State, Ex Rel. Wright v. Morrison

75 N.E.2d 106, 80 Ohio App. 135, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 469, 35 Ohio Op. 479, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 703
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1947
Docket6743
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 N.E.2d 106 (State, Ex Rel. Wright v. Morrison) 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
State, Ex Rel. Wright v. Morrison, 75 N.E.2d 106, 80 Ohio App. 135, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 469, 35 Ohio Op. 479, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 703 (Ohio Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

*471 OPINION

By MATTHEWS, PJ.:

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding a writ of mandamus ordering the Board of Trustees of the City of Cincinnati Retirement System to pay to the relatrix a pension based upon the court’s finding that her husband’s death on June 5th, 1941 was “the natural and proximate result of personal injuries, accidentally sustained by him on October 11th, 1934, while in the performance of his duties as Assistant En-' gineer of the Sewer Department of the defendant, the City of Cincinnati, and without wilful negligence on his part.”

At the outset, we take notice of the motion of the appellee to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the notice of appeal was not filed within twenty days of the overruling of the motion for a new trial.

An examination of the transcript discloses that the trial was concluded on May 15th, 1946, and on June 19th, 1946, there was placed upon the journal the “Conclusions of Fact and of Law” in the preamble to which it is recited that at the conclusion of the trial the court had announced “in open court its decision in favor of the relatrix” and that “thereupon the City Solicitor upon behalf of the defendants orally requested the court to state in writing its conclusions of fact found separately from its conclusions of law,” and it was because of this request that the findings were made. There then followed very detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law ending with the conclusion ,of law that “a peremptory writ of mandamus should issue as prayed for in said amended petition herein.”

On June 28th, 1946, the defendants filed a motion to set aside these findings and for a new trial. This motion was overruled on September 23rd, 1946, and, on the same day, by separate entry a “Judgment Granting Writ of Mandamus” was journalized. On September 26th, 1946, a motion was filed to, set aside this judgment and for a new trial. This was overruled on October 1st, 1946.

The notice of appeal was filed on October 10th, 1946.

It is urged that the entry of June 19th, 1946 is a judgment and that as the motion to set it aside and for a new, trial was not filed within three days thereafter it did not have the effect of postponing the running of the time within which the notice- of appeal could be filed.

We do not stop to consider the effect of the pendency of that motion upon the running of the time for an appeal, because we are'clearly of the opinion that the- entry of June *472 19th, 1946, is just what the court in the entry said it was, that is, a separate finding of facts and conclusions of law. That was what the City Solicitor requested and the Court’s action, as expressly stated in the journal, was a compliance with that request. The fact that on the same day that the motion to set it aside was overruled a “Judgment Granting Writ of Mandamus” bearing the endorsed approval of relatrix’s counsel was journalized shows that they did not consider that a judgment had already been entered.

The final conclusion of law, as found by the Court on June 19th, 1946, was that a “peremptory writ of mandamus should issue” and counsel cites State, ex rel. v Brookes, 142 Oh St 107, as authority for treating such an entry as a judgment. We think the case is inapplicable. In that case, there was no request for a separate finding of facts and conclusions of law. There was no caption styling the entry as a finding of facts and law. There was no statement by the court in the journal entry or otherwise that what he was doing was making a finding of facts and law. In that case there was no formal judgment awarding the writ based on any separate finding of facts and conclusions of law. Furthermore, the language is entirely different. In the conclusions of law in the case at bar the language is that a peremptory writ “should issue” whereas in State, ex rel. v Brookes, supra, the language is “peremptory writ' of mandamus allowed and defendant ordered to grant relator the right to participate in the police relief fund” etc.

In the case at bar there was no awarding of the writ in the entry of June 19th, 1946. It was a finding that he was entitled to the writ, not that the court ordered the issuance of the writ. In State, ex rel. v Brookes, supra, the writ was allowed in express terms.

We find that the notice of appeal was filed within twenty days of the judgment appealed from, and the jurisdiction of this Court properly invoked.

The “Claim and Proofs of Death” is in the form of a questionnaire to be filled in and executed under oath by the claimant (in this case, the widow), the physician who attended the employee in his last sickness, the undertaker, and a disinterested friend of the deceased. This form carried some printed instructions as to the facts which it was intended to, be developed and as to the manner of its execution.

One of the provisions of the ordinances introduced provided that the Board of Trustees should consist of the mayor, the city manager, the chairman of the civil service commission, and the chairman of the finance committee of council as *473 ex officio members, and three elected by the members of the system, one of which should be from the police department, one from the ñre department, and one from the other departments.

Another provision was that the Board “shall from time to time establish rules and regulations for the administration of the funds created by this ordinance and for the transaction of its business.”

In view of the fact that.the cause of death, to-wit: coronary occlusion, was attributed to an injury that had been received more than six years prior to death, evidence was introduced tending to establish this chain of causation as natural and proximate." This evidence included the testimony of two physicians, who, in answer to a hypothetical question, based on data assembled from other testimony, gave it as their opinion that the coronary occlusion from which Wright died was the natural and direct result of the injury which he had received more than six years before his death.'

The foregoing outline of the facts is sufficient, we think, to indicate the disposition which should be made of this appeal.

(I) Disposing of the relatrix’s claim upon the evidence assembled in another case and the proof furnished through the questionnaire form provided by the Board, stripped from the proceeding the necessary elements to give to the ruling a binding effect. It lacked due process. Speaking of the constitutional requirements of due process as applied to procedure before administrative boards, affecting private rights, the Supreme Court of the United States in Ohio Bell Telephone Co. v Commission, 301 U. S., 292, at 304 and 305, said:

“Indeed, much that they do within the realm of administrative discretion is exempt from supervision if those restraints have been obeyed. All the more insistent is the need, when power has been bestowed so freely, that the ‘inexorable safeguard’ (St. Joseph Stock Yards Co. v United States, 298 U. S. 38, 73) of a fair and open hearing be maintained in its integrity. Morgan v United States, 298 U. S., 468, 480, 481; Interstate Commerce Comm’n v Louisville & N. R. Co., supra.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.E.2d 106, 80 Ohio App. 135, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 469, 35 Ohio Op. 479, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wright-v-morrison-ohioctapp-1947.