Dodeka v. Keith , 2012 Ohio 6216 ( 2012 )


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  • [Cite as Dodeka v. Keith, 
    2012-Ohio-6216
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    PORTAGE COUNTY, OHIO
    DODEKA, L.L.C.,                                :       OPINION
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                :
    CASE NO. 2011-P-0043
    - vs -                             :
    CINDY KEITH,                                   :
    Defendant/Third Party              :
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    :
    RICHARD J. WELT,
    :
    Third Party-Defendant-Appellee.
    Civil Appeal from the Portage County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 2009 CV
    0710.
    Judgment: Reversed and remanded.
    Patrick J. Krebs and Gregory J. O’Brien, Taft, Stettinius & Hollister, L.L.P., 200 Public
    Square, Suite 3500, Cleveland, OH 44114 (For Plaintiff-Appellee and Third Party
    Defendant-Appellee).
    Robert S. Belovich, 9100 South Hills Blvd., Suite 300, Broadview Heights, OH 44147;
    and Anand N. Misra, The Misra Law Firm, L.L.C., 3659 Green Road, Suite 100,
    Beachwood, OH 44122 (For Defendant/Third Party Plaintiff-Appellant).
    THOMAS R. WRIGHT, J.
    {¶1}     This appeal is from a final judgment of the Portage County Court of
    Common Pleas.           In that judgment, the trial court adopted a decision of a court
    magistrate and granted the motion of appellees, Attorney Richard J. Welt and Dodeka,
    LLC, to stay the underlying action so that the matter could proceed to arbitration. As the
    primary basis for the appeal, appellant, Cindy Keith, contends that arbitration should not
    have been ordered because she was not a party to the arbitration clause in the
    underlying credit card agreement.
    {¶2}   In September 1991, appellant was married to Andrew Keith. At that time,
    Andrew submitted an application to U.S. Bank for a credit card. After receiving the card,
    Andrew continued to use it throughout the next eleven years. During that time frame,
    appellant’s name appeared on the various account statements that were mailed to the
    Keith residence.
    {¶3}   In 2000, the Keiths were divorced pursuant to a judicial decree. As part of
    the distribution of the marital property, Andrew was held solely responsible for any debt
    under U.S. Bank card. However, no steps were ever taken to remove appellant’s name
    from the account, and the account statements mailed to Andrew at his separate address
    continued to have her name on them.
    {¶4}   During the time frame in which the “Keith” credit card account was open,
    U.S. Bank would periodically modify the terms of the underlying agreement by sending
    copies of the new contract to the listed address. The last of these “amended” contracts
    was mailed to Andrew’s home address in July 2002. Paragraph 43 of that contract was
    an arbitration provision, which generally stated that either side had the right to choose to
    submit “any kind” of dispute to binding arbitration so long as that dispute arose from the
    underlying “credit card” agreement.
    {¶5}   In April 2003, Andrew Keith stopped making payments on a considerable
    sum that he had charged on the U.S. Bank credit card. Five months later, he submitted
    2
    a petition for federal bankruptcy, and his credit card debt was ultimately discharged. As
    a result, U.S. Bank removed Andrew’s name from the “credit card” account, and began
    to pursue possible remedies against appellant.
    {¶6}   In November 2007, U.S. Bank transferred its interest in the “Keith” account
    to Dodeka, LLC, thereby giving that entity the ability to seek payment on the outstanding
    balance of $10,964.56. Approximately eight months later, Dodeka instituted an action
    for money damages against appellant in the Portage County Municipal Court. After the
    action had been pending for nearly ten months, appellant answered the complaint and
    asserted a counterclaim, essentially alleging that Dodeka had violated certain consumer
    protection laws in maintaining the case. As an additional party to the counterclaim, she
    named Dodeka’s original counsel, Attorney Richard J. Welt, as a third-party defendant.
    {¶7}   Due to the amount of damages appellant sought in her counterclaim, the
    municipal court transferred the case to the common pleas court. Upon reviewing the
    pleadings in the action, the common pleas court concluded that Dodeka had failed to
    attach the required documents to its complaint. Accordingly, Dodeka filed an amended
    complaint in March 2010. In addition to attaching copies of various account statements
    from 2002 and 2003, Dodeka also submitted the affidavit of a recovery manager for
    U.S. Bank.
