Pagel v. Creasy

26 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 113
CourtHamilton County Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 113 (Pagel v. Creasy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton County Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pagel v. Creasy, 26 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 113 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Gorman, J.

The plaintiff in error brought an action to recover from defendant in error the sum of $822.62, with interest from the 1st day of November, 1913, being the amount of one-half the profits which the plaintiff claimed resulted to the defendants upon the purchase and sale of one thousand barrels of sugar.

[114]*114In his petition the plaintiff claimed that he entered into a contract with the defendants whereby he sold to them one thousand barrels of sugar from the Warner Sugar Refining Company, at the then market price of $4.20 a hundred pounds, New York basis, the delivery of the sugar to be held off as long as possible, and that the defendants agreed with ■ him to sell the sugar bought as aforesaid, and that, the profits or losses derived from the purchase and sale of said sugar as aforesaid should be equally divided between said defendants and' the plaintiff, William F. Pagel. He further says that in pursuance of the agreement there was shipped to said defendants one thousand barrels of sugar at various .times during the summer of • 1913, and that said sugar was sold by the defendants at. a total profit of $1,645.24, one-half of which, $822.62, he claims under the contract belonging to him.

Defendant by answer set up that the plaintiff, Pagel, was the selling agent of the Warner Sugar Refining Company at the time the sale of the thousand barrels of sugar was made to them; that they did buy from the Warner Sugar Refining Company through the plaintiff a thousand barrels of sugar at the then market price of $4.20 per hundred pounds, deliveries to be delayed as long as possible; that said sugar was sold •to them in- the usual course of business. The defendants deny that the profits on the said thousand barrels, of sugar was $1,-645.24. ' And further answering the defendants state that if they entered into an agreement on May 2, 1913, with the plaintiff for the purchase by plaintiff and defendants of the said thousand barrels of sugar from said Warner Sugar Refining Company, or agreed or had'agreed on or about that date with the plaintiff that the defendants should sell the said sugar so purchased from the said company and that the profits and loses derived from the. sale thereof should be equally divided between the plaintiff and defendants as set forth in the petition, ‘said agreement and each' and every part thereof was and would have been contrary to public policy, illegal, void and of no binding force or effect, because on said date and for some time previous thereto and thereafter ..plaintiff was. a sales agent in the city, of [115]*115Cincinnati and state of Ohio for said Warner Sugar Refining Company, selling sugar for his said principal on a commission basis for each barrel sold; and representing himself to be the sales agent of the said company, and the defendants believing him to be such, plaintiff had solicited an- order for and on behalf of said principal for said sugar and defenlants bought the said sugar from the said company through the plaintiff acting as its said sales agent, but said purchase was made solely for the 'account of defendants, and plaintiff had.no interest whatever therein as purchaser or otherwise with defendants, but that plaintiff as said sales agent was paid and received the usual ’ commission-from his said principal, the Warner Sugar Refining Company; that plaintiff was not authorized, empowered or permitted to become a purchaser in whole or in part of said sugar, and if said plaintiff had acquired or had any interest in the purchase or sale of said sugar except as sales agent of the Warner Sugar Refining Company it was without the knowledge or consent of his principal or these defendants. Defendants therefore asked to be dismissed with their costs.

■ A demurrer was filed to the second defense, which set up the agency of the plaintiff and that he was not authorized to acquire an interest in the purchase of said sugar. This demurrer coming on to be heard was sustained by one of the judges -of the common pleas court, upon the theory that there was no double agency in the case.

Thereafter an amended answer "was filed in substance setting up the same defense.

When the case was called for trial' plaintiff obtained leave to file an amended petition, setting out practically the same state of facts as in the petition, but alleging that the agreement as to profits was as follows:

Plaintiff alleged “that the said defendants, Edwin K. Creasy and Llewellyn V. Creasy, and plaintiff should divide equally the profits to be made by the advance in the price of sugar 'in the market, or if the same declined the losses should be divided equally between them, the gain or loss to be based on the- price of said sugar on the date of delivery of the same to the said defendants.”'

[116]*116This part of the amended petition differed from the petition in that in the petition it was claimed that the plaintiff and the defendants were to divide the losses or profits which might result from the resale of the sugar without reference to.the market price.

A second amended answer was filed to this amended petition, which in substance set up .the facts set out: in the original answer.

It appears from the statements of counsel that when, this case was called for trial, the trial judge was of the opinion that the demurrer.filed to the.second defense of the answer should have been overruled, and after a' conference with the- judge who sustained the demurrer the trial court overruled the demurrer. The record fails to show that any demurrer was filed, to the. second amended answer or to the amended answer, and the record also fails to disclose that an entry was made on the day that it is claimed that the demurrer was overruled by the trial.court. .

The cause was heard on March 25, 1915, and upon that day it is claimed that the trial judge overruled plaintiff’s demurrer to the second defense of the answer. Long after, the case was heard and the verdict and judgment rendered in favor of the defendants, to-wit, on May 11, 1915, an entry appears upon the journal setting forth that the demurrer of the plaintiff to- the second'defense of defendants’ amended answer was argued and overruled, to which ruling of the court the plaintiff by his counsel excepted. The minutes state, 619, “Entry nunc pro tunc,” but the record fails to show on what day this entry should have been made. It was made on May 11, but as “nunc pro tunc” and there is an absence in the record of the date when the ruling was really made by the court.

The plaintiff in error complains that the trial judge should not have overruled the demurrer to the amended petition, but should have abided by the ruling of the former judge who sustained the demurrer to the second defense of the answer.

"We are of the opinion that the plaintiff in error was not prejudiced by the ruling of the trial judge in this matter. When it is considered that' the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton [117]*117County is one court, notwithstanding the different individuals who sit upon the bench of that court, and when it is further considered that it is not material what particular judge rules upon an interlocutory matter, it is a ruling of the common pleas court, we are of the opinion that the individual judge who tries a case has a right at the time the final judgment is rendered to correct any errors of law that may have been made in any interlocutory orders or rulings, whether they have been made by himself or by any other judge of the common pleas court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pagel-v-creasy-flactyct23-1916.