Ohio Farmers Co-Op. Milk Assn. v. Davis

17 N.E.2d 924, 59 Ohio App. 329, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 551, 13 Ohio Op. 116, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 262
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 13, 1937
DocketNo 1392
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 N.E.2d 924 (Ohio Farmers Co-Op. Milk Assn. v. Davis) 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
Ohio Farmers Co-Op. Milk Assn. v. Davis, 17 N.E.2d 924, 59 Ohio App. 329, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 551, 13 Ohio Op. 116, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 262 (Ohio Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

*552 OPINION

By THE COURT

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Crawford County, Ohio, in a cause pending in said court wherein Ohio Farmers Co-Operative Milk Association, the appellant, was plaintiff and George Davis, doing business as Bucyrus Restaurant, appellee, was defendant.

The cause is submitted to this court upon the motion of defendant-appellee to strike from the files the purported bill of exceptions filed herein for the following reasons:

1. Neither defendant or his attorney has had any opportunity whatsoever to inspect said purported bill of exceptions at any time.

2. Said purported bill of exceptions has not been approved by the Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Crawford County, Ohio.

3. Said purported bill of exceptions does not have a proper certificate attached as required by law. ■

4. Defendant herein within ten days from the filing of the purported bill of exceptions filed a. motion in the Common Pleas Court of Crawford County, Ohio, objecting to the approval of the purported bill of exceptions.

and is also submitted to the court upon the motions of plaintiff-appellant for an order granting leave to appellant to attach to its bill of exceptions filed in this court, the certificate of the official court reporter, as provided by §11571 GC, and for diminution of the record under favor of §11572-a GC, and for an order to return the bill of exceptions filed in this case to the Court of Common Pleas for the purpose of permitting the trial court to allow and sign the bill of exceptions.

As the granting of either of the motions of the appellant will necessarily require the denial of the motion of the appellee, the motions will be considered in the inverse order of their submission.

On July 12, 1937, and within less than forty days after the entry of the judgment from which this appeal was taken, plaintiff-appellant filed the bill of exceptions in controversy, in the office of the clerk of courts but immediately withdrew the same from the files and retained the same m his possession from July J2th until about four o’clock in the afternoon of July 23rd, the fiftieth day after the entry of the judgment from which this appeal is taken, when he returned the same to the clerk’s office and finding that the trial judge was absent from his office caused the same to be filed by the clerk in this court without having secured the signature of the trial, judge thereto.

Said bill of exceptions did not at the time of filing and does not now bear the certificate of the official court reporter thereto, as contemplated by §11571, GC.

There was at all times mentioned a custom in effect in the office of the clerk of courts of the county whereby attorneys representing parties to causes withdrew original papers from the files in said cases from the office of the clerk and retained them in their possession until such time as they were returned by the attorneys of their own volition or upon request of the clerk.

Immediately following the filing of the bill of exceptions on July 12th the clerk gave notice to defendant-appellee’s counsel of the filing thereof, pursuant to the provisions of §11565, GC. Subsequent to the receipt of such notice and prior to July 23rd the attorney for defendant-appellee called at the office of the clerk for the purpose of examining such purported bill of exceptions and preparing and filing his objections and proposed amendments thereto, as provided in said section, and was each time advised by the clerk that such purported bill of exceptions had been withdrawn from the files by the attorney for plaintiff-appellant and had not been returned by him to the office of the clerk.

1. The determination of plain tiff-appellant’s motion for an, order directing the return of the hill of exceptions to the trial judge for allowance and signature involves the consideration of the duties of the clerk of courts with reference to papers and particularly bills of exceptions delivered to him for filing.

Sec 2875, GC, provides:

“The clerk shall file together and carefully preserve in his office all papers delivered to him for that purpose in every action or proceeding.”

*553 *552 Under this section it was the duty of the clerk when the bill of exceptions was filed *553 with him on July 12th to file the same with the other paper's in the case and to carefully preserve in his office the said bill of exceptions, and it is the clear intent of this section as applied to the bill of exceptions, that the same upon filing, as provided by §11585 GC, shall be carefully preserved in the clerk’s office and not withdrawn or removed therefrom so that it may be available at the clerk’s office for the purpose prescribed in §§11565, 11566, GC.

The custom referred to above is in contravention of the express provisions of said §2875 GC and is without any authority whatever in law and therefore cannot be considered as an excuse or justification for the withdrawal of papers from the clerk’s office and the retention of the same by counsel.

In the instant case, on account of the withdrawal and retention of the bill of exceptions by the attorney for plaintiff-appellant such bill of exceptions was not available to the attorney for defendantappellee at the clerk’s office for the purpose of filing objections and amendments thereto for the correction thereof within the time limited by §11565, GC, and was not available to the clerk in his office for transmission to the trial judge as provided in said section, and was not at any time available to the trial judge for the purpose of correction, allowance, signing and transmission as provided by §11566, GC.

In the case of Pugh v State ex, 51 Oh St at page 116, it was held:

“The proviso of §5302 Revised Statutes (89 Ohio Laws 125) ‘that where exceptions are not allowed and signed during the progress of the trial, the party excepting shall submit the bill to opposite counsel for examination not less than ten days before ihe expiration of said fifty days,’ is intended as a condition to the power of the trial judge to sign a bill of exceptions within the fifty days mentioned in §§5298, 5301 and 5302, and where the condition is not complied with, it is the duty of such judge, unless consent of opposite counsel be given, to refuse to sign and allow the bill.”

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Related

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168 N.E.2d 3 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 N.E.2d 924, 59 Ohio App. 329, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 551, 13 Ohio Op. 116, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-farmers-co-op-milk-assn-v-davis-ohioctapp-1937.