Trumpler v. Royer

18 Ohio App. 151, 1918 Ohio App. LEXIS 191
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 18 Ohio App. 151 (Trumpler v. Royer) 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
Trumpler v. Royer, 18 Ohio App. 151, 1918 Ohio App. LEXIS 191 (Ohio Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Chittenden, J.

This case originated in the Probate Court upon an application by Royer & [152]*152Spitler for an allowance of attorney fees, for services rendered in defending the will of Emma R. Slusser, deceased, in a contest suit. The Probate Court, upon the evidence introduced in that court, allowed the attorneys for their services the sum of $400. An appeal was prosecuted by Royer & Spitler to the Court of Common Pleas, and upon trial in that court an allowance was made to them of $2,000. From this judgment error is prosecuted to this court.

In the Court of Common Pleas it was stipulated that the testimony taken in the Probate Court should be submitted as evidence, subject to the right of the defendants to object to any part thereof on the ground that it was incompetent. On the trial in the Probate Court, the applicants, John C. Royer and Calvin D. Spitler, were permitted to testify, and John C. Royer testified further in the trial in the Common Pleas Court. This testimony was received by the common pleas judge over the objection of the defendants, with the statement that upon his consideration of the case he would determine its competency and mate a ruling thereon. The bill of exceptions, prepared by the defendants and signed by the trial judge, contained the following statement:

“And the court coming now to consider the admissibility of said evidence, finds that the same is incompetent and the evidence of the said John C. Royer and Calvin D. Spitler is hereby excluded from the record and the same will not be considered by the court in the determination of the issues herein.”

After the case had been assigned for hearing in this court, the defendants in error suggested a [153]*153diminution of the' record and this court remanded the record to the Court of Common Pleas with instructions to make such corrections as he might find necessary, if any, to cause the bill of exceptions to present a true record. Thereupon the record was presented to the trial judge, who endorsed upon the margin of the page containing the statement above quoted, the following:

“This page of record is erroneous and is not the true record of this case. The statements contained on this page are corrected on the preceding page. This marginal statement is made this 4th day of March, 1918.”

This marginal statement is signed by the trial judge. The “preceding page” referred- to was inserted by the trial judge, as is shown by a marginal statement on that page signed by the trial judge, which contains the following statement with reference to the testimony given by Judge Royer and Mr. Spitler:

“After full consideration by the court, the court does overrule the motion of defendant's to strike from the record the testimony of Judge Royer and Mr. Calvin D. Spitler.”

Counsel for the plaintiffs in error objected to this correction being made, and preserved exceptions to the ruling and action of the trial judge. Thereupon counsel for the plaintiffs in error moved this court to strike from the bill of exceptions the substituted page, which contains the correction made by the trial judge as above indicated.

The amendment was made under favor of Section 11572a, General Code, 103 Ohio Laws, 405. This section provides :

[154]*154“When justice requires it, upon notice to all parties, an omission in a bill of exceptions, occurring through accident or error, may be corrected by the reviewing court, or it may be remanded to the trial court for such correction.”

After a careful consideration of the question presented by this motion, we are of opinion that the trial judge was authorized by this section of the statute to make the amendment. It is a remedial statute, which is to be liberally construed, and is intended to relax the rigidity of the former rule which precluded the making of amendments to a bill of exceptions after the same had been allowed, signed and filed. It is claimed that it is not shown that there was an omission in the bill, and if there was, that it did not occur through accident or error. It would seem to be obvious from the correction made by the trial judge, especially in view of the marginal statements signed by the trial judge, that the recital in the bill of exceptions as originally signed could not have been included in the bill of exceptions otherwise than as the result of an error, for it set forth a ruling that was the reverse of the one which the trial court now insists that he in fact made, and it is equally obvious that the bill of exceptions did omit to contain the ruling that was in fact made by the trial court and that such omission was necessarily the result of an error. If the testimony of a witness had been given in the trial of a cáse and by inadvertence the stenographer had failed to transcribe it and include it in the bill of exceptions, it would scarcely be’ contended that under the provisions of the section cited it would not be proper to order a transcript [155]*155of such testimony inserted in the bill of exceptions. We think the case is not different in principle where the testimony has been transcribed and inserted in a bill of exceptions and by an error in the preparation of the bill of exceptions it appears that the court had excluded it from his consideration. Surely no one can know so well as the trial judge whether he did or did not in fact consider the testimony in arriving at a decision, and we think that the correction as made in this case was not only within the spirit but within the letter of the statute. The motion of plaintiffs in error to. strike the amendment from the bill of exceptions will therefore be overruled.

It is earnestly contended by counsel for plaintiffs in error that the evidence of Judge Royer and Mr. Spitler is incompetent because of Section 11495, General Code, which provides that “a party shall not testify when the adverse party is * * * an executor or administrator.” The facts which it is claimed bring the testimony within the provisions of this section are, briefly stated, these:

After the death of Emma R. Slusser, Samuel Dahm was appointed and qualified as the executor of her will. Thereafter an action was brought to contest the will, and Royer & Spitler claim that Samuel Dahm employed the firm, by an agreement made with Mr. Spitler, to defend the will, Mr. 'Spitler agreeing for the firm to release Dahm .from any personal liability for such services and to look to the estate for compensation. An answer was prepared by these attorneys for Mr. Dahm, which was filed in that case. A few months thereafter, and before the trial of the case, Dahm [156]*156died. The Prohate Court thereupon appointed the plaintiff in error, Walter G. Trumpler, administrator de bonis non with the will annexed. Trumpler was not made a party to the will contest, but the case proceeded to trial, resulting in a verdict sustaining the validity of the will. It is claimed by Royer & Spitler that all their services rendered in defense of the will, after the death of Dahm, were done with the knowledge and consent of Trumpler.

That part of Section 11495, General Code, above quoted, is subject to certain exceptions contained in the same section, the first of which is that a party shall not testify except as to “facts which occurred * * * after the time the decedent * * * or testator died.” The decedent or testator, whose estate was involved in the litigation, is Emma R.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio App. 151, 1918 Ohio App. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trumpler-v-royer-ohioctapp-1918.