Smith v. New York Central Rd.

170 N.E. 637, 122 Ohio St. 45, 122 Ohio St. (N.S.) 45, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 192, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 307
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1930
Docket21993, 22129 and 22147
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 170 N.E. 637 (Smith v. New York Central Rd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. New York Central Rd., 170 N.E. 637, 122 Ohio St. 45, 122 Ohio St. (N.S.) 45, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 192, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 307 (Ohio 1930).

Opinion

Marshall, C. J.

The sole question for determination in both of these controversies is whether the *48 amendment of Section 11224, reducing the period within which personal injury suits may be brought from four years to two years, will apply to causes of action existing at the time of the effective date of the enactment. Neither of the controversies was a pending suit at the time of such effective date, and both controversies were existing causes of action on that date. The same legal questions therefore apply to both, and will therefore be considered and decided together.

The case concerns the statute of limitations, and concededly relates to the remedy. This has been so often decided that elaborate citation of authority is unnecessary. One of the earlier eases is that of Sturges v. Crowninshield, 17 U. S. (4 Wheat.), 122, 4 L. Ed., 529. It has been so declared in this court in a large number of cases.

Except where constitutional provisions expressly forbid, the Legislature has power to make, amend, and repeal laws relating to the remedy, and make the same applicable, not only to existing causes of action, in which suits have not been instituted, but even in pending suits. Section 28 of Article II of eke Ohio Constitution denies to the General Assembly the power to pass retroactive laws. It has, how-’ ever, been decided in numerous eases that retroactive laws refer to those which create and define substantive rights, and which either give rise to, or take away, the right to sue or to defend actions at law. It has been further declared at numerous times that a statute which is remedial in its operation on rights, obligations, duties, and interests already existing is not within the mischiefs against which that clause of the Constitution was intended to safe *49 guard, and the remedial statutes do not even come within a just construction of its terms. Rairden v. Holden, Admr., 15 Ohio St., 207; Templeton v. Kraner, 24 Ohio St., 554. Under these well-settled rules of interpretation, there is no constitutional inhibition in the state of Ohio against the enactment of laws relating to the remedy and against making them applicable to pending actions and existing causes of action. This gives rise to the further question whether a cause of action existing at the time of the amendment of a remedial statute is a vested right. If it is such vested right, it could not, in any event, be taken away altogether. On the theory that a right to sue once existing becomes a vested right, and cannot be taken away altogether, it does not conclusively follow that the time within which the right may be asserted and maintained may not be limited to a shorter period than that which prevailed at the time the right arose, provided such limitation still leaves the claimant a reasonable time within which to enforce the right. This proposition has been elaborately discussed in the text-books, but nowhere has the rule been better stated than in Terry v. Anderson, 95 U. S., 628, at page 633, 24 L. Ed., 365. It is there stated:

‘£ The parties to a contract have no more a vested interest in a particular limitation which has been fixed, than they have in an unrestricted right to sue. They have no more a vested interest in the time for the commencement of an action than they have in the form of the action to be commenced; and as to the forms of action or modes of remedy, it is well settled that the legislature-may change them at its *50 discretion, provided adequate means of enforcing the right remain.”

The court proceeded further to say that the question became one of reasonableness, and that the only problem for the court to consider is as to whether the time allowed in the statute is reasonable. The conclusion was reached that the Legislature is primarily the judge. The amendment to Section 11224, General Code, shortening the period from four years to two years, did not provide in terms that the enactment should go into effect at a future date. It was not passed as an emergency measure. Section lc of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio, as amended in 1912, which amendment became effective October 1, 1912, provides that, except in emergency legislation, “no law passed by the general assembly shall go into effect until ninety days after it shall have been filed by the governor in the office of the secretary of state * *

When the amendment was filed by the Governor in the office of the secretary of state on May 4, 1927, the parties to this controversy had ninety days within which to begin their respective actions, which period in cause No. 21993 would have been one year and six months after the injury occurred, and in cause No. 22129 the plaintiff would have had one year and four months from the time the cause of action accrued. As a matter of fact, Smith waited for more than a year after the effective date of the amendment. Sr oka, who might have filed his suit on April 10,1928, which would have been more than eleven months after the amendment was filed in the office of secretary of state, in fact filed his petition on January 28, 1929, more than a year and eight *51 months after he was charged with notice of the amendment of the statute.

Upon the authority of the declaration of the United States Supreme Court in Terry v. Anderson, supra, the Legislature must be the primary judge of the reasonableness of the limitation, and the people of Ohio in their Constitution have fixed that period as such reasonable limitation. It cannot therefore be said that, whatever right vests in one who has suffered personal injury to recover damages from a tort-feasor has been taken away altogether by the enactment of Section 11224-1; neither can it be claimed that an unreasonable limitation has been effected by the change.

It clearly appearing that the Legislature is free to act in remedial legislation, subject only to the requirement that any change which may possibly affect vested rights should give a reasonable time within which to enforce such rights, let us inquire what action the Legislature has taken in such matters. The first legislation in Ohio upon this subject is found in the enactment of April 8, 1856 (53 Ohio Law, 153), which provided in substance that repeals shall in no manner affect pending actions founded thereon, nor causes of action not in suit prior to such repeal, unless the repeal so provided. This statute was amended February 19, 1866 (63 Ohio Law, 22), which broadened the statute without making substantial changes. A very substantial change was made in the statute in the revision of 1880, when it became Section 79 of the Revised Statutes, as follows:

“Whenever a statute is repealed or amended, such repeal or amendment shall in no manner affect pend *52

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 637, 122 Ohio St. 45, 122 Ohio St. (N.S.) 45, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 192, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-new-york-central-rd-ohio-1930.