Western & S. Life Ins. v. Selzer

34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 146, 23 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 104, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 332
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 146 (Western & S. Life Ins. v. Selzer) 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
Western & S. Life Ins. v. Selzer, 34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 146, 23 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 104, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 332 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

The parties stand in the reverse order from that occupied by them in the court of common pleas. The terms “plaintiff” [147]*147and “defendant,” used in this opinion, refer to the parties as they were in the court below.

The plaintiff is an attorney at law; he sued to recover compensation for services claimed to have been rendered by him to the defendant, which is a corporation, in his professional capacity.

The home office of the defendant is in Cincinnati, Ohio. Some twelve or fifteen different suits were brought against it in the county of Cuyahoga, where plaintiff resides and was practicing his profession. He was employed by the defendant in each of these cases to defend.

It is claimed by the defendant, and the contention seems to be sustained, that as to each of these cases there was a separate employment, that is, the employment was not general, but in each case he was employed for that particular case.

It is clear that in each case the plaintiff rendered some service for the defendant, for which he would be entitled to recover but for the defense set up that he neglected his duty and failed to do the things that it was his duty to do under his employment. The defendant claims that there was such negligence in each case, and it sets up as a cross-petition that in a case brought by John F. Doreen and Elizabeth Doreen, the plaintiff failed to make any defense for the defendant; that by reason of such failure on the part of the plaintiff the said Doreens recovered a judgment against the defendant for $2,097 damages and $18.18 costs of suit, which it was obliged to pay, and so the defendant prays for judgment against the plaintiff for that amount.

On the trial the court took from the consideration of the jury all Jlaim of the defendant under said cross-petition. The result of the trial was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the full amount of his claim.

All things necessary to be done to bring the case to this court for review on error were done, including a bill of exceptions containing all the evidence and the charge of the court.

One of the errors complained of is the action of the court in talri-ng from the jury the consideration of the defendant’s cross-petition. The reply of the plaintiff to the answer contained also an answer to the cross-petition, and in such pleading it is al[148]*148leged, and the allegation is fully sustained by the evidence, that the plaintiff did file an answer to the petition filed against the defendant by the Doreens; that such answer was prepared by the general counsel for the defendant in Cincinnati. The plaintiff was acting for the defendant under the authority and direction of such general counsel.

This answer contains all the information, so far as appears, of any facts relied upon as a defense in such action. To this answer a demurrer was filed and after argument it was sustained, on the ground that the allegations of such answer constituted no defense to the petition.

So far as anything appears in the evidence, plaintiff had no knowledge that there were any other facts on which the defense could be based, and so judgment was taken in the ease against the defendant. He did not, however, prosecute error to this judgment, nor report the judgment until it was too late to prosecute such error. He had no direct instructions to prosecute error if the decision in the- common pleas court should be adverse to his client. It was the judgment of plaintiff that error could not successfully be prosecuted but it is here urged on behalf of plaintiff in error that if there were failure to do all that should have been done in the case, the presumption arises that the defendant lost all that it was required to pay on the judgment taken against it, and that in the absence of evidence on the part of the plaintiff that no defense could have been made which would have defeated the claim of the Doreens, the defendant should have recovered the full amount claimed in its cross-petition.

In support of this contention our attention is called to the case of Grayson v. Wilkinson, 13 Miss., 268. The second paragraph of the syllabus in the case reads:

“If an attorney be employed to defend a suit and fails to do so, he is liable to the party injured to the extent of damages actually suffered; if, however, the attorney can show that the defense he was employed to make was not a good one, he would be liable at most only to nominal damages. ’ ’

In the opinion in the ease, at page 288, the court refers to the only other cases to which our attention is called on this question, and in so referring uses this language:

[149]*149“The case of Godfrey v. Jay, 7 Bingham, 413, settles this principle, that if an attorney is retained and suffers a judgment to go by default he is liable for damages, and it is for him to show that the party has suffered no actual damages. • It is not for the plaintiff to show that he had a good defense; and the case cited from 2 Chit. R., 311, is to the same effect. ’ ’

The court, however, later on in the opinion uses this language:

‘ ‘ Comyn, in his treatise on Contracts, says that if an attorney is guilty of gross neglect, or conducts his business unskillfully, he is liable for any damages his client may sustain in consequence thereof. According to this rule the client would have to show what damages he had sustained. If the attorney employed to defend did fail to file a plea, that is a breach of contract and entitled the plaintiff to recover something; but if he wishes to recover damages to the amount of the judgment against him, then he must show that he has sustained damages to that amount.” ■

The court then calls attention to a case referred to in 2 Comyn, Contracts, 384, Russell v. Palmer, where Lord Camden was reversed for misdirecting the jury to the effect that the measure of damages, where counsel failed to make a defense, was the amount of the recovery.

This case in Mississippi was decided in 1845 and does not decide the question as to who had the burden of showing the amount of damages in a case where the attorney fails to defend in a ease where he is employed to defend. Authorities are quoted from, as already shown, some holding that the burden is on the attorney, some that it is on his employer; it was not necessary to determine the question in'that case.

The English ease of Godfrey v. Jay, 7 Bingham, 413, was decided in 1831. That of Bourne v. Diggles, 2 Chitty, 311, was decided in 1814. These are the latest and indeed the only authorities cited to us by either party in the case on this point. We have, however, found later authorities. See Pennington’s Exec’rs v. Yell, 11 Ark., 212 [52 Am. Dec. 262] decided in 1850, where it is said in the syllabus:

“Extent of damages resulting from attorney’s negligence must be affirmatively shown.”

[150]*150In Fitch v. Scott, 4 Miss. (3 How.), 314, [34 Am. Dec. 86], the first paragraph of the syllabus reads:

“To subject an attorney to an action by his client two things are necessary to be done: Gross or unreasonable neglect or ig-norance and consequent loss to his client”

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34 Ohio C.C. Dec. 146, 23 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 104, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-s-life-ins-v-selzer-ohcirctcuyahoga-1912.