    {¶8}   Prior to the submission of the amended complaint, Dodeka and Attorney
    Welt, appellees, moved the trial court to stay the action so that the entire matter could
    proceed to arbitration. In support of their position that the arbitration clause in the July
    2002 amended contract applied to appellant, appellees attached a separate affidavit of
    the U.S. Bank recovery manager. As part of her averments, the manager asserted that
    3
    appellant and Andrew had applied jointly for the disputed credit card in 1991. However,
    no copy of the joint application was presented with the motion to stay. Instead, the only
    other evidentiary item submitted with the motion was a copy of the July 2002 amended
    contract that was mailed to Andrew’s home address.
    {¶9}    Before responding to the motion to stay/compel arbitration, appellant took
    the deposition of the U.S. Bank recovery manager. In her subsequent response brief,
    appellant tried to use the manager’s answers to certain questions to challenge whether
    she had any personal knowledge of the disputed account. Additionally, appellant also
    attached to her response brief her own affidavit, in which she stated that: (1) she never
    applied for a credit card with U.S. Bank; (2) she never made any payments to U.S. Bank
    on the disputed account; and (3) she did not make any of the purchases set forth on the
    account statements from 2002 and 2003.
    {¶10} In attempting to reply to appellant’s contention that the arbitration clause
    was inapplicable to her because she was never a party to the initial contract, appellees
    tried to take the deposition of Andrew Keith. However, because Andrew had cancer, a
    dispute arose between the parties as to how much time appellant should be afforded to
    question him. Therefore, the deposition never went forward, and appellees did not file a
    reply brief.
    {¶11} Ultimately, the motion to stay/compel arbitration, along with other pending
    motions, was referred to a trial court magistrate for consideration. Despite the fact that
    an evidentiary hearing was conducted, the magistrate based his decision on the motion
    to stay solely upon the materials accompanying the pleadings, appellees’ motion, and
    appellant’s response. In holding that the parties’ claims could be referred to arbitration,
    4
    the magistrate basically accepted appellant’s averment that she did not sign the “credit
    card” application submitted by Andrew Keith in 1991. Nevertheless, the magistrate still
    found that the arbitration clause in the July 2002 amended agreement was applicable
    because she could have become a party to the account through her intervening use of
    the credit card. In support of this finding, the magistrate emphasized that her name had
    appeared on the monthly account statements, and that she never denied in her affidavit
    that she had made purchases with the credit card prior to 2002. Hence, the magistrate
    recommended that the motion to stay be granted.
    {¶12} Appellant objected to the magistrate’s decision, essentially arguing that it
    was not demonstrated that she had agreed to be bound by the arbitration clause. After
    appellees filed a response, the trial court issued a final judgment in which the objections
    were overruled and the decision of the magistrate was adopted. Accordingly, the court
    granted appellees’ motion to stay and ordered the parties to submit the entire action to
    binding arbitration.
    {¶13} In appealing the foregoing decision, appellant has raised two assignments
    of error for review:
    {¶14} “[1.] The trial court committed prejudicial error in granting appellees’
    motion to require arbitration without making the threshold finding as to the legal
    requirement that [appellant] must have entered into an agreement to arbitrate.
    {¶15} “[2.] The trial court committed prejudicial error in granting appellees’
    motion to require arbitration without finding whether the alleged claims were within the
    scope of the alleged agreement, and whether appellees through their litigation activities
    had waived any claim to arbitration.”
    5
    {¶16} Under her first assignment, appellant reasserts the basic argument
    forming the grounds for her objections before the trial court. That is, appellant contends
    that the arbitration clause in the July 2002 amended contract cannot be enforced
    against her because appellees never proved that the elementary requirements for the
    formation of the original credit card agreement had been satisfied. She emphasizes
    that there was no evidence before the court magistrate to support a finding that, in
    1991, she actually accepted U.S. Bank’s offer to create a credit card account.
    {¶17} As previously discussed, appellees’ motion to stay/compel arbitration was
    predicated upon Paragraph 43 of the amended “credit card” contract which was mailed
    to Andrew Keith’s address in July 2002. This provision stated, in pertinent part:
    {¶18} “By requesting an Account from us and accepting this Agreement, you
    agree that if a dispute of any kind arises out of this Agreement, either you or we can
    choose to have that dispute resolved by binding arbitration. If arbitration is chosen by
    any party, neither you nor we will have the right to litigate that claim in court or to have a
    jury trial on that claim, or to engage in pre-arbitration discovery, except as provided for
    in the arbitration rules. * * *.
