Westfall v. Dungan

14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 276
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1863
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 276 (Westfall v. Dungan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westfall v. Dungan, 14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 276 (Ohio 1863).

Opinion

Brinkerhoff, J.

This case is a petition in error, prosecuted to reverse a judgment of the court of common pleas of Jackson county, reserved for decision by this court. The plaintiff in error was the defendant below, and the defendants in error were the plaintiffs below.

From tbe record it appears that tbe plaintiffs below, as executors, etc., of Reese P. Thompson, deceased, brought suit against the defendant below on a note of band, for $4050, given by him to them in their character as executors.

Tbe defendant answered, in substance :

1. Denying that tbe plaintiffs, at tbe time of tbe giving o'f the note sued on, or at any time thereafter, were tbe duly ap ■ pointed executors of tbe last will of Reese P. Thompson, deceased, or were authorized to act as such.

2. Denying that tbe plaintiffs are now such executors.

[277]*2773. That the plaintiffs pretending to be the duly appointed executors of said testator, and assuming to act as such, sold to him, the defendant, at private sale, certain real estate, consisting of a share in a certain furnace property, and including in the sale a like share in the stock then on the bank of said furnace property. That the note sued on was given for a part of the purchase money on said sale. That the defendant purchased said property, believing the plaintiffs to be such executors, averring that they in fact were not such executors, and were unable to make the defendant any valid title to said property, and that the consideration for said note had, therefore, wholly failed.

To these three defenses the plaintiffs replied, taking issue upon the facts alleged therein.

Subsequently, and before trial, the defendant obtained leave to amend, and thereupon' filed a fourth defense by way of counterclaim — re-averring the assumption of the plaintiffs to act as executors of said testator, the sale of said real estate and stock to him by them as such executors, and the giving of said note for a part of the purchase money, as in the third defense alleged; and then proceeding to aver, that at the time of said sale, the plaintiffs had knowingly made certain false and fraudulent representations as to the amount of stock on hand and included in the sale; and claimed to recoup the amount of the‘damages sustained by him by reason of said fraudulent representations from the purchase money represented by said note, and to recover for the balance.

To this fourth defense and counterclaim, the plaintiffs’ demurred, on the ground, that the same “ does not state facts sufficient to constitute a right of recovery against plaintiffs as executors as aforesaid.”

These issues of law and of fact, were submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury.

On the hearing of the case, as appears from a bill of exceptions embodied in the record, the plaintiffs gave in evidencq an authenticated copy of the last will of the testator, naming them as executors thereof, and fully authorizing them to sell and convey all or any part of his estate, real and personal, at [278]*278public or private sale, at their discretion, but containing no clause authorizing a warranty of any kind. They also gave in evidence an authenticated copy of the record of the probate court, showing the due probate of said will, and the original letters testamentary, or letters of administration, as the case may be, issued to them by the probate court.

Evidently, through the mere blunder of the probate judge, the plaintiffs were, in these letters, uniformly designated as “ administrators with the will annexed.” But the letters, in terms, authorized them “ to administer according to law, and to the said, will, all and singular the said goods, chattels, moneys, rights and credits of said deceased, and also the proceeds of - all the. real estate of which he may he authorized to sell for the payment of the debts and legacies of said deceased,” etc. No other or further evidence was given.

There is no intimation in the record that any motion for a new trial was ever made.

The court found all the issues of fact in favor of the plaintiffs, sustained the demurrer to the counterclaim, or fourth defense, and gave judgment for the plaintiffs for the amount of the notes sued on. To all which the defendant duly excepted. And all these rulings and the judgment of the court are assigned for error.

And now we are required to consider:

1. As to the disposition made by the court below of the issues of fact made by the reply to the first three defenses set up in the answer.

These issues are, in effect, all embodied in the single question — were the plaintiffs below, at the time of the sale and at the time of bringing the suit, legally the executors of the last Vill of Reese P. Thompson, or not?

Now, if it appeared that the defendant had moved the court for a new trial, and that the same had been overruled, so as, under the statute, to make its findings, upon’all the evidence, a prpper subject of review in this case, we are far from being prepared to say that the rulings of the court below were erroneous, But that question is really not before us.

It is' said, in House v. Elliot, 6 Ohio St. Rep. 497, that a [279]*279review, on error, of the findings of a court or jury on issues of fact, was unknown in this state until the enactment of the act of the 12th of March, 1845, “to regulate the judicial courts,” etc.; which act provided, among other things, that on a motion for a new trial “ by reason that the verdict may be supposed to be against law or evidence,” exception might be taken to the ruling of the court overruling such motion, and such exception might be made a ground of error. In this way, while that act remained in force, questions of fact submitted, first to a jury, and then to the court on motion for a new trial, might be reviewed on error. But that act was repealed by the code of .civil procedure; and thereafter, for several years, under the holdings of House v. Elliot, before cited, and Gest v. Kenner, 7 Ohio St. Rep. 75, and several other subsequent cases, no review could be had, on error, of the findings of courts or juries on issues of fact. But these provisions of the act of 1845', were substantially reenacted by the act of April 12, 1858, “ to relieve the district courts,” etc., 4 Curwen’s Stat. 3087, the fourth section of which provides, that “ in all cases pending in the court of common pleas, or either of the superior courts in this state^ either party shall have the right to except to the opinion of the court ... in all cases of motion for a new trial ... by reason that the verdict, or in ease that the jury he waived, that the finding of the court, may be supposed to be against law or. evidence, so that said case may be removed by petition in error,” etc.

Now, this provision of the act of 1858, confers a right which did not before exist; the right to review, on error, the findings of a court or jury on issues of fact. And the right is made dependent on the overruling of a motion for a new trial. Eor in no other way could all the evidence be embodied in a bill of exceptions and legally brought into the reeord. But, in this case, no motion for a new trial was made; there was r,o authority of law for bringing the whole evidence into the reeord; and we are not authorized to review it. Kepner’s Adm’r v. Snively’s Adm’r, 19 Ohio Rep. 296.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio St. (N.S.) 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westfall-v-dungan-ohio-1863.