Winters National Bank & Tr Co. v. Midland Acceptance Corp.

191 N.E. 889, 47 Ohio App. 324, 17 Ohio Law. Abs. 146, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 370
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1934
DocketNo 1253
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 N.E. 889 (Winters National Bank & Tr Co. v. Midland Acceptance Corp.) 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
Winters National Bank & Tr Co. v. Midland Acceptance Corp., 191 N.E. 889, 47 Ohio App. 324, 17 Ohio Law. Abs. 146, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 370 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

*148 OPINION

By HORNBECK, PJ.

Error was prosecuted by plaintiff and the intervenor trustee in cases which are numbered 1249 and 1250 in this court. Upon presentation of the cases it was agreed by counsel that determination might be made upon the appeal case and the error cases held in abeyance.

The preliminary questions presented and which before consideration of the case on its merits must be determined favorably either to the plaintiff or to the intervening trustees, are: Does the plaintiff have the right to proceed upon the allegations of its petition? Does the intervening petitioner, the trustee of Gesgaman, bankrupt, have the right to maintain his action, although the cause of action of the plaintiff be properly dismissed and finally, if the intervening trustee had not the right to maintain his action upon the original petition, may he amend and proceed in this court upon the amended petition?

We have carefully considered the questions urged and the unusually helpful briefs which have been tendered by counsel for the plaintiff, the. intervening trustee and the defendant. We have, also, carefully read the two opinions of the trial judge. We have no hesitancy in holding that the plaintiff had no standing to maintain an action against the defendant upon the facts developed as to the date of the filing of the petition. The right to institute the action which the plaintiff sought to prosecute was, by the adjudication of Gessaman, a bankrupt, and the appointment of a trustee vested in the representative of all of Gessaman’s creditors, the trastee.

We do not deem it necessary to cite authorities at length to support the proposition that the plaintiff was properly dismissed from the action. Remington — Bankruptcy, §2222.

A more difficult question arises on the right of the intervening trustee to maintain the action as representative of plaintiff or as representative of creditors other than plaintiff. Counsel for the trustee seems to concede that the trustee did not have the right to proceed to judgment through any rights of plaintiff but insist that as representative of other creditors he had a cause of action based upon the same transaction as set forth by the plaintiff in its petition.

There is great confusion in the available authorities on the question presented. No Ohio case cited parallels the facts in this case. Alflen v McClenaghan, 32 Oh Ap, 43; Higgins v McCrea (Ohio Fed.) 116 U. S., 671; United Sales Promotion v Anderson, 100 Oh St, 58; Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Company v Strausz, 14 C.C. (N.S.), 51, all were actions wherein at the time the petitions were filed the respective plaintiffs had causes and rights of action. It is not unusual for a party who at the time of the -suit has a cause of action and right of action to be superseded by another who has the right to act for him in a representative capacity. In the instant case the plaintiff did not have a right of action at the time the petition was filed. The cause of action stated was substantially the same as set up by the trustee intervenor with the further right of the intervenor to act for and in behalf of all creditors including the plaintiff. It should be noted that the i.atervenor by his pleading made definite the cause of action to be the same as. plaintiff, his right of action to appear for the plaintiff and all other creditors of the defendant. Summons was also issued against the defendant and service made -thereon.

One case in Ohio which has not been cited by counsel for either party seems to indicate the course which we should pursue upon the pleadings and record in this case. Van Camp v McCulley, Trustee, 89 Oh St, 1. All of the syllabus is pertinent and we therefore quote it:

“Where a creditor of an insolvent corporation enters suit in behalf of himself and other creditors against C. and other stockholders, to compel payment into court of unpaid subscriptions to capital Stock of the corporation, C. demurs on the ground that plaintiff has not reduced his claim to judgment and exhausted his legal remedies, and, pending the demurrer, a trustee of the insolvent corporation is appointed in bankruptcy. Held: The court has power in furtherance of justice to substitute the trustee as plaintiff with leave to file an amended petition and bring in another subscriber as a defendant.
“2. At a subsequent term, the demurrer still pending, the court on motion of C. struck out the former order of substitution as an irregular assumption of jurisdiction. Held: This was error.
“3. Meantime, between the order of substitution and the order to strike out, the trustee had filed his amended petition and issued summons to the new defendant, who answered. The amended petition of the trustee added matter explanatory of the *149 origin of the indebtedness of C. and new allegations showing the right and title of the trustee to maintain the suit. Held: Neither the substitution of the trustee as plaintiff nor his amendment to the petition changed the cause of action or the nature of the action; the case was then pending upon the amended petition, and the defendant C. was still in court pursuant to the original summons to answer to the cause of action.
“4. Nevertheless, the court heard and sustained the demurrer to the original petition and dismissed the cause. Held: This was error, and the judgment of the circuit Court overruling the judgment of the Common Pleas Court in striking out its original order and dismissing the cause, must be affirmed.”

It will be noted that at the time Barnard Brothers, the original plaintiffs, instituted the action they had no right of action against the defendants. In this situation they are identical with the plaintiff in the instant cause. Thereafter a trustee in bankruptcy for the Mt. Vernon Glass Company was named and substituted as a party plaintiff. 'He was then permitted by the determination of the Appellate and Supreme Courts to proceed with the cause of action originally stated by Barnard Brothers. In the Supreme Court Judge Wilkin, in stating the propositions for determination’ set them forth under two headings. We quote in part. The argument of plaintiff in error is as follows:

“(2) Permission to the trustee to be substituted as plaintiff can not change the original case. The trustee merely takes the place of the plaintiff; if such plaintiff were not properly in court the substitution can not cure the defect. The trustee is entitled to maintain the suit only • after summons issued (on his precipe) and served. If the trustee is substituted for a plaintiff who had no cause of action, the trustee sues without due issuance and service of summons.”

The court then says:

“Manifestly there was in the beginning, as shown by the original petition, a cause of action in somebody. If Van Camp was owing an unpaid subscription to stock of this company and the company’s affairs were not wound up and liquidated, and the company was, as is alleged in the petition, insolvent, it was the duty of the subscribers to pay the money due for stock to somebody for the benefit of the company’s creditors. This was a duty which the court could enforce in a case properly brought before it.

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Bluebook (online)
191 N.E. 889, 47 Ohio App. 324, 17 Ohio Law. Abs. 146, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winters-national-bank-tr-co-v-midland-acceptance-corp-ohioctapp-1934.