Stumpff v. Harris , 2012 Ohio 1239 ( 2012 )


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  • [Cite as Stumpff v. Harris, 2012-Ohio-1239.]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY, OHIO
    KENNETH M. STUMPFF, et al.                      :
    Plaintiffs-Appellants                   :   C.A. CASE NO. 24562
    vs.                                            :    T.C. CASE NO. 03CV5624
    RICHARD L. HARRIS, et al.                       :   (Civil Appeal from
    Common Pleas Court)
    Defendants-Appellees                    :
    . . . . . . . . .
    O P I N I O N
    Rendered on the 23rd day of March, 2012.
    . . . . . . . . .
    Konrad Kuczak, Atty. Reg. No. 0011186, 130 West Second Street,
    Suite 1010, Dayton, OH 45402-1588
    Attorney for Plaintiffs-Appellants
    Alfred W. Schneble, III, Atty. Reg. No. 0030741, 11 West Monument,
    Suite 402, Dayton, OH 45402
    Attorney for Defendants-Appellees
    . . . . . . . . .
    GRADY, P.J.:
    {¶ 1} This is an appeal from a final order dissolving a corporation entered pursuant
    to R.C. 1701.91(D). We find that the trial court erred when it entered that order without first
    affording the corporation a hearing pursuant to R.C. 1701.91(C) to determine the
    corporation’s claims against its president relating to assets of the corporation the president
    allegedly appropriated.      The order of dissolution will be reversed and the case will be
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    remanded for further proceedings.
    {¶ 2} In 2003, Kenneth Stumpff and Mahaffey’s Auto Salvage, Inc. (the
    “corporation”) commenced an action against Richard Harris. Stumpff and Harris each owned
    50% of the shares in the corporation. The Plaintiffs alleged that Harris had used his position
    as president of the corporation to enrich himself and another business he owned with assets of
    the corporation and to deny Stumpff opportunities to which he was entitled as a shareholder.
    Plaintiffs claimed Harris’s conduct was a breach of his fiduciary duties. Harris denied
    liability and filed a counterclaim seeking an order of judicial dissolution of the corporation.
    {¶ 3} The claims in the action were referred to a magistrate. Following hearings, the
    magistrate filed a decision (1) dismissing the Plaintiffs’ claims against Harris for breach of
    fiduciary duty and (2) ordering judicial dissolution of the corporation. Stumpff objected, but
    the court overruled his objections and adopted the magistrate’s decision. Stumpff appealed.
    On review, we affirmed the judgment of the trial court on September 15, 2006. Stumpff v.
    Harris, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 21407, 2006-Ohio-4796.
    {¶ 4} On November 22, 2006, Stumpff filed a motion asking the court to appoint a
    receiver for the corporation. The court denied that motion, and instead ordered the parties to
    file an agreed order dividing the assets and liabilities of the corporation within thirty days.
    The court further ordered that if the parties could not agree, the court would appoint a
    liquidator to perform that task.
    {¶ 5} Stumpff filed a notice of appeal from the order denying his motion to appoint a
    receiver. On May 1, 2007, we dismissed that appeal for lack of a final order. Stumpff v.
    Harris, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 22050, (May 1, 2007).
    3
    {¶ 6} Stumpff again moved for the appointment of a receiver, representing that the
    parties could not agree on a liquidation plan. The court appointed a receiver to “continue,
    manage, inventory, operate, and liquidate” the corporation, to “receive and collect any and all
    sums of money due or owning to” the corporation, and to “institute, prosecute and defer” any
    action in state or federal courts “as may in his opinion be necessary or proper for the
    protection, maintenance and preservation of the assets of the parties or the carrying out of the
    terms of this Order.”
    {¶ 7} The receiver held hearing to determine the corporate assets and liabilities. On
    July 2, 2008, based on information discovered in the course of those hearings, the corporation
    filed a Notice of Claims alleging that it is owed an additional $233,536 for monies belonging
    to the corporation that Harris appropriated for the use of another business he owns, Valley
    Auto Parts, L.L.C.
