Windhurst v. Ford

22 Ohio Law. Abs. 70, 1936 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1235
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 14, 1936
DocketNo 840
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 70 (Windhurst v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Windhurst v. Ford, 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 70, 1936 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1235 (Ohio Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

OPINION

By GUERNSEY, J.

This case comes into this court on appeal from the Common Pleas Court of Marion County, Ohio.

On July 2, 1935, the plaintiff Florence Windhurst filed her petition in the Common Pleas Court against the defendant Lew H. Ford as assignee for the benefit of creditors of The Waldorf Pharmacy Company, alleging in substance:

That on August 11, 1933, The Waldorf Pharmacy Company, an Ohio corporation, which was then and for some time prior thereto had been engaged in conducting a store in the City of Marion, Ohio, for the sale of drugs, wall paper and sundries at retail, being then insolvent made an assignment for the benefit of all its creditors to the defendant Lew H. Ford by deed of assignment duly executed and filed in the Probate Court of Marion County, Ohio, and that thereupon said Ford was duly appointed and qualified and is acting assignee for the benefit of all the creditors of said company.

That on January 21, 1930, the plaintiff . was hired by the board of directors of said company as a clerk and assistant manager of said company for the term of five years at a salary of $750 per year, or $62.50 per month; and that as such she was the assistant operative of said retail store of said company, her duties consisting of managing postcard department, buying stock for same, assisting in displaying drugs, wall paper and sundries, wrapping and delivering packages; clerking and doing and performing all such duties as were required of her as such clerk or as ordered by the manager.

That on the date of said assignment there was due and owing from said company, as wages for her services aforesaid, the sum of $455, and that on August 15, 1935, she caused to be executed and filed with said. assignee, her sworn claim for said sum as a preferred claim, and on October 15, 1,933, said assignee allowed said claim as a preferred claim in the sum of $300 and indorsed his allowance thereon; that afterward The Marion County Bank filed in said Probate Court its demand and bond as provided by law demanding that said claim be disallowed and thereupon same was disallowed.

The prayer of the petition is for an order requiring the defendant to allow said claim as a preferred claim in the sum of not less than $300 as against said company’s assets, and for other relief.

[72]*72To this petition, the defendant Ford filed his answer in which he admits that The Waldorf Pharmacy Company was a corporation and made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, as alleged in the petition; and that he is the duly appointed qualified and acting assignee.

He further admits the allowance by him as assignee, of plaintiff’s claim as a preferred claim in the sum of. $300; the indorsement of said allowance thereon and the subsequent disallowance .of said claim by him, on requisition of The Marion County Bank Company, as alleged in the petition.

The defendant assignee then denies each and every allegation contained in plaintiff’s petition not specifically admitted to be true.

The Marion County Bank and The Harding Publishing Company, creditors of said pharmacy company, who were subsequently made parties defendant in said action, filed their separate answers therein.

In these answers the defendants deny that the plaintiff was employed as assistant operative as alleged in her petition and that there is any sum of money due her from said company as wages for her services.

They allege that at the time of said assignment and for several years prior thereto said company had issued and outstanding, only seventy-seven shares of stock; that seventy-four of said shares were owned by the plaintiff and two of said shares were owned by William G. Windhurst the husband of plaintiff; and that plaintiff was assistant manager and secretary treasurer of said company during all the time that she alleges there was owed her wages; that her said husband was president and general manager during all of said time; that said company for more than five years last past was conducted solely for the benefit of plaintiff and her husband.

. Following trial and judgment in the Court 'of Common Pleas the plaintiff appealed the case to this court and the defendants filed a motion in this court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that this case is not one in chancery within the meaning of §6 of Article 4 of the Ohio Constitution, and therefore not appealable.

At the time this case was heard in this court this motion was taken under advisement by the court, and without prejudice to the rights of the defendants under said motion and subject to decision on said motion, this case was then submitted to this court on a transcript of the evidence in the lower court, together with additional evidence taken in this court. We will therefore first pass on the motion to dismiss.

The object of this action is to compel the allowance of a claim of a creditor as a preferred claim against funds of an assignor debtor in the hands of an assignee for the benefit of creditors. The right, if any, to the allowance of the claim as a preferred claim is based solely on statutory provisions.

In this country voluntary and general assignments by failing debtors, of their property to trustees upon trust to pay the creditors of the assignor, are generally recognized and treated as active trusts enforceable by courts of equity. Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, Fourth Edition, Volume 3, §993 and note 994. This rule is recognized in the case of Webb, Receiver v Stasel, Receiver, 80 Oh St 122.

Except as restricted by statute, the Court of Common Pleas has such jurisdiction in equity as courts of chancery had at common law. Madden v Shellenbarger, 121 Oh St 401.

As assignments for the benefit of creditors are active trusts originally recognized as subjects of chancery jurisdiction, an action to compel the allowance of a claim against the trust property is an action in chancery and is within the equitable jurisdiction of the Common Pleas Court, unless the fact that there are statutory provisions providing a similar remedy changes the action from one at chancery to one at law.

It is the law of Ohio as established by the cases of Feucher v Keyl et, 48 Oh St 357, and City of Zanesville v Fannan, 53 Oh St 605, that where a new remedy is given by statute for a right of action existing independent of it, without expressly excluding any former remedy, the statutory remedy is cumulative merely. Wagner v Armstrong, 93 Oh St 443. There is no provision of the statutes relating to assignments expressly excluding the former chancery remedy and in fact the statutory provisions authorizing such action are merely a restatement and adoption of such remedy. Consequently the nature of the action is not changed from one in chancery.

[73]*73[72]*72While the right to preference in the case at bar is entirely statutory, equity follows the law and as the Common Pleas Court had chancery jurisdiction to compel the al* [73]*73lowance of the claim against the trust fund, such jurisdiction necessarily included the right to adjudicate the allowance of a preferential claim therein whether the right to such preference is based upon equitable principles or statutory provisions.

The case therefore constituted a chancery case and was appealable to this court under the provisions of §6 of Article 4 of the Constitution, and the motion to dismiss is therefore overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio Law. Abs. 70, 1936 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/windhurst-v-ford-ohioctapp-1936.