Schuck, Exrx. v. McDonald

16 N.E.2d 619, 58 Ohio App. 394, 12 Ohio Op. 233, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 450
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 16 N.E.2d 619 (Schuck, Exrx. v. McDonald) 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
Schuck, Exrx. v. McDonald, 16 N.E.2d 619, 58 Ohio App. 394, 12 Ohio Op. 233, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 450 (Ohio Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Sherick, J.

The question presented by this appeal concerns a matter which has perplexed the bar of this state since the adjudication of Swisher v. Orrison Cigar Co., 122 Ohio St., 195, 171 N. E., 92. It has to do with the right of a payee, or rather that of a holder by assignment, of a promissory note, which contains a power of attorney authorizing the confession of judgment against the maker thereof, to procure a judgment thereon by confession against him after the death of the maker. In other words the query is: May a judgment be confessed against a dead man ?

On June 1, 1936, John A. Bachtel executed and delivered to Minnie Schuck his certain promissory note, which contained the following warrant of attorney:

“And I hereby authorize any attorney at law to appear in any court of record in the United States, after the above obligation becomes due and waive the issuing and service of process and confess a judgment against me in favor of the holder hereof, for the amount then appearing due, together with costs of suit, and thereupon to release all errors and waive all right of appeal. ’ ’

Thereafter Minnie Schuck endorsed and transferred this note to Carrie McDonald. On July 30, 1937, John A. Bachtel died. On August 2,1937, Carrie McDonald, the legal holder, procured a judgment thereon by confession not only against the deceased maker but also against Minnie Schuck as payee and endorsee. On November 5, 1937, at a subsequent term of court, Minnie M. Schuck, in her representative capacity, filed her petition and commenced a proceeding to vacate the judgment previously entered against her decedent. The petition was demurred to. The demurrer having been sustained and there being no desire to plead fur *396 ther, the petition was dismissed. The appeal is from this order.

Before proceeding further, let it be made known that the petition does not contain a copy of the note with its incorporated power of attorney; neither is- mention made of the facts disclosing that the judgment sought to be vacated was a joint judgment. We are advised of these facts by the trial court’s opinion and examination of the files in the case upon which the judgment was entered. One further comment. The petition and relief sought are, without doubt, grounded on paragraph six of Section 11631, G-eneral Code, which prescribes that a judgment may be vacated “for the death of one of the parties' before the judgment in the action.” In as much as the demurrer admits that the judgment was taken after the death of the maker, we feel at liberty to examine and consider the original files in the action upon which the judgment complained of was entered, for the reason that a demurrer searches the record, and as said in Bever v. Beardmore, 40 Ohio St., 70, at page 78, in speaking of a petition to vacate after term: “It is not of itself a civil action; but a special proceeding in an action to effect a judgment rendered therein at a former term of the same court. * * * It is professedly an application for a new trial. ’ ’

This court is not concerned with the status of the judgment as it exists against the payee and endorser, Minnie Schuck, except in so far as it affects the right of the attorney at law to confess' a joint judgment under the terms of the warrant of attorney as it hereinbefore appears.

It is our purpose to consider the error complained of in the sustaining of this demurrer from three independent view points, the first of which necessitates a consideration by the court of the matters of fact, previously noted, which do not appear within the petition, *397 Our right to so consider them has heretofore been vindicated.

We have at the inception of this opinion stated that confusion exists since the decision of the Swisher case, supra, because of a seeming conflict in reasoning with the court’s finding in Hoffmaster v. G. M. McKelvey Co., 88 Ohio St., 552, 106 N. E., 1061. The reason for any uncertainty is perhaps due, in part, to the facts that report of the Hoffmaster case is confined to the court’s journal entry; the holding of the Swisher case, supra, in that a warrant of attorney is a power coupled with an interest which survived the maker’s adjudication of mental incapacity; and the fact that the Hoff-master case is cited as authority in the Swisher case. There may be a further reason embodied in the conclusion to be drawn from the argumentation and what was actually held and done in Hunt v. Rousmanier’s Admrs., 21 U. S. (8 Wheat.), 174, 5 L. Ed., 589, of which we will hereinafter have more to say. It is our judgment that both the Hoffmaster and Swisher cases were, upon principle, rightly decided and when the facts are understood and precedent reviewed apparent incompatibility disappears.

In the Hoffmaster case a judgment had been confessed'against one Emarinda Smith, a co-maker of a cognovit note with one G-eorg’e Smith, who had died prior to the rendition of the individual judgment against her. The McKelvey Company, which held this judgment against Emarinda Smith, sought to enforce their lien, acquired by virtue of an execution and levy upon her property against Hoffmaster and another lien holder. The court found the lien to be void for it had been, “rendered on the appearance of defendant [Emarinda Smith], being entered under authority of a joint warrant of attorney against one of the parties to such warrant; it appearing on the face of the record that the other party signing such warrant of at *398 torney had died prior to the entry of such appearance, said joint power was revoked by power of law.”

The reason back of this holding is found in the second paragraph of the syllabus of the early case of Cushman v. Welsh, 19 Ohio St., 536, which established, that:

“A warrant of attorney to confess judgment must be strictly construed, and the authority thereby conferred cannot be exercised beyond the limits expressed in the instrument. ’ ’

Therefore the power being joint, and, the co-maker having died prior to the exercising of that power, it could not be thereafter exercised because the power itself was revoked by force of law. In other words it was reasoned that death of a co-maker before judgment was confessed revoked the power by operation of law.

The Court of Appeals of the Ninth Appellate District in Saulpaugh v. Born, 22 Ohio App., 275, 154 N. E., 166, followed the reasoning of the Úoffmaster entry and applied its. principle to a state of facts wherein a joint judgment was confessed against the two makers of a note after'the death of one. The survivor sought the judgment’s vacation. The judgment was vacated upon this reasoning, which we adopt.

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Related

Hunt v. Rousmanier's Administrators
21 U.S. 174 (Supreme Court, 1823)
Hunt v. Rhodes
26 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1828)
Johnson v. National Bank of Mattoon
151 N.E. 231 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1926)
Saulpaugh v. Born
154 N.E. 166 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1925)
Swisher v. Orrison Cigar Co.
171 N.E. 92 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.E.2d 619, 58 Ohio App. 394, 12 Ohio Op. 233, 1938 Ohio App. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuck-exrx-v-mcdonald-ohioctapp-1938.