    {¶19} “Any claim, dispute or controversy (whether in contract, regulatory, tort, or
    otherwise, whether pre-existing, present or future and including constitutional, statutory,
    common law, intentional tort and equitable claims) arising from or relating to (a) the
    credit offered or provided to you, (b) the actions of you, us or third parties or (c) the
    validity of this arbitration provision * * * must, after an election by you or us, be resolved
    by binding arbitration in accordance with this arbitration provision and the Commercial
    Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association (“AAA”) in effect when the
    6
    Claim is filed * * *.    This arbitration provision shall be governed by the Federal
    Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. Sections 1 through 16.”
    {¶20} As a basic proposition, the Federal Arbitration Act states that if the parties
    to an interstate commerce transaction have agreed in writing to settle any controversy
    through arbitration, such a term “shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon
    such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.” 9 U.S.C. 2.
    The federal statutory scheme delineates two general methods for the enforcement of a
    written arbitration clause. First, if a lawsuit involving an issue referable to arbitration is
    already pending in any federal or state court, an application to stay the proceeding can
    be filed. 9 U.S.C. 3. Second, if no pertinent lawsuit is presently pending, a petition for
    an order requiring immediate compliance with the arbitration clause can be brought in
    any United States district court. 9 U.S.C. 4.
    {¶21} The Ohio statutory scheme governing agreements to arbitrate, as set forth
    in R.C. Chapter 2711, is patterned after the federal scheme, to the extent that our state
    also recognizes two procedural mechanisms for requiring a party to abide by the written
    contractual term: “The Ohio Arbitration Act allows for either direct enforcement of such
    agreements through an order to compel arbitration under R.C. 2711.03, or indirect
    enforcement through an order staying proceedings under R.C. 2711.02.” Brumm v.
    McDonald & Company Securities, Inc., 
    78 Ohio App.3d 96
    , 100 (4th Dist.1992). Under
    Ohio law, the two procedures are viewed as separate and distinct. Maestle v. Best Buy
    Co., 
    100 Ohio St.3d 330
    , 
    2003-Ohio-6465
    , ¶14.
    {¶22} Pursuant to the federal statutory scheme, only a motion to stay a pending
    legal action can be submitted before a state court. Therefore, in moving the trial court
    7
    for relief in the instant case, appellees were going forward solely under 9 U.S.C. 3. This
    statute provides, in its entirety:
    {¶23} “If any suit or proceeding be brought in any of the courts of the United
    States upon any issue referable to arbitration under an agreement in writing for such
    arbitration, the court in which such suit is pending, upon being satisfied that the issue
    involved in such suit or proceeding is referable to arbitration under such an agreement,
    shall on application of one of the parties stay the trial of the action until such arbitration
    has been had in accordance with the terms of the agreement, providing that the
    applicant for the stay is not in default in proceeding with such arbitration.” (Emphasis
    added.)
    {¶24} The standard for determining the merits of an application to stay the trial
    court proceedings is virtually identical under the corresponding Ohio provision. That is,
    R.C. 2711.02(B) states that the stay application should only be granted when the court
    has been “satisfied” that the underlying issue in the pending legal action was intended
    under the parties’ written agreement to be referred to arbitration.
    {¶25} As the wording of both 9 U.S.C. 3 and R.C. 2711.02(B) strongly suggests,
    two basic facts must be proven before a stay of the trial proceedings can be justified: (1)
    the existence of a valid written agreement to arbitrate disputes between the parties; and
    (2) the scope of the agreement is sufficiently broad to cover the specific issue which is
    the subject of the pending case. Bratt Enterprises, Inc. v. Noble International LTD., 
    338 F.3d 609
    , 612 (6th Cir.2003). Both factual requirements are predicated upon the legal
    proposition that, while the arbitration of disputes is strongly encouraged under the law, a
    party should not be forced to proceed to arbitration unless she expressly agreed to do
    8
    so. Id.; Telsat, Inc. v. Knight, 9th Dist. No. 23502, 
    2007-Ohio-2342
    , ¶12. Furthermore,
    in determining whether an enforceable agreement to arbitrate exists, state-law contract
    principles must be applied. Stepp v. NCR Corp., 
    494 F.Supp.2d 826
    , 831 (S.D.Ohio
    2004).
