Reed v. Ramey

80 N.E.2d 250, 82 Ohio App. 171, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 596, 37 Ohio Op. 529, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 558
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1947
Docket6874
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 80 N.E.2d 250 (Reed v. Ramey) 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
Reed v. Ramey, 80 N.E.2d 250, 82 Ohio App. 171, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 596, 37 Ohio Op. 529, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 558 (Ohio Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

*598 OPINION

By ROSS, J.:

This is an appeal on questions of law from the Municipal Court of Cincinnati, in which a judgment upon the pleadings was rendered in favor of the plaintiff upon their motion. The defendant’s motion for judgment was denied.

The pleadings consisted of an Amended Bill of Particulars and an answer which contained in addition to specific denials, certain admissions, a general denial. All of the allegations of the Bill of Particulars are to be construed most favorably to the defendants on the plaintiffs’ motion, and the defendants are entitled also to those allegations of the answer favorable to them, not denied by the plaintiff. No reply was filed by plaintiffs.

This action in which the plaintiffs seek a judgment for $316.73 is classified as a “first class” case by the rules of the Municipal Court of Cincinnati, of which rules this court is required to take judicial notice, such obligation resting upon the trial court. Glicklich v Garfield, 31 Abs, 129.

Rule XIV of the Municipal Court of Cincinnati, Rules of Practice, provides in part:

“No reply pleadings in third class cases will be required— pleas of confession and avoidance, set-off and counter-claim, will be considered as denied by the plaintiff, without pleading, as justice requires. In first class cases affidavits of reply shall be filed on or before the fifth day after rule day for statement of defense.”

Rule XIX provides:

“In all first class cases the provisions of the Ohio Code of Civil Procedure governing the practice and procedure of courts of Common Pleas, so far as the same are applicable to the Municipal Court and consistent with the act of April 7, 1913, establishing said Municipal Court, and not inconsistent with the rules otherwise adopted for the practice and procedure of said Municipal Court, shall be held to apply to and govern the proceedings in said Municipal Court.”

Sec. 11329 GC, provides:

*599 “Excepting averments as to value, or the amount of damage, for the purposes of an action, every material allegation of a petition, not controverted by the answer, and every material allegation of new matter in an answer not controverted by the reply, shall be taken as true. New matter alleged in a reply shall be deemed controverted by the adverse party as upon a denial or avoidance as the case may require.”

It is thus apparent that the proper allegations of the-answer not inconsistent with allegations in the petition must in this case be taken as true, no reply having been filed thereto.

It is apparent, of course, that no judgment can be rendered, on the pleadings in favor of the plaintiff upon his motion therefor, where, essential factual predicates for such judgment are issues of fact produced by affirmance and denial of the parties.

The assignments of error raise the general questions of' whether the trial court erred as a matter of law in granting-plaintiffs’ motion for judgment and denying defendants’ motion for judgment. While the effect of the absence of a reply may be here indirectly considered, there cannot be said to-be any decision of the Municipal Court of Cincinnati upon a question of practice, hence, the provisions of §1558-27 GC, are-not involved.

Although the action was brought against two defendants, as members of a partnership, only one of them John P. Ramey, the only appellant, filed an answer.

Turning to the Amended Bill of Particulars it appears that the plaintiffs entered into a contract with the defendants as a partnership, doing business as the R. & R. Engineering Company, by which the latter were engaged to furnish and install a furnace and heating plant in the residence of the plaintiffs for the sum of $675.00. Contrary to the statement of plaintiffs in their brief, there is no allegation either in general or specific terms that the defendants agreed “to apply the contract price to the payment of the material and labor-bills.” The nearest allegation to this is that the defendants “were by virtue of and contract with plaintiffs bound and obligated to pay” such bills. (Exact quotation.) This is a mere conclusion of law, and has no standing as an allegation, of fact.

It is further alleged by the plaintiffs that the installation was made, that upon demand of the defendants, payment was. made to the defendants of the full contract price.

*600 Ramey in his answer denies that plaintiffs made-payment to him of the contract price, and states that if paid it was paid to “the defendant Ralph sS. Miller after plaintiffs had full knowledge of the dissolution of the partnership of R. & R. Engineering Co.”

The plaintiffs allege that the defendants represented that all bills incident to such installation due and owing material men, subcontractors and laborers had been paid in full. The defendant Ramey in his denies he made such representation and his general denial covers his partner. So that such allegation is fully controverted.

It is further alleged in the Amended Bill of Particulars that the defendants failed to pay The Cincinnati Stamping .& Furnace Company the sum of $316.48 for material furnished defendants and installed in the residence of plaintiffs under the contract with the defendants, and that by reason of such failure The Cincinnati Stamping & Furnace Company filed a mechanic’s lien upon the real property of plaintiffs in which the furnace was installed, that such lien holder made demand upon plaintiffs for payment, and threatened foreclosure of such lien and that plaintiffs were required to and did pay said lien of $316.48 on May 12, 1947.

The defendant Ramey in his answer merely admits that the plaintiffs paid the furnace company. His general denial traverses the allegations of plaintiffs that a lien was filed .-against their property, that the furnace company demanded payment, that it threatened to foreclose the lien. So then the only uncontroverted fact upon this phase of the action is that the plaintiffs paid the furnace company $316.48, which sum was an indebtedness of the partnership assumed by Miller. Some comment is made by defendant Ramey that such payment was made after the original Bill of Particulars was filed. The allegation would have been proper in a supplemental Bill of Particulars and the Amended Bill of Particulars may be so considered. McMurray v Vaughn’s Seed Store, 117 Oh St, 236, 239; City of Cincinnati v Cameron, 33 Oh St, 336.

Plaintiffs allege that by reason of the failure and neglect of defendants to pay the material man, the consequent assertion of a claim against them and filing of a lien upon their property which they were required to pay, the plaintiffs have suffered damage in the amount of $316.48, for which amount with incidental costs, they ask judgment.

Of course, the filing of the lien and threat to foreclose as well as the demand for payment having been denied, the allegation of damage rests only upon the uncontroverted state *601 ment that the partners failed to pay the furnace company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.E.2d 250, 82 Ohio App. 171, 50 Ohio Law. Abs. 596, 37 Ohio Op. 529, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-ramey-ohioctapp-1947.