Sauer v. Cincinnati Street Railway Co.

5 Ohio N.P. 108
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedFebruary 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 108 (Sauer v. Cincinnati Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sauer v. Cincinnati Street Railway Co., 5 Ohio N.P. 108 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

The. question here presented is as to the admissibility in evidence of a certain decree entered February 1, 1890, in case No. 43246, an action between the same parties as in the above entitled case.

[109]*109The petition in said No. 43246 declared upon an action of tort, it being a suit to recover against the Cincinnati Street Railway Company the sum of fifteen thousand dollars for damages on account of personal injuries which it was alleged the plaintiff, Joseph Sauer, had received on the 18th day of July, 1887, by reason of the carelessness and negligence of the defendant company while said plaintiff was a passenger on one of the cars of said defendant.

The answer of the defendant was first a general denial: and second, a plea of a written contract of compromise and settlement of all plaintiff’s claim for damages which it was alleged by way of defense was entered into by defendant for a‘valuable consideration on or about the 22d day of September, 1887. To this answer, the plaintiff on June 5th, 1888, replied, stating in substance that the agreement of compromise and settlement actually entered into between the parties was to the effect that defendant would pay the expenses of plaintiff’s sickness, and -would thereafter “give plaintiff work such as his bodily condition would permit him to do, and for such a'length of time until the plaintiff should become well enough to work at his trade, which was that of a hand in a brewery, and that for said services plaintiff was to receive a reasonable compensation. ’ ’

Plaintiff further avers in said reply that he was given work for a short time, but that the work assigned him was of such character that he could not by reason of his bodily condition attend to the same. He also averred that the paper writing purporting to contain the above agreement was submitted to him for his signature; “That he was not able to speak, read or write the English language; that said paper which was written in English was explained to him by the officers, agents and representatives of the said defendant company as containing said terms of compromise as above'averred; that if it should be found that sáid paper writing does riot contain said terms, then his signature to the same was obtained from him by the fraud of the defendant company through its officers, agents and representatives, and that by reason of the premises, this plaintiff still continues to pray as in his first and former petition herein.”

On December 8, 1889, the defendant filed the following motion: “Now comes the defendant, the Cincinnati Street Railway Company, and moves the court to try the equitable issues raised by the pleadings in this cause to the court without the intervention of a jury,- and to stay further proceedings in same until the court shall have determined said equitable issues.”

On the same day an entry was made granting said motion and ordering “that said equitable issues be tried before a judge of this court without the intervention of a jury, and that further proceedings in this case be stayed until the determination of the same.”

To the granting of said motion and the making of said entry the plaintiff below noted .his exceptions. Thereafter a hearing upon the so-called equitable issues was had in this court, the plaintiff below excepting to all proceedings of the court thereunder.

Considerable evidence was taken in support of the claims of both parties, and thereafter on February 1, 1890, the final decree which is the subject of controversy, was- entered, in which the court found that the paper writing relied upon by the defendant as the agreement of compromise between the parties did not contain the whole of such agreement and “that said agreement in addition to the terms and conditions set forth in said paper writing included, and the court finds a part and parcel thereof, that the said The Cincinnati Street Railway Company in addition to the payment of the sum of money therein mentioned, did agree to and with the said Joseph Sauer that it would give him, said Joseph Sauer, such light work as the said Sauer was capable of doing in his then condition and until such time as he should be able to return to his regul ar employment. ’ ’

The court therefore proceeded to order and adjudge “that said paper writing as reformed be and the same is hereby declared to be the agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant as hereinbefore set forth.”

The defendant excepted to the decree, but it does not appear that it excepted for want of jurisdiction, and thereafter prosecuted error to the superior court in general'term. The general term.affirmed the judgment of the court below, and the defendant thereupon prosecuted error to the supreme court of the state. The supreme court refused the application of defendant for leave to file petition in error upon the ground that the order made by the special term was not a final order, and therefore not reviewable in that court.

The plaintiff, Joseph Sauer, then instituted the present action in this court, in which he seeks to recover from the defendant company for breach of the contract as reformed and evidenced by said decree.

Upon the first trial of the case, the decree was, against the objection of the defendant, admitted in evidence as embodying the real terms of the agreement between the parties. The trial resulted in a verdict of $2,000 in favor of the plaintiff, and the case came to general term by reservation upon the motion for a new trial. The general term reversed the case, upon the ground that the ver[110]*110dict was against the weight of the evidence, but found “that there is no error in the record of the court below upon the questions of law. ’ ’

The case being remanded to* special term, came on for trial, and said decree was again offered in evidene to prove the contract, and was excluded upon defendant’s objection. Thereupon a juror was withdrawn,and the case continued.

At the present trial the defendant again objects to the admission of said decree, and urges as.grounds for its objection: First, that the judgment of the court in decreeing a reformation of the contract so as to embody the real terms of the agreement as found by the court was void for want of jurisdiction. Second, that the decree was an interlocutory order, subject at any time to be modified by the court, and therefore not binding upon the parties.

It is apparent at the outset that, under the pleading's in the original case, No. 43246, there were in fact no equitable issues presented calling for the determination of a court of equity. The plaintiff sued in tort on account of personal injuries received by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendant. The defendant answered, pleading for its second defense a compromise and settlement of all such claims; the plaintiff replied, alleging in substance another and a different agreement of compromise and settlement than that relied upon by the defendant, and also fraud in the procurement of the contract of settlement relied upon by the defendant.

The reply of plaintiff therefore raised no equitable issue whatever. So far as the allegation of fraud in the reply is concerned,it must be treated purely as a defense to defendant’s answer of compromise_ and a settlement, and not as a proceeding on behalf of plaintiff, asking for affirmative relief in the way of cancelling said contract relied upon by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sauer-v-cincinnati-street-railway-co-ohsuperctcinci-1898.