    {¶ 8} The receiver filed a report, inventorying the assets of the corporation. The
    report made no mention of the additional claims totaling $233,536 against Harris made by the
    corporation. Plaintiffs requested a hearing on their new claims. The court denied that
    request. The court entered an order identifying the assets of the corporation and ordering the
    receiver to take possession of those assets and prepare a plan for liquidation of the
    corporation. Harris filed a notice of appeal from that order. Harris subsequently dismissed
    his appeal voluntarily on August 19, 2008. Stumpff v. Harris, 2d Dist. Montgomery No.
    22651 (Sept. 29, 2008).
    {¶ 9} On March 13, 2008, the receiver filed a liquidation plan that again took no
    account of the claims against Harris in the corporation’s July 2, 2008 Notice of Claims. The
    4
    corporation and Stumpff filed objections to the report’s failure to take account of those
    matters. The trial court overruled the objection and adopted the liquidation plan, ordering a
    full disbursement of monies obtained by the receiver pursuant to the court’s order of
    liquidation. The court also discharged the receiver.
    {¶ 10} Stumpff and the corporation took no appeal from the order denying their
    objections and adopting the liquidation plan of the receiver in the 2003 action. Instead, on
    October 23, 2008, Stumpff and the corporation commenced a new action against Harris on the
    claims which were the subject of their July 2, 2008 Notice of Claims.
    {¶ 11} Harris moved for summary judgment in the 2008 action. The trial court
    granted the motion, reasoning that Stumpff and the corporation should have filed a motion in
    the 2003 action to amend their complaint to include their new claims against Harris. The
    court further concluded that because Stumpff and the corporation took no appeal from the
    court’s order adopting the report of the receiver in the 2003 action, their claims in the 2008
    action are barred by res judicata. Stumpff and the corporation appealed.
    {¶ 12} On review, we agreed with the trial court’s res judicata analysis, to the extent
    that the claims in the 2008 action involve the same funds that were asserted in the Notice of
    Claims the corporation filed in the 2003 action. We further held that such claims against a
    party to a dissolution proceeding are properly brought as part of that action, and that there was
    no need for the Plaintiffs to amend their complaint in order to do that because their Notice of
    Claims had put the matters before the court. When the receiver and the trial court failed to
    act on those claims, Plaintiffs’ proper course of action was an appeal challenging the order
    overruling their objections and adopting the receiver’s report and liquidation plan, which they
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    failed to pursue.
    {¶ 13} Nevertheless, we further held that the res judicata bar could not apply to the
    claims in the 2008 action for lack of an R.C. 1701.91(D) order of dissolution, the final order
    in such an action from which an appeal lies. We added: “Given that finality has not attached
    in (the 2003 action on the issue of dissolution), the Appellant’s claims against Harris in that
    case may be pursued further on appeal whenever final judgment is entered.                But, the
    appellants cannot simultaneously pursue their claims in the (2008 action) while the same
    claims remain part of a pending dissolution action in the same court.”             We therefore
    overruled the error Stumpff and the corporation assigned in the 2008 action. Stumpff v.
    Harris, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23354, 2010-Ohio-1241, ¶ 32.
    {¶ 14} Following our decision in Case No. 23354, Stumpff and the corporation
    requested a hearing in the 2003 action to prove the corporation’s claims against Harris.
    Plaintiffs argued that the court could not enter the final order of dissolution that R.C.
    1701.91(D) requires without first complying with R.C. 1701.91(C), which authorizes the
    court, after a complaint for judicial dissolution is filed, to “require the parties to the
    proceeding to present and prove their claims, demands, rights, interests, or liens, at the time in
    the manner required of creditors or others.” Plaintiffs argued that an R.C. 1701.91(D) order
    of dissolution that left the issues of their claims against Harris unresolved would not be a final
    order.
    {¶ 15} Prior to entering the order of March 8, 2011, from which this appeal was taken,
    the trial court on February 24, 2011, entered a Decision, Order and Entry Granting
    Defendant’s Motion For Judicial Dissolution. [Dkt. 2]. After discussing the history of the
    6
    litigation, the court concluded that Plaintiffs are not entitled to a hearing on the Notice of
    Claims they filed on July 2, 2008, because those claims were previously rejected by the court
    in 2005, when the court dismissed the claims for breach of fiduciary duty in the complaint
    Defendant filed in 2003, a decision which this court affirmed in Case No. 21407 on
    September 16, 2006.
