Tuttle v. Furi

33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 626, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 388
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 626 (Tuttle v. Furi) 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
Tuttle v. Furi, 33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 626, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 388 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

HENRY, J.

By this proceeding in error, the plaintiff in error, Mrs. Tuttle, who was defendant below, seeks a reversal of the judgment for $250 recovered against her by the defendant in error, [627]*627an infant suing by her next friend, as damages sustained by said infant in consequence of having been bitten July 3, 1905, by a dog alleged to have been owned or harbored by the plaintiff in error.

The first error assigned is upon the court’s denial of the motion, made by the defendant below, at the outset of the trial, to exclude all evidence offered in support of the petition, upon the grounds, first, that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and secondly, that the next friend is without authority to bring the action.

Within the scope of the first ground, objections to the caption and to the verification of the petition are sought to be included. So far as such defects are merely formal, they were of course waived by the defendant below, when she answered and went to trial, without having first challenged them by motion. Her Christian name undoubtedly should have been used in the caption, in place of the expression “Mrs. Loren Tuttle” but her objection to it was made too late. The verification, we think, was properly made by the next friend, rather than by the infant, according to the provisions of Sec. 5109 R. S. (Sec. 11358 G-. C.), and particularly paragraph 2 thereof, the agency for that purpose and for all purposes connected with the prosecution of an infant’s suit, being derived not indeed from any appointment by, or agreement with, the infant, but by virtue of the statutory provision of Sec. 4998 R. S. et seq. (Sec. 7477 G. C. et seq.) But be this as it may, the objection to the verification was likewise made too late. Kerns v. Roberts, 2 Dec. Re. 537 (3 West. L. M., 604); Simmons v. Brown, 4 Dec. Re. 29 (Cleve. L. Rec., 33).

It is further urged, however, that the legislature could not constitutionally authorize the practice of planting suits on behalf of infants by persons as next friends under no appointment by such infants, or by any court; neither can the plaintiff’s just liability to judgment for costs in ease of defeat be shifted by the legislature from the shoulders of an infant plaintiff to those of a possibly irresponsible next friend. Reference is made to the bill of rights, but we find nothing therein to support these contentions, and the practice of suing by proehein ami is immemorial and well approved at common law and under both the [628]*628old and the new Constitutions in 'this state Hanly v. Levin, 5 Ohio 227, 239; Massie v. Long, 2 Ohio 287; Pennsylvania Co. v. Gallagher, 40 Ohio St. 637 [48 Am. Rep. 689]. Moreover See. 4998 R. S. (Sec. 7477 G. C. el seq.), expressly provides that the court may dismiss an infant’s action brought by next friend, if it is not for the benefit of the infant, or it may substitute another person as next friend, or the infant’s legal guardian. It is no objection to this form of procedure that neither the infant nor its next friend has authority to bind it by a contract of settlement, if such be the law. The authority to enter into an accord is not a prerequisite to an iñf ant’s right to sue. The authority of the next friend in this case is sufficiently alleged in the petition, by the averment that ‘ ‘ Plantiff is an infant eleven years of age and brings this action by Katherine Furi, her next friend,'’ ’ it is sufficiently proved by the evidence that Katherine Furi is the infant’s mother, and there is absolutely nothing in the record tó rebut the presumption that the action was brought and throughout maintained for the infant’s benefit.

Sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action are set forth in the petition’s averments that plaintiff was, without warning to or provocation by her, bitten by a fierce and dangerous dog which the defendant owned and kept and, knowing its disposition, negligently allowed to run at large. We fail to see how the facts constituting the duty, the breach thereof, and the consequent injury to plaintiff could be stated so as to conform more nearly with the requirement of the first paragraph of Sec. 5057 R. S. (Sec. 11305 G. C.), that the petition shall contain “A statement of the facts constituting the cause of action in ordinary and concise language. ’ ’ The averments that the occurrence was “without warning or provocation,” so far as she was concerned, is the full equivalent of the expression “without fault on her part,” the absence of which from the petition is complained of.

The further criticism of the petition in connection with the motion to exclude all evidence in support thereof, becomes, of course, irrelevant upon the determination thus reached that its averments of fact suffice to constitute a cause of action. No motion was interposed to reform the petition in respect to any alleged indefiniteness or redundancy of its allegations, and defects of that character, if any, were therefore waived.

[629]*629It is claimed, however that the objection to the introduction of any evidence under the petition operated to save all questions concerning the admissibility of evidence thereafter received. This is not true where the petition states, however, in artificially, a cause of action. In such case, specific objection must be made to each particular item of evidence adduced in support of averments which have no proper place in the petition, but which have been suffered to remain in it for want of any motion made to expunge them.

On the other hand, though timely objection be made, it is by no means true that evidence is admissible only of such facts as are specifically pleaded, or expressly put in issue. On the contrary, the evidence upon the trial of cases usually consists chiefly of testimony of other facts from which those facts may be inferred. Hence when the petition introduces its statement of facts with the qualification “at all times hereinafter mentioned,” an allegation for example, of the defendant’s knowledge of the vicious disposition of her dog, 'opens the door to proof of antecedent facts showing the mode of her acquisition of such knowledge. She had that knowledge at the times mentioned in the petition because the knowledge had been brought home to her by facts which had transpired on some former occasion. Hence the evidence of her dog having previously bitten some other child, to her knowledge, is admissible notwithstanding that it antedates the times expressly mentioned in the petition.

It is further complained that the verdict and judgment are not supported by sufficient evidence and are contrary to the weight of the evidence. The alleged conflicts in the testimony concerning the description and identity of the dog in question, as well as of divers minor matters, are not different in kind nor greatly different in extent from like discrepancies in most cases. The verdict of the jury is the means provided by law for settling disputed questions of fact and we can not say here that the solution of these questions implied in the verdict in this case is unwarranted by the evidence.

We have, however, paused somewhat on the question whether the bill of exceptions discloses sufficient testimony as to plaintiff in error’s ownership of the dog to warrant the submis[630]*630sion of the ease to the jury, and more especially to warrant the refusal to grant a new trial for want of sufficient evidence in that behalf to support the verdict for the plaintiff below.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Ohio C.C. Dec. 626, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuttle-v-furi-ohcirctcuyahoga-1908.