Swing v. Rose

75 Ohio St. (N.S.) 355
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1906
DocketNo. 9669
StatusPublished

This text of 75 Ohio St. (N.S.) 355 (Swing v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swing v. Rose, 75 Ohio St. (N.S.) 355 (Ohio 1906).

Opinion

Price, J.

The questions in controversy between the parties are —

(1) Did the trial court err in the admission of testimony introduced by the defendants?

(2) Did the court err in refusing to instruct the jury as requested by the plaintiff?

(3) Is there error in the general charge prejudicial to the plaintiff below?

(1) It was alleged in the petition that the policy of insurance was taken out by a co-partnership known as “The Heirs of Daniel Rose,” and on their property, and that on that account they became liable to the assessment made by this court, referred to in the foregoing statement of the case. The answer denied that there ever was such á co-partnership, and that as partners, the defendants did not apply for or receive said policy. The existence of the partnership relation was thus put in issue, and it is claimed by the plaintiff in error, that the trial court admitted improper evidence for the defendants to support their denial.

It seems that the property insured was a furniture factory at Roscoe, Ohio, which, in whole [363]*363or in part, had belonged to Daniel Rose, the father of the defendants, and it was operated at least part of the time under the name of D. Rose & Son. One of the defendants states that the firm prior to the father’s death was “Rose Bros.,” composed of himself and his brother Marion. In -another part of his testimony, he says that the business was conducted in the name of D. Rose & Son as before.

The defendants have not been able to make a clear statement of the true relations they sustained to the factory. The father, Daniel Rose, died on the 28th day of April, 1888, and the policy under consideration was not issued until about October 1, 1888. W. E. Rose, one of the defendants, became administrator of his father’s estate, and he says he procured the policy in the "name of “The Heirs of Daniel Rose.” As administrator he never sold the insured property. The issue on the subject of a partnership relation between the defendants when the policy issued and while it was held, was therefore important. The court permitted W. E. Rose, defendant, to answer the following questions: “I want to ask you if on the 1st day of October, 1888, to state to the jury whether or not there was a partnership known by the firm name' as ‘The Heirs of Daniel Rose’?” Answer: “I know as a positive fact it was not.” John J. Rose, another defendant, was asked the following: Question: “I want to ask you if there was in 1888 and 1889 a partnership in which you was connected that was known and doing business as a partnership under the name of the Heirs of D. Rose?” Answer: “There was no such partnership existed.” Question: [364]*364“Was you ever a member of a partnership of that character?” Answer: “Never was.” These and other questions of a similar character were allowed to be answered over the objections of the plaintiff.

We think the persons thus interrogated were permitted to state their opinions or conclusions, rather than the facts upon which the jury should pass. In a merely collateral case or proceeding, the existence or non-existence of a certain firm might be shown by such testimony, but where the issue is direct between the parties, as in this case, as to whether the defendants or either of them were members of a co-partnership, which is charged with being the owner of the policy of insurance, the above course of inquiry can not be justified. The facts should be elicited concerning the true relation, if any, the defendant sustained to the firm. What had he invested, if- anything, in such firm? What, if anything, did he pay of its debts, or receive of its earnings, and so on, in order that the jury, under the instructions of the court as to the law applicable, might determine whether a partnership relation existed.

The course adopted in the above questions and answers gave to the witness the right to decide the question and left nothing for the jury to find. This view should be somewhat emphasized, because of the other issue made by the amendment to the petition to the effect, that if they were not partners, they were jointly interested in the insured property and in the policy of insurance, for it clearly appears in the evidence, that when the factory was totally destroyed the loss was paid to and divided between the heirs of Daniel Rose, [365]*365including the defendants in error. The money received from the insurance company was not administered upon in due course of law by the administrator, but with other insurance money was divided between said heirs. In the light of these facts and. circumstances, we are of opinion the objections to” the above questions should have been sustained.

There is another class of testimony objected to, and its admission is assigned for error. While J. J. Rose, one of the defendants, was on the stand, his counsel put the following questions, which were objected to: “Jack, was you ever apprised of any action brought against this company in the Supreme Court of Ohio?” Answer: “I never was. The first I ever heard of this case was when a voluminous batch of Supreme Court decisions and about a half a wagon load of papers and one thing and another was served on us— was decisions, and so forth, of the Supreme Court deciding that our liability — ” Question: “I don’t care about that. Was you ever served with any notice that the case was pending in the Supreme Court?” Answer: “Never was.” Question: “Did you know that there was one pending?” Answer: “I did not.”

The case referred to as pending in the Supreme Court. was the one in which the company was dissolved and the assessments made, one of which assessments is here in dispute. It was not an issue in the case, whether the defendants had been parties to that case. Beyond doubt they were not parties, nor was it necessary for them to be such in order to give the court the authority to dissolve the corporation and make a decree [366]*366assessing stock or policy-holders. The assessing decree is in the record, and it does not attempt to determine who the policy-holders then were. No one is named as the holder of a policy. On the contrary, the decree classifies the liabilities of the company according to their date, and also classifies policies liable to assessment as those held by persons between April 25, 1889, and the 18th of December, 1890, without naming any such persons. In that proceeding to dissolve and decree a necessary assessment, the policy-holders were represented by the corporation, and they were neither necessary nor proper parties. The decree in that proceeding is conclusive as to the necessity for, and the amount of the assessment, but forecloses no-right to defend against it on any of the grounds contained in the answer.

In Eversmann, Receiver, v. Schmitt, 53 Ohio St., 174-188, this court was passing on the relation stockholders sustain to a building and loan association. In the first sentence of the opinion it is said that, “mutuality is the essential principle of a building association.” On page 188, the court, through Minshall, C. J., says: “But it is insisted that Mrs. Schmitt and the other members were not parties to the suit in which the receiver was appointed, and that he had no power to .make the assessment, and it is not binding, upon them. This objection is without weight. It is not necessary that the members should as individuals have been made parties to that suit. They are parties in their corporate name and capacity, and for the appointment of a receiver, that was sufficient.

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131 U.S. 319 (Supreme Court, 1889)
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Langworthy v. Garding
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Ohio St. (N.S.) 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swing-v-rose-ohio-1906.