White v. Moerlidge

7 Ohio C.C. 348
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
DocketNo. 1412; also, Nos. 1413 to 1437, inclusive, except No. 1436
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio C.C. 348 (White v. Moerlidge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Moerlidge, 7 Ohio C.C. 348 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Smith, J.

These twenty-five cases were heard together, and they may be divided into two general classes, one of which may properly be designated as the account cases, and the other as the chattel mortgage cases. In the former, it is urged by counsel for plaintiffs in error, that the court of common pleas erred in dismissing the appeal taken from the probate court. In the latter, the same claim is made, but it is also insisted that the court erred in refusing to allow the appellants to amend the old bond, or to file a new one to conform to the provisions of the statute, if the one originally given did not do so. But it is urged on behalf of the defendants in error, that the record is not in such a shape that the court can properly hear or decide either of these questions.

The facts in the cases, as they appear by the record, are substantially these :

On a hearing in the probate court of various controversies between the secured and unsecured creditors of J. & A. Simpkinson & Co., (who had made an assignment for the benefit of their creditors), the court, in what are called the account cases, upheld the validity of the transfer by the assignors before the assignment, to various persons, of certain accounts due to the firm, and also the validity of the chattel mortgages in the other [350]*350cases, and made separate orders to the assignee to pay the same. Thereupon, in all of the cases, as appears by the transcript of the journal entries in the probate court, the several appellants gave notioe of their intention to appeal, and the court fixed the bond for the several appeals at the sum of $250 in each case. In fact, the amount so ordered to be paid in each case was more than $250,[so that the amount of the appeal bond thus fixed, was in each case much less than double the amount so ordered to be paid by the assignee. Thereupon, in each case, as is shown by such transcript, “ undertaking in appeal of”-(naming him), “from claim of”-(naming him), “ in the sum ®f $250, with W. H. Jones and Lip-man Levy as sureties, approved and filed.’,

In the accowit oases no such bond appears in the transcript from the probate court, or anywhere in the record, and it does not seem to be required by see. 6409 that a copy of the bond should be sent up. But in what are known as the chattel mortgage cases, a copy of the several bonds given to appeal such cases, is brought into the record by a bill of exceptions taken on the overruling of the motions of the appellants for leave to amend such bonds or to give new ones.

When these appeals wrnre docketed in the court of common pleas, some or all of the account cases were heard on the issues raised, and the court, after consideration, was about to render judgments therein. After the hearing of these cases, but prior to the time the court was ready to decide them, motions had been filed by the appellees to dismiss the appeal in' the chattel mortgage cases, “ for the reason that the undertaking required by statute has not been given, and for other reasons appearing of record.” These motions were sustained by the court, and it dismissed the appeals, and the appellants excepted, and at onee on the same day filed their motions for leave to amend their bonds with the consent of sureties, so that the same would be in double the amount ordered to be paid, for the benefit of the appellees, respectively, or to give a new bond in said sum with approved [351]*351sureties, for the benefit of the appellees. These motions were overruled by the court, and exception taken, and in each case a bill of exceptions was taken containing the evidence offered, which was the original appeal bond, and which also showed the action of the court.

After this, when the court was about to decide the account cases, as the journal entry shows, the counsel for appellants in open court called attention to the fact that the appeal bonds given therein were in a sum less than double the amount ordered by the probate court to be paid to-(naming the appellee), and suggested that in view of a former ruling of this court made after the hearing and submission of this claim in said assignment, it may not now have jurisdiction of this cause. “And the court now coming to consider said suggestion, find the same well taken, and find further that the appellants creditors of said J. & A. Simpkinson & Co. have not given the bond required by statute, and by reason thereof have not perfected their appeal.” The several appeals were then dismissed, to which appellants excepted.

We are of the opinion that sec. 6408, Rev. Stat., which provides the mode and manner in which an appeal is to be taken from a judgment of the probate court to the eourt of common pleas in cases of this character, did not make it necessary that any appellant in any of these cases, who desired to appeal from a judgment directing the assignee to pay from the funds in his hands a specifio sum to any particular person, should give an undertaking in double the amount directed to be paid. That the only reasonable interpretation to be given to the language used therein is, that this provision applies only to those cases, in which the order, judgment or decree directs the payment of the money by the person or persons who take the appeal, and that in cases like those before us, the amount of the undertaking to be given, is to be in such sum as shall be prescribed by the probate eourt. Any other construction of the statute would in many eases be a virtual deprivation of the right to appeal. The idea that it could [352]*352have been the intention of the legislature, that a person who» asserts a small claim, say of $100, to a fund of say $20,000, and his claim is disallowed, and the wholefund ordered to be distributed to the other persons claiming it, should, as a condition of his right to appeal give an undertaking in the sum’of $40,000,is not^to be entertained, if any other reasonable construction can be placed upon the language, as may be done here, viz : that a bond in double the amount should be required only in cases where the appeal is by the person who is adjudged to pay the money, and that in all other eases the bond is to be given in such amount as shall be prescribed by the probate court.

If, therefore, itproperly appeared from the record, as brought before us, that the sole ground upon which the appeals in these cases were dismissed, was that the bond for appeal was not in double the amount ordered by the court to be paid to the adverse party by the assignee, we would feel obliged to reverse such orders dismissing the appeals. But on the record, as it stands, it does not seem to us that in the account cases it affirmatively appears that such was the case. No motions to dismiss the appeals in the cases were actually filed. It simply appears that it was suggested to the court that the bonds given were not in double the amount ordered to be paid. And that the court, on consideration of such suggestion, found that it was well taken, and further found that the appellants had not given the bond required by the statute.

It must be assumed that this finding was made on evidence submitted to the court, and no bill of exceptions having been taken to bring this evidence into the record, we cannot see how we can hold that the finding of the court that the appellants had not given bond as required by statute, was wrong, or erroneous.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio C.C. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-moerlidge-ohiocirct-1893.