Ohio Fuel Gas Co. v. Ringler

185 N.E. 553, 126 Ohio St. 409, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 409, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 429
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1933
Docket23329
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 185 N.E. 553 (Ohio Fuel Gas Co. v. Ringler) 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
Ohio Fuel Gas Co. v. Ringler, 185 N.E. 553, 126 Ohio St. 409, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 409, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 429 (Ohio 1933).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The plaintiff in error, the Ohio Fuel Gas Company, urges certain subsidiary points which we shall discuss first. It moved for an order dismissing the action and to return a judgment “in its favor against the plaintiffs, C. P. Gongwer, J. B. Lentz, Guy B. Murray, C. N. Bohn, W. B. Marlowe, Boss Markell, *412 D. B. Hammer, J. J. Graska, Boy Shaw, P. B. Kirkton, and Lester Meyers, for the reason that there is no evidence in this case showing that one or all of these people, or any one of them, owns the interest alleged in the petition, ’ ’ or any interest. The court overruled the motion, and this is claimed to constitute reversible error.

Plaintiff in error urges that there is no scintilla of competent evidence in the record that plaintiffs below owned any interest whatsoever in the lease in question, but inasmuch as the allegations of ownership of the various interests in the lease made in the petition are not denied by the gas company, no proof was required upon that point, and this objection is overruled.

The principal grounds of error presented are that the Court of Appeals erred:

(1) In affirming the judgment of the trial court, which refused to permit the Ohio Fuel Gas Company to prove that the contract sued on had been modified by a later agreement between the known and disclosed parties thereto.

(2) In affirming the overruling of the motion of the gas company for judgment in accordance with the special findings of fact, duly made and returned in writing by the jury pursuant to request therefor.

(3) In affirming judgment for damages as entered by the trial court in accordance with the general verdict of the jury, the same being excessive due to error on the part of the jury in fixing the amount of its general verdict.

(4) In affirming the trial court’s rulings admitting evidence by the plaintiffs below as to whether other wells than those referred to in the petition and located one-half mile or more distant from the Boy Shaw well and on property other than that adjoining the Boy Shaw 15 acres would drain the Boy Shaw well.

Did the Court of Appeals err in affirming the judgment below, although the trial court refused to permit *413 the plaintiff in error to prove the alleged modification of the contract sued on by a later agreement between the gas company and Hulse and Kundtz?

This objection as to rejection of evidence is untenable. The pleadings raised no issue of modification of the contract. As the contract was a written contract covering ten years, any modification thereof to be enforceable under the statute of frauds was required to be in writing. Section 8621, General Code. Mr. Clyde C. Phillips, manager of transmission of the defendant company, describes the so-called contract as an “arrangement”, “pretty much a verbal arrangement” of which the company secured “verbal approval, although we had correspondence.” Hence the court did not err in excluding this testimony.

Did the Court of Appeals err in affirming the overruling of the motion of the plaintiff in error for judgment, as it claims, in accordance with the special finding of facts?

Under Section 11464, General Code, in effect at the time this action was instituted, when a special finding of fact is inconsistent with the general verdict, the former shall control the latter, and the court may give judgment accordingly; and it has been held by this court recently, in Central Gas Co. v. Hope Oil Co., 113 Ohio St., 354, 149 N. E., 386:

“2. Where special findings of fact returned by a jury are clearly irreconcilable upon the record with the general verdict, it is error for the trial court to refuse to set aside and disregard the general verdict, in so far as such special findings are inconsistent therewith, and to give judgment accordingly.”

The same rule is laid down in the syllabus in the case of Columbus, Delaware & Marion Electric Co. v. O’Day, Admx., 123 Ohio St., 638, 176 N. E., 569.

The plaintiff in error contends that the special finding of facts by the jury is inconsistent with the general verdict.

*414 The first two items of breach of contract alleged in the petition were taken from the consideration of the jury by the trial court, and only the following three items were submitted, charging that the defendant

“(c) Failed to take the gas provided in said contract to be taken by it during the summer months of 1928, but instead said defendant closed the gate of said ‘Shaw’ well and blindplated the line thereto on or about May 1, 1928, and thereby caused the gas produced at said well to be completely shut off from delivery into its gas lines until on or about October 1, 1928.

“(d) Failed to take the gas provided in said contract to be taken by it during the summer months of 1929, but instead said defendant closed the gate to said ‘Shaw’ well and blindplated the line thereto on or about May 1, 1929, and thereby caused the gas produced at said well to be shut off from delivery into its gas line until on or about October 1, 1929.

“(e) Permitted the gas produced from the Brown No. 1 and Ringler No. 1 wells to be delivered into its gas line at all times hereinbefore mentioned when said ‘Shaw’ well was shut off from delivery.”

At the trial, at the request of the Ohio Fuel Gas Company, the court submitted to the jury two special interrogatories, which with their answers, are as follows :

“No. 1. Does the jury find as a fact that the marketing of gas from the Roy Shaw well and the J. E. Ringler well was begun on the same day?
“Answer: Yes.
“No. 2. If the jury should find from the evidence the fact to be that The Ohio Fuel Gas Company violated or breached the agreement of October 24, 1927, by not taking enough gas from the Roy Shaw well from November 24, 1927 to October 15, 1929, then and in case the jury so finds, how much gas did said gas *415 company take from said well during said time and how much gas should it have taken during said time?
“Answer: 50,897 M amount of gas taken.
“Answer: 62,713 M amount of gas it should have taken.”

The two interrogatories were clearly responsive to items (c) and (d) above given, and not to item (e), which alleged discrimination in the shutting off of the Shaw well in favor of other wells from which the Ohio Fuel Gas Company was marketing gas from the adjoining property. This clearly was a separate specification of breach of the contract heretofore set out.

Hence the answers to the interrogatories were not conclusive of the entire case alleged in the petition. The special findings are not inconsistent with the general verdict, and we overrule this contention of the plaintiff in error.

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Bluebook (online)
185 N.E. 553, 126 Ohio St. 409, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 409, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-fuel-gas-co-v-ringler-ohio-1933.