Oliver v. Canan

71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 360
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1905
DocketNo. 8673
StatusPublished

This text of 71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 360 (Oliver v. Canan) 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
Oliver v. Canan, 71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 360 (Ohio 1905).

Opinion

Spear, C. J.

At request of plaintiff the circuit court made a finding of facts separate from its conclusions of law. A bill of exceptions was also taken by plaintiff. From this finding it appears, among other things, that on the decree rendered in the court of common pleas of Holmes county in the case of Oliver v. Canan et al., May 19, 1885, there is due Oliver from Canan the sum of $3,508.00, and interest.

The suit of Canan against McCool and Oliver in the court of common pleas of Richland county was commenced about the time of the commencement of Oliver’s suit against Canan in Holmes county to recover judgment on the alleged balance due on his former judgment — the present case. Judgment was rendered by the common pleas of Richland in favor of Canan September 26, 1900, for $7,881.43, hut this judgment, was reduced by the circuit court on review to $5,300.00, and interest and costs, at the January term, 1901.

March 28, 1902, execution was issued and the personal property of Oliver levied upon and advertised for sale. April 18,1902, the circuit court granted an order restraining Canan from selling the property, but upon the condition that Oliver pay one-half of the amount of the judgment to J. C. Laser and A. A. Douglas, attorneys fob Canan, for services in recovering the judgment (they having a contract with Canan for that amount as compensation, and an assignment of the judgment), and upon the further condition that Oliver execute a bond in $4,000.00 to secure the payment of the other half of the judgment in the event that Canan should prevail in the final trial, and, both of which conditions, being complied with, the execution was returned.

[364]*364The Richland county judgment was against. McCool as principal and Oliver as surety or guarantor. McCool is a non-resident of the state and has no property within the state subject to execution. Canan is insolvent.

There were several trials of the suit of Canan v. McCool and Oliver and several verdicts and judgments, all save the last one hereinbefore recited having been set aside. After each verdict and judgment an assignment of the same by Canan was made to Laser.. They were based upon a valuable consideration, were in due form and were filed with the clerk and entered upon the judgment docket. Aside from the consideration arising from Laser’s interest as attorney of record in the case, and from the contract he and his colleague (Douglas) had with Canan for- fees; the assignment of the -Richland county judgment to Laser rested upon the sale and transfer of certain land in Ashland county, at the time owned by Laser, the deed, however, being made sometime after the date of the assignment, to the wife of John D. Canan, and the only consideration for .that deed was the assignment of the Richland county judgment.

The judgment in favor of Oliver against Canan became and was dormant at the time of the assignment by Canan to Laser of the judgment of Canan v. McCool and Oliver because no execution had issued upon it within five years.

Upon its- findings- of fact the circuit court held as conclusion of law that “the dormant judgment in favor of Paul Oliver against John D. Canan could not be set off against the living judgment of John D. Canan against said Paul Oliver. A dormant judgment would not be entitled so long as it remained [365]*365dormant to be set off against a living judgment, and that is the situation that existed at the time Laser obtained this assignment of Ganan’s interest in the judgment and cause of action and so continued and existed until the judgment was rendered in this action in the common pleas court on the original judgment. Therefore we hold that.there were no equities existing in favor of'"Paul Oliver to have this judgment set off against the judgment of John D. Canan at the time J. O. Laser became the owneir of the Richland county judgment. And the revivor of that judgment afterwards, or rendition of the new judgment upon it, would give no rights antedating the date of the revivor or the rendition of the new judgment. The injunction is dissolved and the petition dismissed at plaintiff’s costs.”

The contention of plaintiff in error is that the findings of fact do not support the judgment rendered but require a judgment for plaintiff upon two grounds: 1, that the dormancy of Oliver’s judgment, if it was in law dormant, did not deprive the party of the right of set-off; and, 2, that the judgment was in legal effect a decree in chancery and therefore the fact that no execution had issued within the time the statute requires execution in order to keep a judgment at law alive, could not have the effect of rendering the decree dormant.1

Counsel for defendant in error, however, present and insist upon an essentially different phase of the case, and it may be well to consider the adverse claims before giving special attention to those of the plaintiff. In short counsel maintain that while the action of the circuit court in deciding for the, defendant is right it can rest' upon other and better grounds than the grofind stated. One proposition [366]*366is that the Holmes comity court had no jurisdiction to consider the demand of set-off because that'matter should have been set up in the Eichland county case. We do not so understand the law. The proposition seems to confuse set-off with counterclaim. There is an essential difference. A counterclaim is a cross-action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth as the foundation of the adversary’s claim, and as to such demand the right to set it up may well be limited to the case in which it arises; but a set-off is a distinct cause of action existing in favor of a defendant, and on which he might maintain his action irrespective of any suit against him, and as to such a claim the right to assert it is not limited to the suit brought by the opposite party.

Again it is urged that the court was without jurisdiction to adjudicate the rights of Mr. Laser, the assignee of the judgment, because he was not made a party. Whatever. force there might be in this proposition had it been urged to the' trial court originally, we think it should have none here as an objection to the jurisdiction. That gentleman was attorney for Canan not only in the Eichland county litigation, but in the second case in Holmes county, and was a witness against the plaintiff in the trial in the circuit court, and his several assignments of the Eichland county judgment to him were given in evidence, and his rights necessarily considered. The claim seems to lack substance from the viewpoint of a reviewing court. And this conclusion is reached with full appreciation of the fact that, in his testimony, Mr. Laser makes it clear that at the time he took the first assignment from Canan, the one given just after the first trial of the case in Eichland county, March, 1898, he did not know of [367]*367the indebtedness of Canan to Oliver, although he did know of such indebtedness at the time he took the last assignment, that given upon the rendition of final judgment, September 26, 1900, and knew it long before the land was in fact conveyed to Mrs. Canan; and of the further fact that Canan in his testimony disclaims any interest in the judgment.

It is further insisted that the record will show that the true amount of the judgment of Oliver against Canan was very much less than (about half), of that claimed and set up by Oliver, and that a careful inspection will show that the true amount has been paid. We have endeavored to make a careful inspection of the record to determine this proposition.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Ohio St. (N.S.) 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-canan-ohio-1905.