Wolfe v. Williams

5 N.E.2d 694, 53 Ohio App. 415, 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 590, 7 Ohio Op. 259, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 395
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 5 N.E.2d 694 (Wolfe v. Williams) 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
Wolfe v. Williams, 5 N.E.2d 694, 53 Ohio App. 415, 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 590, 7 Ohio Op. 259, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 395 (Ohio Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

OPINION

By SHERICK, J.

Henry Wolfe, an incompetent person, under guardianship for his estate in the *591 Probate Court of Tuscarawas County, filed an application therein for termination thereof which that court denied upon final hearing. A motion for a new trial was thereafter filed and subsequently overruled. Thereafter on December 13, 1935, an appeal was perfected to the Court of Common Pleas, wherein a paper styled a petition on appeal was filed and demurred to by the appellee. The Court of Common Pleas considered these papers as upon a motion to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction, and on March 24, 1936, dismissed the appeal. This is the final order from which appeal on a question of law is prosecuted to this court.

The appeal to the Court of Common Pleas is predicated upon the authority of 810501-56, GC. The appellee maintains that this section is not pertinent but that the appellant’s right of appeal is governed by 810501-62, GC. A further significant fact is made to appear by the Probate Court’s certificate attached to the transcript of that court, wherein it is recited in part that the probate judge presiding possessed the qualifications of the judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and that a complete record was made of the proceeding in the Probate Court. The sole question presented by the appeal to this court is whether §10501-62, GC, is unconstitutional.- It is claimed by the appellant that this section is repugnant to §26 of Article II of the Ohio Constitution, which prescribes that “All laws, of a general nature, shall have a uniform operation throughout the state.” I-t is also urged that the section is violative of the constitutional provision of “due process of law.” We do not find it necessary to pass upon the second claim.

Sec 10501-56, GC, was enacted into law on April 10, 1931, (114 Ohio Laws, 320), as a part of the new Probate Code which became effective on January 1, 1932. The purpose of this section, which provides in .part, that: “Appeal may be taken to the Common Pleas Court, by a person against whom it is made, or whom it affects, from any order, decision or judgment of the Probate Court * * *; from an order removing or refusing to remove an executor, administrator, guardian, assignee, trustee or other officer appointed by the Probate Court; - * *” was to afford a remedy by appeal, as well as a right to review upon error theretofore existing by virtue of §12241, GC.

There can be no question that §10501-56, GC, created a right of appeal in such case to the Court of Common Pleas and gave that court jurisdiction thereof on appeal. This act is unquestionably of a general nature and has a uniform operation throughout the 88 counties of the state.

On April 4, 1935, the Legislature enacted the present Appellate Review Act (116 Ohio Laws, 104). Its effective date was January 1, 1936. It will be noted that this Act repeals §12241, GC, heretofore noted, and by §12223-3, GC, thereof prescribes, that:

“Every final order judgment or decree of a court and, when provided by law, the final order of any administrative officer, tribunal, or commission may be reviewed as hereinafter provided, unless otherwise provided by law, except that appeals from judgments of Probate Courts and of justices of the peace upon questions of law and fact shall be taken in the manner now provided for in §§10501-56 to 10501-61, GC, inclusive, and §§10382 to 10398, GC, inclusive, respectively.”

It is apparent therefrom that the Appellate Review Act is in fact a re-enactment of §10501-56, GC, a section of the new act on probate practice. It is rather unexplainable that the Legislature within forty days after the passage of the Appellate Review Act, did; on May 14, 1935, enact §10501-62, GC (116 Ohio Laws, 385, 404). The effective date thereof being September 2, 1935. The section provides that: ’

“If a judge of a Probate Court who has the qualifications provided by law for judges of the Court of Common Pleas, provides for the taking of a complete record at any hearing upon any matter ■ before such Probate Court so that a bill of exceptions, or a complete record, may be prepared as provided by law in Courts of Common Pleas, there shall be no appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, in any such case; but an appeal may be prosecuted to the Court of Appeals in all matters within its jurisdiction in the manner provided by law for the prosecution of other appeals to said court.”

By employment of the term “unexplainable,” we mean that the members of this court are unable to understand why this section was enacted without any reference to §§10501-56 ana 12223-3, GC. It is especially significant that the effective date of §12223-3 GC is four months later than the effective date of §10501-62 GC. As statutes do not ordinarily speak as of the date of passage, it must follow that the *592 breath of life awakes them into being on their effective date. If it was imperative to decide the force of §10501-62, GC, on the strength of the unfavored rule of repeal by implication we would incline to the view that §12223-3, GC, was last in point of time, antagonistic to §10501-62, GC, and responsive to the rule fixed by §10501-56, GC; rather than to hold that §10501-62, GC, limited and restricted the jurisdiction of Courts of Common Pleas as prescribed by §§10501-56 and 12223-3, GC.

If we look to the title of §10501-62, GC, “Appeal from Probate Court,” and the last phrase thereof, a strong and not illogical inference arises that the section was perhaps intended by the scrivener to be amendatory of the Appellate Review Act. Assuming this to be true, the definition of the word “appeal” as found therein in §12223-1, GC, is “construed to mean all proceedings whereby one court reviews or retries a cause determined by another court,” and keeping in mind that the Appellate Review Act, seeks to abolish all distinctions between the old lemedies of appeal and error; and repeals §12241, GC, which provides for review upon proceedings in error; and provides for review of such cases by §§12223-3 and 10591-56, GC, then it would further, naturally follow if §10501-62, GC, governs, that at the present time one may not appeal his cause to the Common Pleas Court of Tuscarawas County “in any such case” because §10501-62, GC, says that appeals may not be had as the present encumbent of the Probate Court office has the qualifications of a Common Pleas judge as fixed by §1532, GC. At the expiration of his term, however, his successor might not possess such qualifications, for §10501-1, GC, prescribes the qualifications for a probate judge which are not so stringent. One might not appeal such a case on February 8, 1939, but on the next day such an appeal would be countenanced. A litigant might possess the right one day and not possess it the next, all within the time allotted him within which to perfect an appeal.

And further considering the force of the word “appeal” as used in §10501-62, GC, it would embrace appeals on questions of law and fact, and also on questions of law purely. If this be true, then the appellant had only a right to appeal to this court in either event for right of appeal is denied him to the Court of Common Pleas by the statute. It is made mandatory that the Common Pleas Court be passed over, for jurisdiction is denied it. The result would be inevitable in this case that appeal could only be had to this court upon questions of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 N.E.2d 694, 53 Ohio App. 415, 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 590, 7 Ohio Op. 259, 1936 Ohio App. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolfe-v-williams-ohioctapp-1936.