Rogers v. Edmund

21 Ohio C.C. 675
CourtLicking Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio C.C. 675 (Rogers v. Edmund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Licking Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Edmund, 21 Ohio C.C. 675 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Douglass, J.

Harland H. Edmund brought his action in the court below .■against Edward A.Storer, Joseph Rogers,and Frank Rutherford, to recover from them the sum of two hundred and fifteen ■dollars. This sum, he alleges, was won from the plaintiff •at gaming, and by him paid to defendants, which they now hold to his use. That, by reason thereof, an action has accrued to him under the statute against gaming; for which •sum,and interest, together with a sum not greater than $500, as exemplary damages, he claims judgment against all these parties. He alleges that Storer, and Rogers & Rutherford were partners, under the firm name of E. A. Storer & Company. These parties defendant answer separately,and deny the alleged partnership, and deny generally the averments of the petition.

The cause was tried to a jury, and resulted in a verdict ■for the amount claimed, plus $50. in addition to the $215, •actually claimed, presumably a penalty under the statute as [676]*676exemplary damages. The verdict is against all of these defendants.

A motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and error is prosecuted here to reverse the judgment, and numerous grounds of error are assigned, which resolve themselves-into,

First. That the verdict and judgment is against the dear-weight of the evidence, and against the law of the case.

Second. That the court erred in the admission and exclusion of evidence, prejudicial to the plaintiff in error; and-

Third. That the court erred in its charge..

These three assignments of error cover the contention.

The claim of the plaintiff is that his contracts with E. A. Storer & Company were wagering contracts,or transactions;, that Rogers & Rutherford were partners of E. A. Storer &. Company, or, at least, interested in these transactions, in such a way as to render them jointly liable with him; and-that the nature of the business conducted, the mutuality of Rogers & Rutherford and Storer in these transactions with plaintiff, made the same gambling contracts as to all of' them, within the purview of Revised Statutes,sections 4270' and 4271.

The claim of the plaintiffs in error is that, under the issue made, it devolved upon the plaintiff below to prove:

First. That these transactions were gambling transactions; and

Second. That Rogers & Rutherford were partners, and interested in the profits and losses of Storer & Company. That is the special claim that they made respecting the affirmative proof required in order to recover. They claim-a failure of proof by any clear weight of evidence either that it was a bet, wager, or chance, or that a partnership, either direct, or by a holding out, was shown by any competent evidence.

Considerable contention is made in reference to the character of the issue made by the pleadings, viz.: Whether the-action is one under Revised Statutes,sections 4270, or 4271.. A reference to section 4272 will show all that is necessary in order to bring a case within the statutes against gaming. Revised Statute section 4272 is as follows:

“In the prosecution of such actions it shall be sufficient?. [677]*677for the plaintiff to allege that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff, or received to the plaintiff’s use, the money so lost and paid, or converted the goods won of the plaintiff to the defendant’s use, whereby the plaintiff’s action accrued to him, without setting forth the special matter.”

I refer to this because it is the section immediately following the two sections which are an inhibition against gaming; and these sections are, presumably, intended to cover broadly the whole subject. The averments, by this section required, are very simple, and it shows that the pleader is not'required to set out 3vith legal exactness and particularity a state of facts which might bring him within one or the other of these sections. A very plain statement of the situation will entitle him to offer evidence, under that kind of averment, of a gambling contract.

The question is (under this evidence): Is a case made under these provisions against gaming? The policy and purpose of the law is to discourage gambling, rather than the natural justice of the case between the parties; and that is the reason, evidently, that the legislature passed section 4272, and they builded wisely when they did, so that no technical particularity is required in order to invoke the aid of either of these sections of the statute.

Under this evidence there can be no dispute but that Harland H. Edmund did deliver to E. A. Storer the sum of two hundred and fifteen dollars as margins upon certain transactions had with him in grain and pork; and that this sum, or any part thereof, has not been re-paid to him. It is beyond dispute that in the late fall of 1898, and continuing up until January, Edward A. Storer was conducting a place of business which was run in the name of E. A. Storer & Company at Newark, Ohio. A volume of evidence is before us relating to the character of these transactions. Were they gaming transactions ? Were Rogers & Rutherford interested in these transactions? If these questions are answered in the affirmative, by competent evidence, then this verdict is right.

The claim is made that this was an absolute purchase' of wheat,corn and pork, to be delivered in kind, actually; and that this was in contemplation of the parties at the time; that Edmund ordered Storer actually to buy these commod[678]*678Ities; that Storer telegraphed the order to Rogers & Rutht erford at Columbus, aud they, in turn, telegraphed the order to their correspondent in Chicago, and that the grain and pork were actually bought, to be delivered at the time rendered certain. ' If this be true, then this would not be a gambling transaction; it would not be a mere wager upon the price of these commodities.

This is the issue. On this issue, the verdict, we think, is clearly not against the weight of the evidence, It is not necessary to review the evidence upon this proposition, The evidence of Thomas E. Brown alone would justify the jury in its verdict under the well-known rule adhered to by reviewing courts; and we will not review the evidence,because we think it is not only not against the weight of the evidence, but it accords with our own view.

Did the court err in the admission and exclusion of evidence to the prejudice of the plaintiffs in error?

We have carefully gone through this record (and it was a laborious matter to do it), but counsel have aided us’jin classifying the claimed errors, and thus have aided us in our labor. A reference is made to certain classes of the evidence. While different in items and somewhat in character, yet, it is directed to the same legal phase of the case, and that is on the assumption that a strict partnership is required to be proven in this case in order to hold Rogers and Rutherford.

On page 18 of the Record a certain circular is introduced; and conversations with Rogers are introduced.

Page 37 of the Record; Rogers comes to take charge of the office over here at Newark.

On page 39 of the Record Rogers sends telegrams to one man, and then another, and then another, (the names of whom I do not remember, and it is not important,) here at the Newark office, They come, and stay but a short time. He inducts Brown into the office here. >

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Ohio C.C. 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-edmund-ohcirctlicking-1901.