Radebaugh v. Citizens Trust & Savings Bank

26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 347, 1925 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1498

This text of 26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 347 (Radebaugh v. Citizens Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radebaugh v. Citizens Trust & Savings Bank, 26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 347, 1925 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1498 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

The case is submitted upon a motion for judgment for nonsuit at the close of plaintiff’s evidence. Defendant relies upon the contract made by the parties wherein it was expressly agreed that the bank should not be liable in case the property in the box should be misappropriated by any person deputized by the plaintiff, to have access to the same. Plaintiff made written acknowledgment of receipt of two keys. The contract stipulated that the bank shall not be liable to Radebaugh in event of misappropria[348]*348tion by the other or others or any person deputized by plaintiff, the undersigned, -who signed the contract.

Plaintiff alleges that bonds of the value of $8,880 were taken from his box and that he suffered complete loss thereof. The claim is made in the petition and upon the evidence that the bank is in fact and law bound to make good the loss upon the showing made by plaintiff. The undisputed facts thus far developed is the written contract made by the parties, the deposit of the bonds in the box and the delivery of the keys to plaintiff. It is undisputed that the plaintiff’s son was made a deputy, entitling him to a key, and that he signed the contract with his father; this made the son a party to the contract. It is also undisputed that upon the disappearance of the bonds, the father, plaintiff, made claim to the son that he was the only other person who had a key to the box, and that he thereupon accused the son of having taken the bonds. It is also undisputed that the son testified on behalf of his father in this case that he never had a key to his box although the evidence disclosed that the son was present with his father and assisted him in clipping the bonds, cashing them and making the purchase of a small bond for him and in placing it in the box. The contract acknowledges receipt of two keys, the one for the father and the clear inference being that the other was for the deputy, the son, which is the sole purpose of the contract signed by father and son; that is, the sole purpose of plaintiff in the appointment of his son as deputy and of his becoming a party to the contract by his signature with his father. We have the undisputed contract and the signatures and the assertion by the father that the son was the only other person who had a key and the qualified denial by the.son that he never saw the key.

It will be helpful to take note of some practical phases of evidence and of the judicial system of investigating and consideration thereof. One must have an understanding of the nature and character of the rules of evidence. It [349]*349is a set of rules and principles designed to aid judicial investigation of questions of fact, controverted questions, also inferences properly arising from undisputed or conceded facts. It is a common experience in judicial procedure that in proof of a fact or set of facts there is presented to the senses of the tribunal, facts which may furnish a basis or ground for inference and deduction in the act of furnishing and receiving evidence. It may present or bring to the tribunal a tangible basis for reasoning, deduction and inference, all of which lies within the realm of evidence.

There is ever present the legal element of reason and deduction which is an inherent part of all rational systems of proof accompanying all facts disclosed and processes of thought, having to do with the exercise of determination and conclusion upon probative process and development of ultimate fact. The present problem has to do with the judicial function upon undisputed evidence upon motion for nonsuit. In arriving at the ultimate fac" to which the law affixes legal consequences the judicial function, embracing the judge :n the first instance, and finally judge and jury, is to ascertain the ultimate operative facts by considering the evidential ones, the unknown from the known. In the exercise of this process a judicial tribunal must use, apply, reflect upon, and compare the general body of facts and ideas which are in its possession.

The judicial function, the court, composed of a judge and jury, or judge, is that of scrutinizing the material which the evidence comprehends, the duty being to observe its implication, the effect of one part on another, comparing and inferring, drawing inferences, all of which lies within the realm or scope of the evidence.

The whole process of legal argumentation, deduction and reasoning attached to or involved in determining upon the final or ultimate conclusion by court and jury involves and comprehends a process of logical deduction, conclusion by verdict or judgment,

[350]*350So, in the exercise of the exclusive judicial function of deciding a motion for nonsuit, there is a liberal indulgement in the process of the same deduction and inferences the jury may eventually draw.

Therefore, all legitimate inferences and deductions may be brought within the realm of the ultimate facts which process may reach out in two directions affecting either one or both parties.

Of course, credibility lies outside the function of the judge, all the testimony is considered though not in respect to its credibility, the same being accepted at its probable worth by the judge assuming its credibility. So, assuming the probable existence of all claimed facts we have everything before us and therefore undertake the task of deciding whether the motion for nonsuit should be sustained or overruled.

There is some conflict of testimony, but the evidence as to the contract and its terms is undisputed. Plaintiff’s son states that he never had a key, the language is significant, whereas the contract between plaintiff and the bank tends to show that the son did have a key, the father says he did, accused the son of taking the bonds; told his son that he had a key and that no one but him,could have opened the box. The son made no specific denials of all that appears against him; he merely says that he did not have a key. The provisions of the contract, the statements and accusations by his father, the lawsuit brought by the father all reflect upon the integrity of the son, with which the court is not concerned.

' A rehersal of all these matters which are more familiar to counsel than to the court, have material bearing upon the motion submitted. It appears that there is conflict or contention between the parties in some particulars, whereas the written contract made by the parties and deductions therefrom and inferences from undisputed conditions and fact are beyond dispute.

The question raised by the bank has to do with its lia[351]*351bility, the complaint merely alleging that “some person or persons other than the plaintiff unlocked and opened said safety deposit box and abstracted and took therefrom, and deprived plaintiff of all of said bonds.”

This is the ground of plaintiff’s contention.

The facts alleged disclose the contract of rental only in a general way; it sets out the facts concerning the nature of the safety deposit box department. Plaintiff does not plead the whole contract.

The petition fails to bring the case within the terms of the contract which expressly relieves the bank from liability for misappropriation of the contents of the box by a person deputized by plaintiff to have access to the box.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dirks v. California Safe Deposit & Trust Co.
68 P. 487 (California Supreme Court, 1902)
Taylor v. Crook
136 Ala. 354 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1902)
Nash v. Hall
4 Ind. 444 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1853)
Goodwin v. Smith
72 Ind. 113 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1880)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 347, 1925 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radebaugh-v-citizens-trust-savings-bank-ohctcomplfrankl-1925.