Taylor v. Schlichter

160 N.E. 610, 118 Ohio St. 131, 118 Ohio St. (N.S.) 131, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 159, 1928 Ohio LEXIS 351
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 1928
Docket20407
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 N.E. 610 (Taylor v. Schlichter) 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
Taylor v. Schlichter, 160 N.E. 610, 118 Ohio St. 131, 118 Ohio St. (N.S.) 131, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 159, 1928 Ohio LEXIS 351 (Ohio 1928).

Opinion

Kinkade, J.

This is an action for the recovery of damages resulting from a breach of promise to marry. The parties to the action are residents of Portsmouth. At the time the engagement to marry was entered into, Loraine Schlichter was teaching *132 in the public schools of Washington, X). C. John F. Taylor was a successful business man, engaged in the garage business, and owning and operating a Ford automobile sales agency in Portsmouth. He was the owner of a considerable amount of property, both real and personal, and paid income tax for the year 1925 on $40,000. On October 22, 1925, Miss Schlichter filed her petition against Taylor in the court of common pleas of Scioto county, in which she alleged that on or about February 10, 1923, in consideration of her promise to marry Taylor within a reasonable time thereafter, and at a time to be by her thereafter designated, Taylor promised to marry her; that she had ever since been ready and willing to marry Taylor, but that he, contrary to his promise, had on October 3, 1925, married one Edna M. Streich, to the damage of Miss Schlichter in the sum of $150,000, for which sum she prayed judgment.

On November 18, 1925, Taylor filed his answer to this petition, in which he admitted that he then was a married man, that Miss Schlichter was an unmarried woman, and denied each and every other allegation of the petition, and further denied specifically that he at any time promised to marry Miss Schlichter.

The jury was impaneled and the trial commenced on February 15, 1926. The next day Miss Schlichter asked leave of the court to file an amendment to her petition. This was granted by the court over objection and exception by Taylor. The amendment so filed averred that each -and every act of Taylor in promising to marry Miss Schlichter, and *133 his subsequent refusal to marry her by marrying Edna M. Streieh, was ruthless, wanton, willful, and malicious. Evidently this amendment was added to form the basis for the recovery of exemplary damages.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of Miss Schlichter for $70,000. The trial judge held this verdict was excessive in amount, and not sustained by sufficient evidence to the' extent of $20,000, and gave Miss Schlichter the option of remitting that amount from the verdict or submitting to a new trial of the action. Miss Schlichter adopted the suggestion of the court and remitted the $20,000, and thereupon judgment was entered on the verdict in her favor for $50,000. Taylor prosecuted error to the Court of Appeals, which court affirmed the judgment entered in the common pleas court. Taylor now prosécutes error to this court, and assigns many grounds of error. We shall mention in this opinion only such errors as we find to be well taken.

This case is no exception to the general rule that in actions of this character there is usually very intense feeling manifested in the trial, riot alone by the contracting parties, but also by the witnesses called to sustain the issues presented, and that is true in this case.

The pleadings in the case are models for brevity. The petition contains less than twelve printed lines, the answer less than eight, and the substance of the amendment to the petition less than four lines. Brevity ceases, however, with the pleadings.

It may be said here, once and for all, that the evidence touching nearly every issue in this case is most conflicting in character. Taylor fixed the time *134 that he agreed to marry Miss Schlichter about four months later than the date she stated his promise was made, and he testified that, at the time of his promise, he definitely and distinctly told her that he so promised to marry her only when his two daughters gave their assent to the marriage, to the end that he and Miss Schlichter and the two daughters might, after the marriage, all four live together in harmony and happiness as one family. Taylor testified that this condition .precedent was promptly and fully agreed to by Miss Schlichter, and that she assured him at the time that she could and would win the daughters ’ consent and would never ask him to marry unless or until she did so. Miss Schlichter denied on the witness stand that any such condition was ever imposed by Taylor or accepted by her. Taylor’s two daughters testified that they had never consented to the marriage, but had continuously opposed it. They both testified that their assent had been solicited by Miss Schlichter and refusal given, and that when asked for the reasons for such refusal they had said that her attentions to their father, as well as his attentions to her, were unseemly and offensive, at least in point of time, by reason of the very recent death of their mother, and that the earnest activities of Miss Schlichter, in apparently urging forward the consummation of the marriage, had led them to feel that the marriage, if carried out, would not bring happiness to their father. Other witnesses called by Taylor testified touching the matter of consent of the daughters, and what they knew of the actions and statements of Miss Schlichter in relation thereto. The matter of consent on the part of the daughters was a very im *135 portant issue in the case, made so by the evidence. Of course, Taylor could have married without the consent of his daughters. They had no legal control over him. It is claimed by counsel for Miss Schlichter that the daughters were too young to give consent, and that the consent of the daughters was merely an afterthought invented and urged by Taylor in justification of his breach of the contract. Taylor was one of the contracting parties, and it was his right when entering into the engagement to attach any conditions to his promise which he saw fit, and the other party could either accept or reject the conditions. "Whether conditions such as claimed were imposed and, if imposed, were accepted by Miss Schlichter, were questions of fact for the jury to decide, and the trial judge was not authorized to substitute his own opinion for that of the jury on these questions of fact, nor had he the right to eliminate the issue by charging the jury that by reason of the evidence the issue had been withdrawn or waived by Taylor, and hence had ceased to be a matter for the jury to consider. ,

The principal error in this case is found in the action of the trial judge at the close of all the evidence. This is best stated in the language "of the trial judge, as found in the record, that is to say:

“The court is of the opinion that as a matter of law, in view of the evidence on both sides, and under the circumstances, that we will not enter upon now, that there was a contract of marriage.
“You, perhaps, would have found so anyway. But it is simply to save time more than anything else.
“So there will only be one question for the determination of the jury, and that is simply the meas *136 ure, or amount, or damages, and on that question the court will now give to you some propositions of law.”

Thus all questions of fact, save and except the amount of damages, were wholly withdrawn from the jury and decided in favor of Miss Schlichter by the trial judge.

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Bluebook (online)
160 N.E. 610, 118 Ohio St. 131, 118 Ohio St. (N.S.) 131, 6 Ohio Law. Abs. 159, 1928 Ohio LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-schlichter-ohio-1928.