Rothstein v. Rothstein

164 N.E.2d 768, 109 Ohio App. 234, 10 Ohio Op. 2d 466, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 640
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 1958
Docket348
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 164 N.E.2d 768 (Rothstein v. Rothstein) 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
Rothstein v. Rothstein, 164 N.E.2d 768, 109 Ohio App. 234, 10 Ohio Op. 2d 466, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 640 (Ohio Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

Guernsey, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Seneca County dismissing plaintiffs’ petition for vacation of an earlier judg *235 ment of that court and for a new trial, the petition having been filed after the term at which the earlier judgment was made.

The judgment in question was entered pursuant to a jury verdict that a purported codicil to the will of Myer M. Roth-stein, deceased, was a valid codicil to the will. The appellants are the same individuals who were parties plaintiff in the action to contest the codicil. The validity of the will to which the codicil pertains has never been questioned.

The ground of contest in the original action was “that the codicil allegedly executed on the 12th day of December, 1952, was not executed on said date, but is a fraudulent, fictitious and forged document.” In the trial thereof two checks, purporting to have been drawn by the testator and dated November 28, 1952, and December 21, 1952, respectively, were offered by plaintiffs as reflecting on the validity of the signature on the codicil and were admitted in evidence. The subscribing witnesses and other of defendants’ witnesses testified to the actual execution of the codicil, and, further, that on the same day on which the codicil was executed the testator signed some checks. One of the subscribing witnesses and the surviving spouse testified that one of the checks then signed by endorsing, was a check for rent due the testator from the Cities Service Company. None of such checks were produced or offered in evidence. There was also considerable evidence as to the testator’s physical condition and his testamentary capacity, and as to other circumstances existing at and about the time the codicil was allegedly executed.

In this action to vacate the judgment determining the codicil valid, plaintiffs claim discovery of new and material evidence affecting the merits of the original action. The new evidence claimed by plaintiffs and offered at the hearing of their petition for a new trial consists of numerous cancelled checks purporting to have been drawn or endorsed by the decedent, some of which plaintiffs assert are valid and others which plaintiffs claim are forged. The petition alleges, and the evidence is to the effect, that the checks purporting to have been drawn by decedent were at the time of the original trial in the possession of the then administrator with the will annexed of *236 the estate of decedent; and it also appears in evidence that he (the administrator) resided in and had his office in the county and city wherein the original action came to trial, and had also testified as a witness at that trial. Also offered as additional evidence are checks drawn by the Cities Service Company payable to decedent dated November 15, 1952, and December 15, 1952, respectively, and bearing endorsements purporting to be those of decedent. These checks at the time of trial of the original action were in the possession of the Cities Service Company at its office in Cleveland, Ohio. Plaintiffs claim the endorsement on the later of these two checks to be forged.

At the hearing of the petition for a new trial, plaintiffs called an alleged handwriting expert who testified that in his opinion the signatures on the codicil and on certain of the checks were not the signatures of decedent; and the defendants offered the testimony of another alleged handwriting expert who testified that in his opinion all the signatures on the various documents purporting to be those of the decedent were genuine. Neither at the original trial nor at the hearing of the petition for a new trial was any direct evidence offered by the plaintiffs as to the identity of the person or persons who inscribed the signatures which the plaintiffs claim to have been forged.

Plaintiffs assign error in the following particulars:

“1. Fraud intervened in the original trial of this matter, which resulted in the jury arriving at a verdict different than would have resulted without such fraud.

“2. Newly discovered evidence, material to these plaintiff-appellants, which with reasonable diligence they could not have discovered and produced at the trial.

“3. The final order and judgment herein were against the manifest weight of the evidence.

“4. The verdict and judgment of the court below were contrary to law.”

Plaintiffs’ first assignment is based on the proposition that the successful party in the contest action, in particular the surviving spouse, practiced fraud when she and one of the subscribing witnesses testified that decedent had endorsed a Cities Service rent check on December 12, 1952, the same' date on which the codicil was purportedly executed.

*237 The judgment of the lower court dismissing plaintiffs’ petition for a new trial is consistent with a determination by that court, after weighing the evidence, that there was no fraud practiced by the successful party in obtaining the judgment in the original action. This was á mixed question of law and fact to be determined by the lower court, and the evidence of fraud had to be clear and convincing before the court could set the judgment aside. See In the Matter of Veselich, a Minor, 22 Ohio App., 528, at page 533, 154 N. E., 55. On an appeal on questions of law only, an appellate court will not disturb the determination of the trial court that there was no fraud practiced by the successful party in obtaining the judgment, so long as there is a conflict of evidence whereby reasonable men might honestly vary in their conclusions respecting this issue, and so long as there is no undisputed fact establishing fraud as a matter of law.

The pertinent testimony of the subscribing witness, Joseph Griggs, which the plaintiffs claim to be fraudulent, is as follows, with emphasis and bracketed explanation added:

“I had already eaten my breakfast, and I was thinking I would go to work. There was some conversation and Aunt Lora [the surviving spouse] said there were some things she would like to have me take care of. She said could you take care of that for me? I said yes, I could. I asked her what is the nature of the business? She said, ‘Well, we have a check that has to be endorsed and cashed, and Uncle Myer [the testator] will have to endorse this check. ’ So my sister-in-law was in the bedroom and watching my uncle getting ready to get up and eat his breakfast. He had a chair there he preferably liked to sit in. He never gave me a reason. I was back and forth in the bedroom to see how she was getting along with him. He came out and sat in that chair. He had a few days growth of whiskers and he asked me if I would shave him and I said, yes, and I shaved him. I believe while I was shaving him my sister-in-law was preparing his breakfast. After he was shaved, I believe his breakfast was brought in and he ate it. He seemed concerned about his payment on a mortgage, but I don’t know or I can’t recall whether that payment was made that day or not, *238 but I do recall that there was something about a check

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 N.E.2d 768, 109 Ohio App. 234, 10 Ohio Op. 2d 466, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rothstein-v-rothstein-ohioctapp-1958.