Perdrix MacHinery Sales, Inc. v. Papp

188 N.E.2d 80, 116 Ohio App. 291, 22 Ohio Op. 2d 121, 1962 Ohio App. LEXIS 657
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1962
Docket5514
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 188 N.E.2d 80 (Perdrix MacHinery Sales, Inc. v. Papp) 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
Perdrix MacHinery Sales, Inc. v. Papp, 188 N.E.2d 80, 116 Ohio App. 291, 22 Ohio Op. 2d 121, 1962 Ohio App. LEXIS 657 (Ohio Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

Fess, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court finding that it is without jurisdiction to vacate a judgment of the Cincinnati Municipal Court and dismissing appellant’s petition to vacate such judgment. Such judgment also overruled appellant’s motion to discharge the proceedings in aid of execution and attachment instituted upon the transfer and recording of the Municipal Court judgment in the Common Pleas Court of Lucas County.

In his petition to vacate the judgment, defendant, appellant herein, alleges that on December 29,1959, a judgment in the sum of $1,000 and costs was rendered by the Cincinnati Municipal Court against the defendant and in favor of the plaintiff, appel-lee herein, on a promissory note, by virtue of a warrant of attorney therein included; that the judgment was taken by the plaintiff for more than was due it; that thereafter the plaintiff transferred such judgment to the Toledo Municipal Court, upon which proceedings in aid were instituted: and that on December *293 7, 1960, the defendant filed in the Toledo Municipal Court his amended petition to vacate such judgment and also moved to discharge the proceedings in aid thereof. Defendant alleges further that he had a valid defense to the action and annexes thereto his tendered answer and cross-petition.

From the record it appears also that on December 29,1960, a certificate of transfer of such judgment of the Cincinnati Municipal Court was also filed in the Lucas County Common Pleas Court, upon which execution was issued and returned unsatisfied. Proceedings in aid of execution were, likewise, instituted on December 29, 1960.

Thereafter, on January 6, 1961, appellant herein filed the instant petition in the Common Pleas Court to vacate such judgment of the Cincinnati Municipal Court in which he also tendered his answer and cross-petition and his separate motion to discharge the proceedings in aid of execution and attachment.

In his tendered answer and cross-petition appellant alleges, inter alia, that the plaintiff was not and is not now an Ohio corporation; and that the purported judgment of the Cincinnati Municipal Court, the purported certificate of judgment issued by such court on July 22, 1960, and thereafter filed on August 4, 1960, in the Toledo Municipal Court, the purported proceedings thereafter issued thereon in such court, and all purported proceedings thereafter taken in the Common Pleas Court are illegal and void.

Appellant’s contention that, upon the transfer of a judgment of a court of record to another court of record, such transfer has the effect of removing the judgment from the court in which it was rendered to the transferee court, and once so removed it no longer remains the judgment of the issuing court but becomes the judgment of the transferee court as though the judgment had originally been made by the transferee court, and thereafter all postjudgment proceedings must of necessity be filed in the transferee court (supported by the decision of the Ashtabula Municipal Court in Ohio Loan & Discount Co. v. Brown, 79 Ohio Law Abs., 280) is untenable.

Section 2329.02, Revised Code, dealing with the transfer of judgments of courts of record, provides, inter alia:

“Each such judgment [transferred] shall be deemed to have been rendered in the county in which is kept the journal *294 of the court rendering the same, in which journal such judgment is entered.
i 6 # * *
“Notwithstanding any other provision of the Revised Code, any judgment issued in a court of record may be transferred to any other court of record. Any proceedings for collection may be had on such judgment the same as if it had been issued by the transferee court.” (Italics supplied.)

Parenthetically, it may be observed that although the provisions of Section 2715.11, Revised Code, appear to authorize service upon a nonresident garnishee of the county in which an attachment is issued, a Municipal Court only has jurisdiction to enforce collection of its own judgments within its territorial jurisdiction. Rose v. Associates Discount Corp., 169 Ohio St., 321.

Section 2325.01, Revised Code, provides in part that the Court of Common Pleas may vacate or modify its own final order, judgment or decree after the term at which it was made for taking judgments upon warrants of attorney for more than was due the plaintiff, when the defendant was not summoned or otherwise legally notified of the time and place of taking of such judgment.

There is one important exception to the rule that a petition to vacate a judgment must be filed in the court which has rendered the judgment. If the judgment is void ab initio because the court lacked jurisdiction to enter it, the validity of such a judgment may be attacked collaterally in an independent action in equity, or in an action, to enjoin its enforcement, or possibly by motion to discharge an attachment. Decision of the question presented in the instant case, therefore, turns upon a determination whether the taking the judgment in the Cincinnati Municipal Court in the name of an allegedly fictitious person deprives that court of jurisdiction to enter the judgment or whether such circumstance is merely an error or such a defect in the proceedings concerning which relief may only be accorded by the filing of a petition to vacate such judgment in the court rendering it.

The Cincinnati Municipal Court had jurisdiction of the subject of the action as well as of the person of the defendant. An action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest and presumably, upon failure of a party-plaintiff to show that he is the real party in interest, judgment should be *295 rendered for the defendant. Bnt, in such a situation, jurisdiction of the court to render the judgment is not' defeated, nor is the judgment erroneously entered void but is probably voidable at the instance of the judgment debtor upon petition to vacate the judgment on such ground. No cases directly in point have come to our attention. But in Canterbury v. Pennsylvania Rd. Co., 158 Ohio St., 68, wherein during the trial it was disclosed that the plaintiff was a minor, it was held that the defect was not jurisdictional, and that the trial court erred in refusing to permit the minor to amend her petition by interlineation by inserting the name of a next friend. In reversing the judgment of the trial court, which had sustained defendant’s motion to dismiss the action for want of capacity of the plaintiff as a minor to maintain it, this court, in its opinion, 90 Ohio App., 530, 531, relied on the following statement in 43 Corpus Juris Secundum, 281, Section 108:

“It is not an absolute prerequisite to jurisdiction of an action by an infant that he should sue by guardian ad litem or next friend, and the suit or action is not void on that ground alone; it merely affects the regularity of the proceedings, and the defect is amendable; the judgment or decree is not void.”

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Bluebook (online)
188 N.E.2d 80, 116 Ohio App. 291, 22 Ohio Op. 2d 121, 1962 Ohio App. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perdrix-machinery-sales-inc-v-papp-ohioctapp-1962.