ohio Power & Light Company.

Mrs. Smith signed a written contract of employment with Charles I. Parlett to represent her as attorney in pressing this claim, and it was he who filed the suit against the company for damages. After Parlett’s *606 employment one Giltner, claim agent for the Northern Ohio Power & Light Company, offered Mrs. Smith $2,500 in settlement, and subsequently raised his offer to $3,500, $2,750 of which Parlett stated was supposed to be for Mrs. Smith and $750 for Joseph E. Smith, her husband, for his claim for loss of services of his wife.

Mrs. Smith’s action was filed December 15, 1925. The verdict actually rendered upon December 12, 1927, in her case, was for $2,750, exactly the same amount as the last sum offered through Parlett by Giltner. The record tends to show that Mrs. Smith at no time authorized a settlement at that figure, and always stated that she would not settle at anything like that figure. The record contains considerable testimony on the part of Mrs. Smith, her husband, her mother and a certain John Halderman, a disinterested witness, tending to show that on December 9, 1927, when the case was on the active list, of which fact she had actual notice, owing to physical disability Mrs. Smith was unable to be present in court. Halderman testified that he presented Parlett with a doctor’s statement relative to her illness. While Mrs. Smith had been notified by Parlett that the case was on the active list, the record shows that she did not have actual notice of the day when the case was finally called for hearing, which was December 12, 1927. However, an agreed verdict was entered in her absence, and because of the judgment rendered on this verdict, paid to Parlett and never accepted nor received by Mrs. Smith, the instant action was filed, praying to set aside this judgment on the ground of fraud.

Two questions of moment are raised in this error proceeding.

1. It is maintained by counsel for plaintiff in error that there is no evidence of knowledge or collusion on the part of the Northern Ohio Power & Light Company in the entering of the agreed verdict in the per *607 sonal injury action, nor of knowledge that it was unauthorized hy Texanna C. Smith. The record does not show knowledge on the part of the attorneys for the company, but it does show knowledge upon the part of the claim agent, and hence knowledge upon the part of the company, and in fact it warrants a finding of collusion.

The petition charges the absence of the client from court at the time that the agreed verdict was returned and the record shows that the defendant was represented in court by counsel at that specific time. No written authority from Mrs. Smith to enter the verdict is claimed to have been offered in evidence. Hence the absence of Mrs. Smith and the absence of any written sanction from her with reference to this agreed verdict were within the knowledge of the defendant company.

The record shows that upon November 1, 1927, Parlett wrote the chief claim agent of the company as follows:

“With reference to the case of Texanna C. Smith against The N. O. P. & L. Company, I have had the parties in this morning and they refuse absolutely to make a settlement of their ease in the sum of $3,500 and have ignored my recommendations in the matter.
“At this time I wish to advise you that I have a contract with Mrs. Texanna C. Smith, covering her case, in writing, which provides that I shall receive for my- fee, one-third of the amount recovered, this contract being on a contingent fee basis. In addition to that there is some expense which has been contracted by me in the cost of the preparation of the case of approximately $200.00.
“I am notifying you of this contract in order that my fees be protected in case a settlement is made. The probabilities are that she will employ some attorney in an effort to get a larger sum of money and my position is that inasmuch as I have secured what, in *608 my judgment, was a favorable offer of settlement for her and her husband that my fee is earned.”

An italicized notation appears in the record at the end of this letter, which is as follows:

“Parlett explained further over the phone that he did not feel kindly toward Mrs. Smith. He did not discuss a division with her and her husband. He says case is worth no more because he cannot, prove unconsciousness at time of accident. He feels mastoid condition is chronic and not due to accident — at least entirely. JWG-.”

This letter was in the possession of the claim agent at the time of the appearance of the company in court for the purpose of entering the agreed verdict.

The record contains a letter written by Mrs. Smith to Charles I. Parlett, dated December 3, 1927, which reads as follows:

“Please be advised I am confined to my home indefinitely on account of my head condition and under orders that I must not risk going out until same has entirely healed. Everytime I go out have an attack, so you will have to postpone the case until I can get out without detriment.
“Sorry this happens but since Sept. 1st have been out mighty little. Sure would like to get this over with. But when I was going and ready to try they postponed on account of a convention, so surely one’s life is more than a convention and the Doctor says I am flirting with Eternity and have been every time I went with an attack.
“Have never had any consideration since I have been injured but am at the place I am forced to demand it.
“If you doubt my word shall be pleased to furnish the necessary papers to sustain me in my statements.
“Have lost 3 yrs. salary............ $3,000
‘ ‘ On account of not being able to shop myself have spent............... $1,500 extra
*609 “Help ............................. $1,500 paid
“Doctor’s Bill so far................ $1,500
“Permanent injury to eye and ear
“4 operations
“2 more I fear to come
“You can see why this proposition is very unjust.”

It is conceded by Parlett that no different instruction was ever given him by Mrs. Smith.

It is significant that while releases were supplied by Giltner and presented to Parlett to be executed by his client and by her husband, these releases never were executed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 N.E. 712, 126 Ohio St. 601, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 601, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-ohio-power-light-co-v-smith-ohio-1933.