244 N.E.2d 527 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1969
This is an action brought by plaintiff, Berea Bus Lines Company, to vacate, after term, a default judgment obtained against it by the defendants, Natalie and Charles Seminatore. In plaintiff's second amended petition, Section
"The Court of Common Pleas or the Court of Appeals may vacate or modify its own final order, judgment, or decree after the term at which it was made:
"* * *
"(G) For unavoidable casualty or misfortune, preventing the party from prosecuting or defending * * *."
The allegations of this petition set forth facts which reveal that plaintiff purchased insurance from an insurance agent named Robert Kujanek. The insurance was designed to protect Berea Bus Lines from the type of claim filed by defendants in their original action. Although agent Kujanek delivered an allegedly valid insurance policy to plaintiff, he had, in fact, never notified the parent insurance company, and instead had simply converted the premiums for himself. Thus, Berea Bus Lines had no insurance.
In January 1966, Natalie Seminatore, wife of Charles Seminatore, left her children at Midpark High School in Middleburg Heights, Ohio, and was exiting from the school when a collision occurred between her car and one of plaintiff's school buses. Defendants herein filed suit against plaintiff company on September 7, 1966, in the Common Pleas Court. On September 9, 1966, plaintiff was served with petition and summons in the action and immediately forwarded the suit papers to its insurance company agent, Kujanek. According to plaintiff's amended petition to vacate, plaintiff inquired of Kujanek about the status of the lawsuit on several occasions, and was assured by him as to its progress. On December 23, 1966, defendants secured a default judgment against plaintiff in the amount of $4,000. In March 1967, an attachment on the assets of the Berea Bus Lines found at the National City Bank of Cleveland in the amount of the judgment was secured. Immediately thereafter, on March 13, 1967, a petition to vacate the judgment was filed by counsel for plaintiff. A demurrer to plaintiff's second amended petition was sustained by the trial court and a motion to reconsider was denied. The appeal to this court followed.
Appellant asserts one assignment of error:
"The court below erred in sustaining a demurrer to *33 the second amended petition on the ground that it did not state a cause of action for `unavoidable casualty or misfortune.'"
In the opinion of this court, appellant's second amended petition did allege facts sufficient to state a cause of action under Section
Is there a similarity between these cases and the case at bar? The Iowa Supreme Court, working with similar statutes, thought so. In Edgar v. Armored Carrier Corp.,
Appellees herein contend that the Berea Bus Lines should have avoided this casualty by checking with the home office of the insurance company. In effect, this argument demands that Berea Bus Lines should have uncovered Kujanek's fraud in order to establish a case of "unavoidable casualty or misfortune." Other courts have not required a party to go this far. For example, the Supreme Court of Iowa held in Hobbs v. Martin Marietta Co.,
"We are not prepared to hold that in the operation of such large business enterprises the law requires constant checking to see that papers sent through the regular channels are received and acted upon, nor do we think the failure to do so here amounted to carelessness within the meaning of our rule. To be careless and inattentive, as the terms are applied here, means to give the matter no care, no attention, approaching gross neglect or willful procrastination. * * *"
See, also, Stehman v. Reichhold Chemicals, Inc.,
Finally, the requirement that appellant allege a valid defense also was satisfied by the second amended petition to vacate where the defense was stated.
It is our decision that appellant has met with an unavoidable casualty or misfortune as specified in Section
The judgment is, therefore, reversed as contrary to law and the cause is remanded to the Court of Common Pleas, with instructions to grant defendant's petition to vacate and for further proceedings according to law.
Judgment reversed.
WHITE, P. J., and CANARY, J., concur. *35