Tucker v. Sherman

19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 368, 16 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 190, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 305
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 368 (Tucker v. Sherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. Sherman, 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 368, 16 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 190, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 305 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

The defendant in error brought suit against the plaintiff in error upon two promissory notes, setting out each one as a cause of action against the defendant. This suit was brought by her in her individual personal capacity. The notes sued upon are alike except that one is payable two years after its date and the other .three years after its date. The first note reads:

“Painesville, Ohio, March 18, 1896.
“$1,500.
' “Two years after dáte I promise to pay to the order of IT. C. Walton fifteen hundred dollars, at Boughton, Ford & Co., Burton, Ohio, with interest at 6 per cent annually, value received.
“Secured by mortgage.
“E. S. Tucker/-’

The following is written on the back of said note:

“Pay to Alma S. Sherman or order. TJ. S. WeltoN.”

There are no credits indorsed on said note.

This suit was begun on June 10, 1902. On December 31, 1904, on motion of the plaintiff, she was permitted by the court to amend her petition, substituting herself as executor of the will of Roger Sherman, deceased, for herself in her personal .capacity, and alleging that by reason of the facts set out in said amended petition she was the owner of said notes as such executor. This amendment was made over the objection of the defendant. . The plaintiff was also allowed to amend [370]*370by making a new party defendant in the case, but nothing that was done by the court in reference to such new party in any wise affects any of the parties now before this court, and nothing need be said as to that amendment. As to the amendment substituting herself as executor, an exception was taken. We think that the action of the court in that regard is fully justified by the case of Becker v. Walworth, 45 Ohio St. 169 [12 N. E. Rep. 1], On pages 174 and 175 this language is used (It should be said, however, before reading this, that a suit was brought against a person in his personal capacity and that thereafter application was made for leave to amend, letting the suit stand as against the defendant as executor.) :

“The filing of the first petition in the case is claimed to contain an election. In- the caption to that pleading the defendant was described as ‘Michael Becker, executor of the estate of Abram Rafenstein. deceased,’ and in the body the allegations purported to charge him as executor. Before answer, on leave, the petition was amended so as to charge him personally. This leave was granted without prejudice to defendant’s right to insist that plaintiff had elected to make her claim against him as executor, and not personally.
“Our practice encourages great liberality in pleading, and the code enjoins the duty of allowing amendments at all stages of a case in furtherance of justice. The commencement of the action by the filing of an original petition against defendant as executor worked no prejudice to him, and it is not easy to see why such commencement of t'he action should preclude amendment on the part of the plaintiff in order to charge him personally. It was no more than the discontinuing of one action and the commencement of another, and this may have been induced by the discovery that the one would prove wholly fruitless. ’ ’

That reasoning applied to this ease would justify the court in permitting the amendment to be made, and there was no error in that regard.

It is further claimed that the court erred in admitting the. notes in evidence. I read certain allegations in the amended petition and certain parts of the answer. In each cause of action this language is used:

“There are no credits indorsed on said note; said note was duly indorsed in blank by said U. C.' Welton and sold and delivered to said Roger Sherman by him long beforeAts maturity, and said Roger Sherman was the owner and holder of said note at the time of his death.”

In answer to this the defendant sets out that there was a fraud [371]*371perpetrated upon him in the procuring of these notes ; that he was induced by certain fraudulent representations and conduct on the part of the payee of the notes to give the notes in part payment of the purchase price of certain lots near the city of Chicago; that the lots were not the ones shown to the defendant at the time he made the purchase; that they were not such lots at all as they were. represented to be, and that Sherman (the deceased) was a party to that fraud, but the only denial contained in this answer is in these words:

“This defendant denies that said notes are owned by the plaintiff; and he says that if and so far as said plaintiff may on the trial hereof produce evidence of her ownership, she took whatever title she has or .shall show, with notice of this defendant’s said claim and defenses to said notes, and after the same each became due by the terms thereof and her said testator at the time he received said notes and at the time of the giving of the same was interested with said Welton in said transaction and in said lots and in said transaction the said Welton acted in whole or in part as agent for said Roger Sherman, deceased, who was then in full life.”

The plaintiff said sne owned-the notes as executor. The defendant denied it. Plaintiff said she owned the notes because they were duly indorsed in blank by U. C. Welton and delivered by him to said Roger Sherman long before maturity, 'and said Roger Sherman was the owner and holder of said notes at the time of his death. This is not denied, the only denial being as hereinbefore quoted, ‘ ‘ this defendant denies that said .notes are owned by the plaintiff. ” It is urged that it is a sufficient deni.R, and in a brief submitted to-day attention is called to Booco v. Mansfield, 66 Ohio St. 121 [64 N. E. Rep. 115], and especially to page 135; Chamberlain v. Railway, 15 Ohio St. 225 and the language of the court on page 250; Boggs v. Wann. 7 O. F. D. 439 [58 Fed. Rep. 681] ; Stoutenburg v. Lybrand, 13 Ohio St. 228. In each of these cases, it is held that it is a denial of the right of the plaintiff to recover when one denies the ownership of a note sued upon. He need not set up the facts upon which he relies as showing that the plaintiff is not the owner. But here the plaintiff has set out the facts upon Avhich she relies to show that she is the owner, to wit, that the notes were owned by her testator long before they were due and that they were indorsed in blank and delivered to him and that they were his property at the time of his death. So that under the pleadings it was not necessary for the plaintiff to show that the notes were sold to the testator and delivered to him in his lifetime and that they belonged to him at the time of his death, but she offered [372]*372the notes in evidence, and it is said that there was error in admitting them in evidence.

She had testified that the notes were in her possession. She testified where she found them, one in the safe with her husband’s papers, and the other in a bank at Titusville, Pennsylvania. There is nothing to indicate how it came to be there. The allegation of the petition is, that it belonged to her husband when he died; this is not denied.

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Related

Stoutenburg v. Lybrand
13 Ohio St. 228 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1862)
City of Cincinnati v. Rice
15 Ohio St. 225 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1846)
Cone v. Bright
68 N.E. 3 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 368, 16 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 190, 1906 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-sherman-ohcirctcuyahoga-1906.