W. H. Mullins Co. v. Jacob Freund Roofing Co.

5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedFebruary 14, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1 (W. H. Mullins Co. v. Jacob Freund Roofing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. H. Mullins Co. v. Jacob Freund Roofing Co., 5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Peleger, J.

Heard on motion to make definite and certain.

The petition alleges that it furnished to the defendant a large number of metal window frames in accordance with the plans and specifications of an architect, to be used in the erection of the Pugh Power Building in this city under a written contract, which was attached to the petition as an exhibit.

(1.) The exhibit reveals a clause in the contract substantially providing that the money for these windows should be payable in installments upon the certificate of the architect certifying that the windows were furnished according to the terms of the contract. Although there is a general averment in the petition of the performance of all conditions on its part to be performed, as permitted under Section 5091, Revised Statutes, there is an omission in the body of the petition of the condition referred to in the exhibit.

The defendant filed a motion to make definite and certain this petition by having included therein the omitted clause referred to, on the ground that it is a condition precedent. It is not denied that it is a condition precedent, but it is claimed on the other hand that the statute does not require the plaintiff to set forth every condition precedent, and that the exihibit can not be examined on this motion any more than it could on a demurrer. As the amount involved is large, counsel have argued and briefed the matter with great care.

Most of the argument has been confined to the construction to be given to Judge Dempsey’s two decisions, one in the case of Lauer v. Insurance Company, 8 N. P., 117, and the other in the ease of Block v. Distilling Company, 8 N. P., 236. The rulings of the learned judge in these two cases is, briefly, that both under the common law and under our present code, all conditions precedent in a contract should be truly and properly set forth in the petition of the plaintiff, but not so with their performance. The Lauer case, involving the right to recover on an insurance policy, contained the material averments thereof but not all of the provisions of the contract. The policy was not .attached as an exhibit. The court required this to be done. At the time the motion to make definite and certain was argued, [3]*3the petition contained only such of the conditions precedent as the plaintiff saw fit to set up. In the case of Block v. Distilling Company, the petition alleged that “among other things it was agreed,” etc., and then followed such conditions as the plaintiff thought pertinent to the case. In both of these cases Judge Dempsey held that, merely because the defendant claimed that there were other conditions precedent, he could not force the plaintiff on a motion to make definite and certain other conditions than those which he disclosed in his petition, because the proof on the trial might develop that the plaintiff was right and that there were no other conditions precedent; that if the plaintiff falsely or carelessly omitted them in his petition he would be met with a failure of proof at the trial. There can be no doubt therefore that in both cases Judge Dempsey distinctly held that all conditions precedent should be fully, clearly and correctly pleaded.

The defendant had the right, if he could do so by the use of the interlocutory motion provided by our code, to compel plaintiff to simplify his petition and put it into such form as to make it fairly and properly the object of a demurrer if insufficient in law, rather than to 'wait for a trial on the merits. This was also his privilege at common law. The old forms of actions were the main instruments in determining the rights of parties, and caused the loss of many meritorious claims mérely because the opposing counsel was more adroit in the .framing of his pleadings and drove his adversary into false or unprofitable issues. To obviate this injustice our code utilized pleadings as the mere vehicle to the just determination of an action upon its merits, and permitted the court even after a verdict to conform pleadings to the proven facts. This abbreviation and simplification of pleadings was not intended, however, to permit the pleader to conceal any weakness in his case which he ought in all fairness reveal. If he sues upon a written contract, there is no reason why he should not set forth all his conditions precedent, no matter how numerous, because he agreed to perform all of them at the time he entered into his contract. He may, however, primarily set forth only such as he thinks pertinent to the issue and must attach his entire contract as an ex-[4]*4Mbit. The defendant may admit that all the conditions precedent in the contract were performed. In that event the necessity of such allegation in the petition is obviated. If-the defendant however, claims that all these conditions precedent in the contract were not performed by the plaintiff he has the right (inasmuch as the burden at .the trial is on the plaintiff to show compliance therewith or an excuse therefor) to compel the plaintiff to set them out in his petition and for that purpose he may examine the exhibit embodying the whole, contract.

The object of Section 5085,- Revised Statutes, requiring evidences of debt for the payment of money to be attached to and filed' with the pleading, is as Judge Grholson said in 2 Handy, 165, a substitute for oyer under the former practice, to compel the opposite party to give in advance copies of those instruments on which the action was founded and which he might have been required to produce under the former practice act. This is one reason why the exhibit not being a part of the petition can not be looked to on demurrer. That does not hold true of a motion to make definite and certain.

Insurance Company v. McCorkey, 33 O. S., 355, was an action brought on an insurance policy which provided that notice of loss should be given forthwith. The court said, page 561:

“The giving of notice of the fire to the company being a condition precedent to be performed by the insured must be averred;’ but under Section 121 of the original code in pleading the performance of conditions precedent in a contract, it is sufficient to state that the party duly performed all the conditions on his part.17

In Ashley v. Henahan, 56 O. S., 559-570, it was held in a case similar to the one at bar that a clause in a building contract that before payment is made the architect must certify that the work was done to his satisfaction, is a condition precedent and that the plaintiff can not recover unless he shows substantial performance therewith or that the architect had fraudulently or unreasonably refused such certificate. Kinkead’s Code Plead[5]*5ing, Vol. 1, p. 407; Weeks v. O’Brien, 141 N. Y., 203; Mehurin v. Stone, 37 O. S., 49; Moody v. Ins. Co., 52 O. S., 12.

The procurement by the plaintiff of the certificate of the architect required by the contract was a condition precedent. * * an(j this condition should be pleaded and its performance alleged and .proved. Roy v. Boteler, 40 Mo. App., 223; Swan’s Code Pleading, 516.

Although in Grand Rapids Fire Ins. Co. v. Finn, 60 O.

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Related

Weeks v. . O'Brien
36 N.E. 185 (New York Court of Appeals, 1894)
Roy v. Boteler
40 Mo. App. 213 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-mullins-co-v-jacob-freund-roofing-co-ohctcomplhamilt-1907.