    {¶ 16} On March 8, 2011, the court entered an order of dissolution pursuant to R.C.
    1701.91(D). Plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal from that order on April 5, 2011.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
    {¶ 17} “THE     TRIAL COURT          COMMITTED           PREJUDICIAL ERROR         BY
    DISSOLVING MAHAFFEY’S AUTO SALVAGE, INC. WITHOUT ADDRESSING
    PROVED BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY CLAIMS AGAINST APPELLEE HARRIS
    AND SETTING THE VALUE OF THE SHARES OF THE SHAREHOLDERS.”
    {¶ 18} The history and present posture of this litigation bring to mind the Latin term
    deus ex machina, literally, “a god out of a machine.” “The expression has its origin in
    ancient Greek theatre, especially in certain plays of Euripides. When the complexities of plot
    and character appeared incapable of resolution, a god was set down on stage by a mechanical
    crane to sort out things and make them right. Greek gods could do anything.”1
    {¶ 19} We have no illusion that our talents and capacities allow us to act as the Greek
    gods were once portrayed, but merely observe that the record of this proceeding and the
    arguments of the parties would benefit from their assistance.
    1
    Amo, Amas, Amat and More, by Eugene Ehrlich (Harper &
    Row, 1985), pp. 104-105.
    7
    {¶ 20} The complaint that Stumpff and the corporation filed in 2003 has not been
    made a part of the record of this appeal. However, we note that our decision in Case No.
    21407, affirming dismissal of those claims against Harris for breaches of fiduciary duty, states
    that those claims set out two grounds for the breaches alleged: that Harris had “unilaterally
    raised the rent paid by the corporation to himself for lease of the premises,” and “that Harris
    breached his fiduciary duty when he prohibited Stumpff from entering the premises.” 
    Id., ¶ 66.
    {¶ 21} The Notice of Claims that Plaintiffs filed on July 2, 2008 allege the following
    claims on behalf of the corporation against Harris and the other business entity he owns:
    Attorney fees in the amount of        $ 22,170.00
    Employee Health Premiums                  33,468.13
    Employee Wages                          152,050.00
    Employee Payroll Taxes                  28,848.50
    [Dkt 11, Case No. 23354.]
    {¶ 22} Plaintiffs argued that they learned of these new matters on January 23, 2008,
    during a hearing to determine the assets of the corporation, and that the new matters concern
    transactions that occurred between June 1, 2005 and January 15, 2008.            In that event,
    Plaintiffs’ new claims are not a part of the acts or transactions on which the claims for unjust
    enrichment in their 2003 claim were founded, and the new claims are not barred from
    subsequent judicial determination by res judicata.
    {¶ 23} In Case No. 23354, we held that Plaintiffs’ Notice of Claims properly put the
    matter of their new claims before the court, and that when the court failed to act on them the
    8
    Plaintiffs could have appealed any error, but for the lack of an R.C. 1701.91(D) final order.
    On remand, Plaintiffs renewed their request for a hearing on their Notice of Claims. R.C.
    1701.19(C) charges the court to “require the parties to the proceeding to present and prove
    their claims, rights, interests, or liens, at the time and in the manner required of creditors or
    others.” The court erred when it failed to afford Plaintiffs an opportunity to prove their
    claims prior to entering its R.C. 1701.91(D) order of dissolution, on a finding that those
    claims are barred by res judicata.
    {¶ 24} The assignment of error is sustained. The March 8, 2011 order of dissolution
    will be reversed and vacated. The case will be remanded to the trial court to conduct a
    hearing pursuant to R.C. 1701.91(C) on Plaintiffs’ July 2, 2008 Notice of Claims, and to
    thereafter enter an order of dissolution pursuant to R.C. 1701.91(D) “upon the evidence” and
    containing, in addition to the provisions that section expressly requires, “such other provisions
    with respect to the judicial dissolution and winding up as are considered necessary or
    desirable,” 
    Id. DONOVAN, J.