    {¶26} At the trial level, the party requesting the “arbitration” stay has the burden
    of proof regarding both the existence of the agreement to arbitrate and its basic scope.
    Penalver v. Compagnie De Navigation Frutiere, 
    428 F.Supp. 1070
    , 1072 (E.D. N.Y
    1977). As to the nature of appellate review of a stay determination, federal courts have
    indicated that any rulings concerning the issues of existence and scope are considered
    de novo. See, e.g., Floss v. Ryan’s Family Steak Houses, Inc., 
    211 F.3d 306
    , 311 (6th
    Cir.2000). In contrast, Ohio courts have generally held that decisions on applications to
    stay under R.C. 2711.02(B) will only be reversed on appeal when an abuse of discretion
    has been established. Telsat, Inc., 
    2007-Ohio-2342
    , at ¶8; Brunke v. Ohio State Home
    Services, Inc., 9th Dist. No. 06CA008947, 
    2007-Ohio-3119
    , ¶10. But even these Ohio
    courts have recognized that when the trial court’s decision turned upon its analysis of a
    question of law, a de novo standard of review must be employed. 
    Id.
    {¶27} As previously noted, in contending at the trial level that appellees were not
    entitled to an “arbitration” stay, appellant’s argument focused upon the initial question of
    whether she had ever agreed to arbitrate any dispute relating to a “credit card” account
    with U.S. Bank; i.e., it was her position that the arbitration clause in the amended July
    2002 agreement was inapplicable to her because she never executed the original 1991
    application for the credit card. In addressing this particular issue in their appellate brief,
    appellees maintain that they presented three items of evidentiary materials which were
    9
    sufficient to demonstrate the existence of a contractual relationship between appellant
    and U.S. Bank. Of these three items, only one was cited by the trial court magistrate in
    support of his ultimate factual finding regarding the applicability of the arbitration clause.
    That item consisted of the copies of the 2002-2003 monthly account statements which
    were attached to Dodeka’s amended complaint.
    {¶28} In responding to appellees’ motion to stay/compel arbitration, appellant did
    not contest the authenticity of the copies of the monthly account statements. Moreover,
    she did not challenge the fact that her name appeared on each of the statements, and
    that each statement was mailed to Andrew Keith’s proper address during that two-year
    period. Therefore, since there were no factual disputes regarding the monthly account
    statements, the question before this court is whether, as a matter of law, the statements
    constituted some evidence upon which it could be found that there had been an existing
    contractual relationship between appellant and U.S. Bank, and that this relationship was
    set forth in a written agreement that included the cited arbitration clause.
    {¶29} A review of the relevant case law shows that, under limited circumstances,
    the fact that a billing statement was mailed to a person can form the basis of a finding of
    liability under a credit card account. In support of such a finding, courts have generally
    cited the doctrine of “account stated,” which has been defined in the following manner:
    {¶30} “‘An account rendered by one person to another and not objected to by
    the latter within a reasonable time becomes an account stated. It becomes the duty of
    the one to whom the account is thus rendered to examine the same within a reasonable
    time and object if he or she disputes its correctness. What constitutes a reasonable
    time within which objection must be made to an account rendered in order to preclude a
    10
    presumption of assent and, thus, prevent it from becoming an account stated, depends
    on the particular factors of each case, such as the nature of the transaction, the
    relations of the parties, their distance from each other and the means of communication
    between them, and their business capacity and intelligence.’” National Check Bureau v.
    Buerger, 9th Dist. No. 06CA008882, 
    2006-Ohio-6673
    , ¶25, quoting Creditrust Corp. v.
    Richard, 2d Dist. No. 99-CA-94, 
    2000 Ohio App. LEXIS 3027
    , at *11-12 (July 7, 2000).
