Suhr v. Hoover

15 Ohio C.C. 690, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 738
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMarch 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. 690 (Suhr v. Hoover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suhr v. Hoover, 15 Ohio C.C. 690, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 738 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Norris, J.:

The defendant in error was the plaintiff below, and commenced his action to recover on two promissory notes executed by the plaintiff in error, to one W.P. Place, or bearer'; one for $250, due four months after date, and one for $225, due six months after date, each'dated April 2, 1895, and bearing interest at 6 per cent, per annum. And he filed his petition in the trial court founded upon these evidences of indebtedness.

To this petition defendant filed his answer and amendment thereto,and denies each allegation of the petition, and as a further defense to plaintiff’s action, he says that bis signatures to said notes were obtained by misrepresentation ■made to him and by fraud practiced upon him by Place,the ¡payee, and Hoover, the present holder and plaintiff in this case. That they represented to him that they owned certain secrets useful in the treatment of Hernia,and that if defendant Suhr and one Charles Hubbard would execute their ■notes for $675, they would sell them the exclusive right to use said treatment in Defiance and Henry counties, and would furnish them, free of charge for one year, a certain ■medicine used in the treatment of Hernia, of which medicine Place was the sole manufacturer and owner, and would furnish full printed instructions fully informing them as to how said system of treatment should be practiced; and after the expiration of one year, furnish them with said medicine at the price of $3 per fluid ounce. Hubbard was a [692]*692practicing physician, and upon these representations and .promises, and upon the representations made by Hoover and Place that under this system of treatment and by the us© of this medicine, there would be no cutting, no pain, no danger to life, no detention from usual occupation, that after cure there would be no necessity to use a truss, and that the cure would be radical and complete — upon these representations and promises made by Hoover and Place, and relying upon them, defendant Suhr and said Hubbard signed a contract which, in substance, embraced these provisions in its terms, and that in compliance w'ith said contract,and relying upon said representations, defendant executed the notes set out in the petition.

Defendant says, that all these representations were false; that said system of treatment is very painful and attended with great danger to life; that said system of treatment did ■detain the patients from their occupation, and did not effect the cure of Hernia. In short,that the representationss were false; that said treatment was without value, all of which Hoover, who defendant alleges was a party to the conspiracy to defraud him and procure said notes, and said Place well knew, and of which he was ignorant, and upon the truth of which he relied, and that hence his notes upon which plaintiff seeks to recover, were without any consideration, all of which plaintiff knew when he took the notes,and that to suffer the plaintiff to collect the same would be a fraud upou his rights.

To these averments of defendant’s answer and amendment, plaintiff replies and makes general denial, and avers that he bought these notes before maturity for value and without notice of the infirmities alleged in the answer.

The issues thus made up were submitted to a jury in the common pleas court of this county, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. Defendant’s motion for new trial was not allowed. Judgment was entered upon the verdict,. [693]*693a bill of exceptions was taken to the .proceedings of the court below,and error is here prosecuted to obtain reversal.

The reasons assigned for reversal, embodied in the motion for a new trial aüd in the petition in error, are:

“That the verdict is against the weight of the evidence and contrary to the law of the case,

“Error in admitting evidence over defendant’s objection and in the exclusion of evidence offered by the defendant.

“Error in the charge to the jury.

“Error in overruling the motion for a new trial.”

And the defendant also complains that the trial court abused its discretion in certain criticisms of the answer made in presence of the jury; ana it erred in refusing to allow defendant’s counsel to address the jury upon evidence other than such as bore upon the failure of consideration pleaded in the answer.

The court, upon objection being made to the introduction of testimony sustaining the matters and things pleaded in defendant’s answer, by way of substantive defense, refused to allow the case to proceed upon the pleading as it then stood, and remarked,in substance, that the allegations of the answer as to misrepresentations and fraud as therein pleaded were not sufficient to bar a recovery or to sustain the -admission of evidence. And this in the presence of the jury.

These remarks of the trial judge were criticisms of this pleading; they were made before the testimony had proceeded to any length.at least upon defendant’s case. They did not go to the merits of the controversy,and were not in a spirit of hostility to the defendant or his cause, and so far as we can see, in no wise were to his prejudice in the determination of the case. The court promptly allowed amendment. We see in this objection no serious cause to differ with the court below.

As to the limit put by the trial court upon the field that [694]*694might be covered by defendant’s counsel in their address to the jury, we see in this nothing prejudicial, because by it the subject of comment was only circumscribed by the horizon of the case. The proposition, not only of failure, but entire want of consideration for the notes in suit, as pleaded in the answer and amendment, was a theme upon which counsel, if they saw fit, could point a moral or adorn a tale to their heart’s content. And nothing is revealed by the record that would indicate that counsel wrapped their faces in their mantels,or-at all retired from the combat.

We have read this record very carefully, every word of it, and we have failed to find error in the admission or rejection of evidence.

And now coming to the objection that the verdict is not sustained by, but is contrary to the weight of the evidence, and is against the law of the case. This assignment of error brings up in review everything upon which Mr. Hoover’s right of recovery is grounded. It directs the attention of this court to the consideration of the notes upon which recovery is sought, and challenges the construction of the contract, which recites the reasons, and values, and the considerations for which the notes were given. The contract is in evidence, and upon it depends this case. The contract is a pretty skillful piece of fine printing, The Wilcox Hernia Co. was a concern located at Binghampton,New York — so says the contract, I quote from it, “and'W. F, Place was the owner” — Place, as such, was the owner of certain useful secrets in the treatment of Hernia or rupture, and he was the sole manufacturer of a certain remedy used in and about this treatment of that complaint. Suhr, this defendant, and Hubbard, were desirous of purchasing the exclusive right to use this treatment, and in consideration of 1675,part of which is evidenced by the notes in suit, Place, as the owner of the Wilcox-Hernia Co., agrees to grant, bargain, sell and convey to defendant Hubbard, the exclu[695]*695siv.e right to use this treatment in Defiance and Henry counties- That is the contract. As an incident and condition of this agreement, the Hernia Co.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. 690, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suhr-v-hoover-ohiocirct-1896.