Strietelmeier v. Angelo

113 N.E.2d 771, 64 Ohio Law. Abs. 549
CourtMuskingum County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedOctober 4, 1951
DocketNo. 32984
StatusPublished

This text of 113 N.E.2d 771 (Strietelmeier v. Angelo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Muskingum County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strietelmeier v. Angelo, 113 N.E.2d 771, 64 Ohio Law. Abs. 549 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

OPINION

By CROSSLAND, J.

DETERMINATION AND OPINION PURSUANT TO REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE REFEREE.

The above cause, which had its inception with the filing of the plaintiffs’ original petition April 3, 1944, and its submission to the judge of the court following the last brief filed June 29, 1951, exceeding seven years, embraces evidence consisting of 723 pages of testimony and 35 designated exhibits, extensive pleadings, more extensive briefing, and the 82 pages of Referee’s Report, all of which the undersigned has fully and thoughtfully read, studied, analyzed and considered.

Believing that an early and concise expression of ultimate findings and conclusions, although brief, is preferable in the interest of all parties and of the litigation rather than a detailed exposition of all contended and controverted issues and a minutely stated disposition thereof, the undersigned will conform his' determination as to judgment accordingly.

The defendant Felix Angelo entered into two separate and distinct agreements with reference to his so-called Blue Diamond Mine No. 1 consisting of lands leased for coal stripping and marketing operations, ostensibly without knowledge by either party of the other’s contract with Angelo at the time of execution.

First in point of time was the Memorandum of Agreement between Felix F. Angelo and Harris Coal Corporation, dated July 1, 1942, covering sale by and through Harris Coal Corporation excepting principally “all coal not loaded out in railroad cars.”

Second in point of time was a contract between Felix Angelo and Henry W. Strietelmeier of August 3, 1942, which became the contract of plaintiffs’, covering stripping and loading, to continue “so long as there remains coal to be mined under said lease or so long as it is profitable to strip and load the coal underlying the above described real estate.” Said con[551]*551tract further provided “that all money received from the sale of coal stripped ahd loaded under this contract shall be paid to Henry W. Strietelmeier.”

Subsequently and before stripping and loading, sales and payments, each of said respective agreements became fully known to the other contracting parties dealing with Angelo, who thereupon entered into conferences and conversations relative thereto, out of which arose a practice or custom implementing the purposes and intentions of the respective contracts with Angelo, being in the one between Harris Coal Corporation and Angelo that the former should collect, distribute and disburse all receipts from rail loading sales and being in the one between plaintiffs and Angelo that plaintiffs should receive their money for stripping and loading “from the sale of coal stripped and loaded” rather than “all” money received therefrom.

For the purpose of the language of plaintiffs’ contract whereby it was agreed by Angelo “that all money received from the sale of coal stripped and loaded under this contract shall be paid to Henry W. Strietelmeier” it was not only unnecessary but, in the circumstances and fact of the Harris contract, undesirable that plaintiffs be paid all money received from such sales, as the Harris bookkeeping could, would and did logically and more simply distribute and disburse directly to the parties to whom due the money received by the Sales Agent of Angelo, Harris Coal Corporation, after rightfully under its own Angelo contract first deducting and substracting money due it, — Harris Coal Corporation in effect becoming and being agent of plaintiffs in remitting to them for stripping and loading.

The only legal significance of the earlier date of the Harris agreement is the undoubted right and privilege accorded the Harris Coal Corporation to make all sales collections of rail shipped coal, which thereby precluded the payment to plaintiffs of “all money received from the sale of coal stripped and loaded under this (plaintiffs’) contract.” To conclude that plaintiffs were willing or agreed to be paid directly no money so received would not only be to put an unreasonable and illogical construction upon the purposes and effect of the conversations between plaintiffs and Harris and of the resulting and ensuing practice and custom in Harris Coal Corporation direct remittances to plaintiffs, but would likewise be to attribute to plaintiffs a puerile lack of understanding of their own financial safety in the manifest light of their positive contractual security against the dubious state of Angelo’s credit. On the contrary, Angelo in his answer to [552]*552plaintiffs’ third amended petition “admits — that the Harris Coal Corporation should collect all money for coal mined on said premises and sold by rail, and that The Harris Coal Corporation should pay to the plaintiffs their share of the money received from the sale of coal directly without the defendant, Felix Angelo, having any control whatever over said portion of the money or having any authority or right therein.”

As a matter of law, the undersigned believes that the two contracts which the defendant Angelo made should be reconciled if it is reasonably possible to do so, that it is possible to do so so as to preserve and fulfill the essential purpose and intention of each, that such was the reason and occasion of the Harris — Strietelmeier—Singer conferences and conversations, and that pursuant thereto in fact and in deed Harris Coal Corporation undertook to and did remit directly to plaintiffs money due them under their contract with Angelo, by which contract Angelo acknowledged plaintiffs’ right to be so paid and by which contract defendant Harris Coal Corporation was also bound in that connection, particularly after it had been giving effect to it throughout the entire period of the tripartite dealings except in the one month which is the subject matter of plaintiffs’ original action.

When defendant Harris Coal Corporation, without plaintiffs’ consent, paid to defendant Felix Angelo money which the latter admits “having no control over whatever, or having any authority or right therein,” in face of the fact that plaintiffs stripped and loaded coal for Harris to sell in the first instance only because and by reason of payment to them for stripping and loading by Harris direct, said defendant violated a confidence and trust reposed in it by plaintiffs and breached its duty to them, without legal excuse or justification.

Accordingly, there is due and unpaid plaintiffs from defendant Harris Coal Corporation the sum of Sixteen Thousand Seven Hundred Twenty Dollars and Ninety-nine Cents ($16,-720.99), with interest at the rate of six per cent (6%) per annum or $8,340.26 from and since February 25, 1944, and on $8,380.73 from and since March 25, 1944, for which judgment is given and execution awarded.

[553]*553[552]*552Relative to the further claims of plaintiffs’ third amended petition, the undersigned fails to find that the money owing plaintiffs by defendant Harris Coal Corporation constituted said defendant in law a trustee thereof, but rather a debtor thereof to plaintiffs, and consequently that wrongful payment of said sum of $16,720.99 by defendant Harris Coal Corporation to defendant Felix Angelo, while none the less making defendant Corporation still liable therefor with in[553]*553terest to plaintiffs, did not thereby make the unobligated payment by said Corporation to Angelo of an equivalent sum of money and its use, profits, benefits or dissipation or loss to or for Angelo or to or for R. C. Harris or L. M.

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Bluebook (online)
113 N.E.2d 771, 64 Ohio Law. Abs. 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strietelmeier-v-angelo-ohctcomplmuskin-1951.