    , concurs.
    HALL, J., concurring:
    { 25} I agree with the opinion of the majority but write separately to detail why I
    believe the prior litigation does not have a res judicata effect on the discreet claims raised in
    the appellant’s “Objection, etc.* * * to Report of Receiver and Request for Hearing” filed July
    21, 2008.
    9
    { 26} The original complaint was filed August 7, 2003, and a trial was conducted
    before a magistrate on April 26, 2004, and completed on May 26, 2004. The magistrate’s
    decision filed November 24, 2004, dismissed the appellant’s complaint for breach of fiduciary
    duty, with prejudice. Objections and supplemental objections were filed. The trial court
    overruled the objections and likewise dismissed the complaint for breach of fiduciary duty,
    with prejudice, in its decision, order, and entry filed December 6, 2005. That decision also
    ordered the judicial dissolution of Mahaffey’s Auto Salvage, Inc. Of primary significance here
    is the nature of the breach of fiduciary duty that was alleged and tried in this initial
    engagement. Stumpff asserted that he was ousted from performing his duties, excluded from
    the Mahaffey’s premises, denied salary and medical benefits, and that Harris took possession
    of personalty, inventory, books, and records.
    { 27} Appellant’s appeal from the trial court’s December 6, 2005, decision was
    docketed as this court’s case number CA 21407. The trial court’s decision was affirmed by
    Opinion and Final Judgment Entry both filed September 15, 2006.
    { 28} After this court’s affirmance, the case was ripe for the trial court to proceed
    with the winding up of affairs for the judicial dissolution. A receiver was appointed. Assets of
    the corporation were determined and the “Receiver’s plan for liquidation” was filed March 13,
    2008. It ended: “Following liquidation * * * Receiver would file a report after reviewing
    each claim. Thereafter, any objecting party to the Receiver’s Report may request an oral
    hearing on the same.” Id at 2. On July 2, 2008, Mahaffey’s filed a notice of claims asserting
    that Harris, who had been operating the company in the interim, and Valley Auto parts, LLC,
    Harris’ new salvage operation, owed the corporation for attorney fees, and for employee
    10
    healthcare, wages, and payroll taxes that were paid from June 1, 2005, through January 23,
    2008 (the date of the hearing to determine assets.)
    { 29} On July 9, 2008, the Report of the Receiver was filed. On July 21, 2008,
    appellant filed objections to the receiver’s report and requested a hearing. The principle thrust
    of the objections was the failure of the receiver to recognize the claims filed July 2, 2008, for
    reimbursement of attorney fees, employee wages, benefits, and payroll taxes. Appellant’s
    claims related to the compensation of employees beginning on June 1, 2005. Those claims are
    different in kind, nature, and time than the breach of fiduciary duty claims for exclusion of
    Stumpff from the business, which were the subject of the trial on April 26 and May 26, 2004.
    Most importantly, the claim that Harris dissipated several hundred thousand dollars belonging
    to Mahaffey’s from June 1, 2005, to January 23, 2008, did not exist at the time of the original
    2004 trial. To the discrete extent that appellant’s claims arose after the original trial, I would
    determine that res judicata emanating from the 2004 trial decisions and their affirmance on
    appeal, did not bar the presentation of those claims in July 2008. Accordingly, I agree that the
    matter should be remanded for a hearing on those claims.
    { 30} Needless to say, granting a hearing does not grant the claims alleged. The
    record reveals that when appellant Stumpff took $16,000.00 out of the corporate accounts,
    there was little if any money left. Therefore, the after-trial payroll expenses about which
    appellant complains were likely paid with after-acquired income, which Stumpff, who was
    excluded from the premises, did not assist to produce. But, the viability of appellant’s claims
    is best left for the trial court to determine.
    .........
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    Copies mailed to:
    Konrad Kuczak, Esq.
    Alfred W. Schneble, III, Esq.
    Hon. Mary Lynn Wiseman
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 24562

Citation Numbers: 2012 Ohio 1239

Judges: Grady

Filed Date: 3/23/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014