Swan Manufacturing Co. v. Jones

211 N.E.2d 835, 4 Ohio App. 2d 161, 33 Ohio Op. 2d 208, 1964 Ohio App. LEXIS 475
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1964
Docket7621
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 N.E.2d 835 (Swan Manufacturing Co. v. Jones) 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
Swan Manufacturing Co. v. Jones, 211 N.E.2d 835, 4 Ohio App. 2d 161, 33 Ohio Op. 2d 208, 1964 Ohio App. LEXIS 475 (Ohio Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

Troop, J.

This appeal is from an order of the Common Pleas Court of Franklin County overruling a motion of the defendant in the trial court, appellant herein, for an order dissolving a temporary injunction previously granted by the court.

Swan Manufacturing Company, plaintiff in the trial court and appellee herein, filed an action against the defendant for the breach of an employment contract, asking damages, a temporary restraining order and then a permanent injunction. The petition was filed on November 12, 1963, and a temporary injunction was issued on November 23, 1963. The order was attacked by appropriate motions, and then, on January 29, 1964, defendant filed his answer in the cause and on the same day the court disposed of the attack on the restraining order by overruling an application of the defendant for rehearing on his *162 motion to dissolve the temporary injunction. The court, on January 24, 1964, had overruled the motion to dissolve.

Defendant’s appeal’ is on questions of law and fact from the order of the court entered January 24, 1964. Plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, urging as a reason that the order from which the appeal is taken is not a final order. The motion to dismiss the appeal is on for decision.

The sole question raised by this motion, and to be decided, is whether the order of the Common Pleas Court from which appeal is taken is a final appealable order. This court, then of the Second Appellate District, gave attention to the problem in Coles v. Alpha Publishing Co. (1935), 19 Ohio Law Abs. 617, following the case of Jones, Treas., v. First National Bank of Bellaire (1931), 123 Ohio St. 642, quoting the syllabus as follows :

“ ‘An order of the Court of Common Pleas overruling a motion to vacate a temporary injunction in a suit in which the ultimate relief sought is an injunction, is neither, a judgment nor a final order which may be reviewed by the Court of Appeals on a petition in error.’ ”

The court, in the Jones case, followed an earlier decision of the Supreme Court in May Co. v. Bailey Co. (1910), 81 Ohio St. 471, in which the rule announced relates directly to the granting of the temporary injunction itself as distinguished from a ruling on a motion attacking the injunction. The syllabus is as follows:

“An order of the Court of Common Pleas granting a temporary injunction in a suit in which the ultimate relief sought is an injunction, is not either a judgment or a final order which may be reviewed by the Circuit Court on petition in error.”

At. this point, with only the above cited cases for consideration, it would seem that a solution to the problem, raised by plaintiff’s motion to dismiss, would come quickly. Our case is more complicated than the cited cases, however, since the prayer in plaintiff’s petition seeks not only a permanent injunction but damages as well. In the Coles, May Co., and Jones cases, supra, the ultimate relief sought was only a permanent injunction.

Because both legal and equitable relief is sought here, attention must be given to two more recent decisions in this court. *163 In the ease of Robnet v. Miller (1957), 105 Ohio App. 536, and that of Shulton, Inc., v. Columbus Vitamin & Cosmetic Distributors, Inc. (1960), 113 Ohio App. 550, the positions taken by the court must be recognized and appraised.

First in time is the Robnet case, in which the prayer in the petition sought relief by way of six separate requests encompassing both legal and equitable sources. Two motions were before this court for decision, one being a motion to dismiss the appeal because it was predicated upon an order overruling a motion to dissolve a temporary injunction. This court held that such an order was a final order and, therefore, appealable.

It should be noted that, in the Robnet case, the plaintiffs in the trial court alleged fraud and sought all manner of relief, and that the action was brought against eight defendants, only one of whom filed the motion to dissolve the temporary injunction, which injunction order had restrained all the defendants. The court suggests three cases as providing the basis for its decision, as follows: Burke v. Railway Co. (1888), 45 Ohio St. 631; Chicago, St. Louis & Pittsburg R. R. Co. v. City of Hamilton (1888), 3 C. C. 455; and Hersch v. Home Savings & Loan Co. (1938), 59 Ohio App. 145.

The report of the decision in the Burke case contains no statement as to basic facts. It appears to resolve essentially the same question presented in the Jones case, decided in 1931, and the latter case is, therefore, controlling. The Chicago, St. Louis & Pittsburg R. R. Co. case is of the same vintage. It is different from the Burke case, in that the order from which appeal was taken was one dissolving a temporary injunction. Paragraph one of the syllabus is as follows:

“An order of the Court of Common Pleas, dissolving a temporary injunction, is reviewable on error before the final disposition of the case in said court.”

The peculiar procedural pattern of the latter case, suggested by the language found in paragraph two of the syllabus, indicates the circumstances which may have produced the result reached by the court. Paragraph two is as follows:

“Where the essential statements of the petition on which the temporary injunction was obtained, are denied by the answer, and a motion is made to dissolve such injunction, and at the hearing, the only evidence offered by the defendant was its an *164 swer, read as an affidavit, and the only evidence offered by the plaintiff was its petition read as an affidavit, the burden of proof to maintain such injunction was on the plaintiff: — and where the court dissolved it on the evidence, the reviewing court will not reverse such judgment unless it clearly appears that the decision was against the weight of the evidence, which does not appear in this case.”

The Eersch case is a later decision. It, too, has a unique flavor. It, too, involves an appeal from an order dissolving a temporary restraining order which had enjoined a defendant from evicting the plaintiff who filed an action to secure specific performance of a contract to convey the premises he occupied. Comparable in fact pattern, although it is concerning personal property rather than real, and alike in the order from which appeal was taken, is the case of Wioland v. Mayflower Motors, Inc. (1947), 80 Ohio App. 310, upon which this court also relies in the Robnet case, supra.

If the Burke case, supra, is the same in fact pattern as the Jones case, supra,

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211 N.E.2d 835, 4 Ohio App. 2d 161, 33 Ohio Op. 2d 208, 1964 Ohio App. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swan-manufacturing-co-v-jones-ohioctapp-1964.