Roberts v. Davis, Admr.

35 N.E.2d 609, 66 Ohio App. 527, 20 Ohio Op. 553, 1940 Ohio App. LEXIS 827
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 29, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 35 N.E.2d 609 (Roberts v. Davis, Admr.) 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
Roberts v. Davis, Admr., 35 N.E.2d 609, 66 Ohio App. 527, 20 Ohio Op. 553, 1940 Ohio App. LEXIS 827 (Ohio Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Sheriok, P. J.

The matters under review concern in the first instance the securing of a judgment by confession on March 29, 1939, upon a warrant of attorney incorporated in a collateral promissory note. The parties therein stood in reverse order. In the second instance, the action is one by petition after term by the judgment debtor to vacate this judgment.

The note which has been reduced to judgment, hears date of January 1, 1920, for $7,676, with 6 per cent interest, payable on demand to Davis & Dilley. It is signed by the appellant. It. therein pledged as collateral security “thirty-eight shares of the Dilley & *528 Davis Shoe Company stock ($50 par value per share),” and “authorized” the payee-pledgee to sell without notice and to apply the proceeds in payment of the obligation. It authorized the confession of judgment after the obligation became due, for the amount then appearing due.

Pour endorsements appear upon the back thereof. The first two are credit notations totaling $1,060 made as of the date of the note’s execution. The third is as follows: “Pay to the order of Prank Davis,” signed, “A. R. Dilley.” This endorsement bears no date. The fourth endorsement reads, “6/2/27 int. $100.”

The petition for vacation of the judgment admits the note’s execution and the payment thereon of the $1,060. It denies any and all subsequent payments. It avers that appellant was not summoned; that the judgment was taken for more than the amount due; and that he was not indebted thereon in any sum whatsoever. Appellant avers that on January 1, 1920, he entered into an oral agreement with Davis and Dilley to purchase a one-third interest in a shoe store for $7,676; that he was installed as its manager; that he never received this interest; that in August of 1920 he was discharged and ejected; that no settlement or accounting was ever made with him; that the payees then abandoned this contract of sale and its consideration and the note was thereby cancelled and discharged. It is specifically pleaded that the. note is barred by the statute of limitations.

The appellant at the same time tendered an answer to the original cognovit petition, and thereafter an amended answer which pleaded the facts appearing1 in the petition to vacate; and that the shoe store business on January 1, 1920, was a corporation known as The Dilley & Davis Shoe Company, authorized capital 200 shares of the par value of $50 each; and that on September 20, 1920, Dilley and Davis caused the corpora *529 tion to be dissolved; that its márket stock value was then $45 per share; and that he, Roberts, was not credited with the value of the 38 hypothecated shares. It is next averred that in September of 1921, Dilley and Davis sold one-half of the shoe store to another party, and that they failed to give him credit on his note or to account to him in any sum.

The appellee answered to the petition to vacate and averred his representative capacity and admitted all facts which comported with his judgment and denied the petition’s remaining averments. A hearing was had and the court refused to vacate the judgment but modified it by a remittitur in the sum of $1,710 with 6 per cent interest thereon from September 20, 1920, which appellee accepted. From this order appellant appeals.

The first claimed error is grounded upon the assertion that the trial court should never have entered the judgment in the first instance, for the reason that the note appeared upon its face to be barred by the statute of limitation; and, that the statute could be tolled only in accordance with some form of compliance provided by Section 11223, General Code, which recites:

“If payment has been made upon any demand founded on a contract, or a written acknowledgment thereof, or a promise to pay it has been made and signed by the party to be charged, an action may be brought thereon within the time herein limited, [Section 11221, General Code, fixes 15 years], after such payment, acknowledgment or promise.”

Appellant asserts that even if the note did bear upon the back thereof the endorsement of “6/2/27 int. $100,” that such fact in and of itself did not establish prima facie proof of actual payment, or that it was endorsed thereon at the time it purports to have been done, and that these matters could be established only by evidence aliunde.

It clearly appears from Section 11223, General Code, *530 that the bar erected by Section 11221, G-eneral Code, may be tolled two ways; by part payment, or by acknowledgment thereof or a promise to pay having been made and signed by the debtor. We are herein concerned only with part payment. It hardly needs assertion that an endorsement made by the holder of a note is not the equivalent of part payment. We recognize that there exists a line of respectable authorities which hold that endorsement is evidence of payment upon the theory that such notations made before the obligation is barred by lapse of time are declarations against interest which a creditor would not make when he then had a right and opportunity to collect his debt. To our notion this reasoning fails to recognize the possible human urge of one to protect his interests. One might be more than willing to lose a small portion of his claim rather than to lose it all. If such an endorsement was made after the statutory bar had set, it is the perpetration of a fraud. If made prior thereto, without actual payment, it is equally fraudulent. Many things might actuate one to forego collection of Ms debt within the period allowed by law, an example of which might be found where one’s mother was a joint obligor. This rule encourages fraudulent practices.

Another list of respectable courts adopt the converse theory, that an endorsement when made by the obligee, is a self-serving declaration. It creates a memorial of his act and not that of the party to be charged. It has long been held that the makers of commercial paper must see to it that their payments are endorsed on the instrument, because in the hand of a subsequent innocent purchaser, the payors may be made to pay again. When a payee permits his paper to become outlawed, it is his procrastination that made the situation possible for he had the ability to enforce payment in time. His laxity engenders postponement of payment. In order that a holder’s endorsement may toll the statute upon the theory of a presumption *531 of payment and a declaration against interest, it becomes necessary to cast tbe affirmative of an issue upon the one who should bear the negative. If the holder seeks to recover on paper which on its face is barred by the statute, it is far better that he should bear this burden. It is a cardinal rule of evidence that he who asserts must prove.

When the recipient of the power proceeded to confess judgment, it was evident that the note upon its face disclosed that the obligation was barred by the statute of limitations. By his act he confessed that a payment had been made thereon before the interposition of the statute. He in fact did but confess that the act of the then holder in placing the last endorsement on the back of the note was in truth evidence of part payment on the day named.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 N.E.2d 609, 66 Ohio App. 527, 20 Ohio Op. 553, 1940 Ohio App. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-davis-admr-ohioctapp-1940.