Stark Electric Railroad v. McKean

17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 599

This text of 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 599 (Stark Electric Railroad v. McKean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stark Electric Railroad v. McKean, 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 599 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

KjnkeAd, J.

This action is again submitted on demurrer, this time to the amended petition. Plaintiff seeks to recover damages in the sum of $11,372.52 for alleged negligence of McKean in failing to issue summons in error in an action prosecuted by it in the Supreme Court to secure a reversal of a judgment obtained by Laura J. Dinger by the action of the two lower courts, by reason whereof the same was dismissed. Plaintiff thereupon was compelled to pay the judgment, and now seeks recoupment against defendants.

The gist of the cause disclosed by the averments is that by reason of the default and neglect of McKean in failing and neglecting to issue summons, plaintiff was compelled and did pay to Laura 3. Dinger the sum of $10,915 and costs amounting to $457.52. Therefore it is claimed that plaintiff is damaged in that sum.

It is contended on behalf of the demurrant that the petition is insufficient for the obvious reason that the plaintiff does not show that it has been damaged by the negligent act of the de[600]*600fendant clerk of the Supreme Court. It is argued that the petition must contain an averment that there was error in the proceedings of the court of common pleas, and of the court of appeals in the rendition of the judgment against it. It is said that there is a presumption of law that the decisions of these courts are correct.

On the contrary, and in behalf of the plaintiff, the attitude seems to be that the essential allegations merely are the course of the proceedings, the neglect of the clerk, and the final payment of the judgment.

The question is-novel and important, though not difficult, if the reasoning faculties are directed towards the familiar Tines of the proceedings, of an action from its commencement to its termination in the court of last resort. The mental attitude of judicial arbitrament toward the question presented here, must be the same as that in awarding the judgment against plaintiff, in the other action. It may not reasonably be contended that the clerk is liable to pay plaintiff the sum of $11,372.52, the amount of the judgment, merely because he neglected to issue summons in the proceeding in error. The argument presented fails to distinguish between damage and injury.

In determining rights and causes, the primary right, the corresponding cltoty, and injury are the sole factors to be considered. Damage follows injury in natural sequence, not being of primary essence of the right and injury, but rather follows as ¡in incidental result.

When a primary right is violated, the law.at once recognizes that an injury is done, the scope and extent thereof measured in dollars by way of damages being an incident and not an essential of the cause of action.

From the adjective viewpoint, a cause of action consists 'of the bare statement of the ultimate facts disclosing a breach of duty by the defendant. Duty and right, however, are found in substantive law, and are not stated in the pleading. The facts alleged in the petition under consideration, discloses the breach of duty by the defendant in failing to issue summons in error. This negligence of the defendant deprived plaintiff of a right.

What is the scope and extent of the right? It is to have its [601]*601ease reviewed on error by tlie Supreme Court to tlie end tliat it may have it determined whether errors of law intervened in the action of the courts below to the material prejudice of the plaintiff. ' ■

If no errors were committed, by the lower courts which were prejudicial to the rights of the plaintiff in that proceeding, the violation of a duty by defendant concerning the issuance of summons has not infringed a substantial procedural right resulting in injury.

It may lie reasoned that the full scope and extent of the primary right of plaintiff to have its cause reviewed on error in the Supreme Court, comprehends the right to have corrected only prejudicial errors committed by the courts below, those material to its rights. That constituted plaintiff’s right under the law, no more, no less. So does it not'seem logical therefore to assume, that in the statement of the ultimate facts showing the neglect of defendant, facts should appear, disclosing prejudicial errors committed by the courts below, in the ease in which judgment was rendered against plaintiff here ?

It is apparent that these thoughts were present in the mind of Judge Taft in his opinion in B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Weedon, 78 Fed., 584, when he states:

“The defendant may be obliged to submit to the court, the record in the first ease, to decide whether there was reversible error. ’ ’

Stored away among the hoots and decisions there is a rule that it is actionable to deprive a man of a right given him' by law, although no damage, loss or injury has been thereby occasioned (Ashby v. White, 1 Smith’s L. C., 356; 1 Eng. Rul. Cas., 521) On the other hand there are instances Avhere the question .whether a right has •leen infringed, or not, is made to depend upon actual damage being done, as in libel or slander, and in some cases of fraud. But the rule of precedent since probably 1826, in England and in this country, has been that in an action for negligence, tlie cause of action is the breach of legal duty .alleged (Howell v. Young, 5 B. & C., 258; Kerns v. Schoonmaker, 4 Ohio, 331). Duty and right are correlative and be[602]*602long to substantive law, while the formal statement of the ultimate fact lies within the field of adjective law.

Applying the principles thought to be controlling in Bilikin v. Columbus Railway & Light Co., 10 N.P.(N.S.), 561, as determining factors of the essence of a cause of action, its dual aspect in substantive and adjective law is to be considered.

The right of plaintiff to complain in his case is to be measured by fact and law,' whether it had the right by its proceeding in error in the Supreme Court to have the judgments of the lower courts reversed. That is its substantive right in law. To disclose a violation of such right, it will not be sufficient simply to allege that one Laura J. Dinger recovered a judgment for. $10,000 against plaintiff, in the common pleas court, that the same was affirmed by the court of appeals, and that its proceeding in error was dismissed in the Supreme Court by the neglect of defendant to issue summons.

In addition to this it must be shown that both a substantial procedural and substantive right was injured by the violation of duty by defendant. Looking to the law of the state as found in statute and decision, it is known that the burden is on a plaintiff in error to show prejudicial error before there can be a reversal. Errors and defects which do not affect substantial rights- are disregarded. If the court is of the opinion that, substantial justice has been done to the plaintiff in error, all alleged errors occurring at the trial must be disregarded, and the judgment affirmed. Section 11354, General Code.

This becomes a part of the right of one who prosecutes error. It is clear, therefore, that the presumption is that the judgments of the lower courts were not prejudicial. So that presumption must prevail in this action.

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Related

State ex rel. Wall v. Fleming
24 N.E. 664 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1890)
Symns v. Cutter
59 P. 671 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1900)
Harper v. Newport News & Mississippi Valley Co.
14 S.W. 346 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1890)
Baltimore & O. R. v. Weedon
78 F. 584 (Sixth Circuit, 1897)
United States ex rel. Kinney v. Bell
127 F. 1002 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stark-electric-railroad-v-mckean-ohctcomplfrankl-1915.