Squire, Supt. v. G. Trust Co.

66 N.E.2d 651, 88 Ohio App. 37, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 196
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 24, 1944
Docket19247
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 N.E.2d 651 (Squire, Supt. v. G. Trust Co.) 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
Squire, Supt. v. G. Trust Co., 66 N.E.2d 651, 88 Ohio App. 37, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 196 (Ohio Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

OPINION

By MATTHEWS J.

This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing the action at the plaintiff’s cost for failure to comply with the former orders of the court.

To the plaintiff’s petition, thirty-eight pages in length, the defendants filed motions to make definite and certain, and to separately state and consecutively number the causes of action. Upon the sustaining of these motions, the plaintiff filed an amended petition, which, upon the defendants’ motions, was stricken from the files on the ground that it failed to comply with the court’s order. A second, third and fourth amended petition met a like fate for the same reason. Upon striking the fourth amended petition from the files the court entered a judgment of dismissal from which this appeal was taken. This fourth amended petition was attacked not only *198 on the ground that it failed to comply with the former order of the court, but also bn the ground that it was a sham pleading. The court, however, did not find that it was a sham, and we think the record clearly justified the court’s position in that respect. The court placed its ruling, striking the fourth amended petition solely for non-compliance with the former order of the court to make definite and certain, and to separately state and number.

The appeal, therefore, requires us to examine and analyze the original order to make definite and certain, and to separately state and number, to determine to.the extent necessary for a decision of this case whether the original petition was defective in the respects found, and then determine whether this fourth amended petition, which is three hundred and eighty pages in length, purporting to separately state and consecutively number ninety-seven causes of action, is so charged with the same vice as to be subject to a motion to strike from the files.

The plaintiff, as superintendent of banks of the State of Ohio instituted this action to recover against sixty-three directors of The Guardian Trust Company of Cleveland losses sustained by the .bank during the period commencing on January 15, 1923 and ending June 15, 1933, when the superintendent of banks took possession under authority of §710-89 GC on insolvency of the bank.

In the original petition, the plaintiff alleged that the defendants, being directors of the bank, “wilfully and knowingly i in violation of the laws of Ohio, or wrongfully, illegally and negligently without exercising ordinary care, diligence, prudence and business judgment and with a careless disregard of the rights of the stockholders, depositors and creditors of the bank, suffered and allowed, caused and permitted, authorized, acquiesced in, ratified and approved each and all of the following acts and the carrying out of each and all of the following transactions.”

These general allegations were followed by other allegations of concealment of their action by false and misleading bookkeeping entries and then were set forth many specific instances of losses resulting to the bank because of the actions of the defendants as described. Many of the instances related to losses sustained in connection with the Hotel Hollenden Company which, according to the allegations, the bank through wholly owned subsidiary corporations, owned and operated for almost ten years at a large loss. Other instances related to losses incurred in the operation of The Vincent Building Company, which was a wholly owned subsidiary of *199 The New England Company which in turn was a wholly owned subsidiary of The Guardian Trust Company. This corporate pyramid was used, 'according to the allegations, in the construction of an annex to the Hollenden Hotel. Still other losses resulted from the improper handling of several trusts of which The Guardian Trust Company was a fiduciary of one kind or another, and finally the defendants were charged with distributing a large sum as dividends out of capital. '

To this thirty-eight page petition about twenty motions were filed, varying somewhat but each asking and seeking an order requiring the plaintiff to make the petition definite and certain, to strike out and to separately state and consecutively number the causes of action. Just one of these motions contained about ninety specifications of asserted defects to be 'cured. We have not examined the other motions to determine the extent in which they contain distinct grounds of attack. Suffice it is to say that compliance with the demands set forth in one motion would require a complete reconstruction of. the pleading. The court overruled that part of the motions which sought to have certain portions stricken out, thus reducing the number of specifications in the one motion by fourteen, and then entered a blanket order sustaining the motions to separately state and number and to make definite and certain with the provision 'that compliance with the order should be in conformity with “memorandum of counsel heretofore rendéred.” An examination of this memorandum discloses that the court was of the opinion that the plaintiff had attempted to state as one equitable cause of action what was in reality several legal causes of action.

Confronted with this order, the plaintiff filed an amended petition containing fifteen causes of action. This was stricken from the files for failure to comply with the order to make definite and certain and to separately state and consecutively number. A second amended petition purporting to state sixty causes of action, a third amended petition purporting to state sixty-one causes of action and a fourth amended petition purporting to. state ninety-seven causes of action were in turn also stricken from the files for the same reason. Upon striking the fourth amended petition from the files, the court entered a judgment of dismissal.

In view of the manifold objections to the form of the petition and the general and indefinite terms of the order sustaining the objections, it would have been impossible for any one to assert with any confidence that any given amended pleading would comply with the requirements of the court. The progressive increase in the length of the pleadings is *200 mute evidence of the plaintiff’s vain struggle to comply.

In Bates Pleading etc, at 524, it is stated:

“But if the amendment has added facts in a bona fide effort to state a cause of action, the motion to strike will not lie for it is not a proper way to. test sufficiency.”

And in Phillips on Code Pleading, at page 261, it is stated that:

“Where an objection to a pleading is based, not upon an irregularity connected with its filing, nor upon a matter pertaining to its form merely, but upon its alleged insufficiency in matter of substance, the objection must be taken by demurrer, and not by motion to strike from the files.”

This would seem to be particularly appropriate when a litigant is faced with the hazard of a dismissal of his action.

In 18 C. J. 1181, we find it-stated that:

“Where some of the counts state a good cause of action, the complaint should not be dismissed because the amendment to other counts includes matters which the court had directed stricken.”

In 1 Bates’ New Pleading, Practice, Parties & Forms, 524, it is said:

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Related

Squire v. Guardian Trust Co.
84 N.E.2d 91 (Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 N.E.2d 651, 88 Ohio App. 37, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/squire-supt-v-g-trust-co-ohioctapp-1944.