    {¶31} Under the doctrine of account stated, legal responsibility to pay a debt can
    be established through the submission of evidence showing that an account statement
    was mailed to the debtor, who then failed to challenge the correctness of that statement
    within a reasonable time. However, although not expressly referenced in the foregoing
    quote, it has been held that this doctrine cannot be invoked unless the existence of the
    debtor-creditor relationship has been proven through other evidence. This requirement
    was discussed in Nelson v. First National Bank Omaha, Minn.App. No. A04-579, 
    2004 Minn. App. LEXIS 1316
    , a case in which the bank sought recovery on a credit card debt
    notwithstanding the fact that it could not produce a copy of a signed application:
    {¶32} “When proof of an express contract does not exist, liability for a particular
    debt may be established pursuant to the doctrine of account stated. * * * This doctrine
    requires a manifestation of the debtor’s and creditor’s assent to a stated sum as an
    accurate computation of the amount due the creditor on the account. * * * Because
    assent to the numerical accuracy of the account is required, the doctrine of account
    stated does not apply in the absence of ‘some form of assent to the account’ in the first
    instance. * * * Merely transmitting an account to a debtor does not establish an account
    stated. * * * Accordingly, when the putative debtor was not aware of the account when
    11
    the debt was incurred, the doctrine of account stated does not supply a legal basis for
    liability because the requisite element of mutual assent is lacking. * * *.
    {¶33} “* * *
    {¶34} “[The bank] contends that proof of an actual account is not required.
    Rather, [the bank] argues, it need only prove that appellant received billing statements
    and retained them without objection. This argument is unavailing.             It is true that
    acquiescence to an account balance may be established if the debtor retained without
    objection, for a long period of time, a statement of account rendered by the creditor. * * *
    But implicit in this notion of implied consent to the account balance is an existing
    relationship between the debtor and creditor in which assent to the account itself is
    undisputed.” (Citations omitted.) Id. at *5-9.
    {¶35} In our case, the materials attached to the amended complaint and the
    motion to stay/compel arbitration shows that appellees were unable to produce a copy
    of the credit card application which appellant supposedly executed in 1991.
    Furthermore, appellees did not present any other evidentiary materials, such as an
    admission by appellant, which would tend to establish the existence of an ongoing
    debtor-creditor relationship between her and U.S Bank. In other words, appellees did
    not demonstrate that appellant had expressly or implicitly agreed to enter into any form
    of contractual relationship with U.S. Bank for a credit account.
    {¶36} Under these circumstances, the doctrine of account stated is inapplicable
    to the facts of the underlying case. In turn, this means that the copies of the 2002-2003
    monthly account statements had no evidentiary value for purposes of proving the
    existence of a valid written agreement between U.S. Bank and appellant which included
    12
    an enforceable arbitration clause.
    {¶37} As previously mentioned, in rendering his decision on the “arbitration”
    issue, the trial court magistrate did not find that appellant had actually signed the credit
    card agreement which Andrew Keith submitted to U.S. Bank in 1991. Instead, the
    magistrate based his conclusion as to the existence of a contractual relationship
    between appellant and U.S. Bank upon the finding that it was possible that she had
    used the credit card to make purchases prior to 2002. As a general proposition, the
    consumer’s actual use of the credit card is considered sufficient to demonstrate her
    acceptance of the provisions of the credit card agreement. See FIA Card Serv., N.A. v.
    Ryan, 10th Dist. No. 09AP-193, 
    2009-Ohio-6660
    , ¶21.
    {¶38} In regard to the “prior use” finding, this court would indicate that our review
    of the trial record does not reveal any evidentiary materials supporting the magistrate’s
    analysis. First, appellees did not present any direct evidence, such as a receipt, which
    would tend to prove appellant’s actual use of the credit card at any time. Second, we
    would emphasize that it is impermissible to infer her use of the card from the presence
    of her name on the monthly account statements. Again, pursuant to the governing case
    law, such statements can only be employed to prove the present amount owed after the
    actual existence of the underlying contractual relationship has been established through
    the submission of other evidentiary materials. As a result, both the magistrate and the
    trial court erred in concluding that the monthly account statements were relevant to any
    factual issue pertaining to the determination of whether appellant had ever entered into
    a binding contractual relationship with U.S. Bank.
    {¶39} Besides the monthly account statements, the magistrate referred to only
    13
    one other evidentiary item in support of his finding as to the existence of a valid credit
    card agreement. Specifically, the magistrate noted that, as part of her averments in her
    affidavit, she only asserted that she had not made any of the purchases described in the
    monthly account statements for 2002 and 2003. In light of this, the magistrate inferred
    that, since appellant had not made any denial regarding purchases which occurred prior
    to 2002, it was possible that she could have used the credit card during that time frame
    and, therefore, implicitly accepted the terms of the written “account” agreement.
    {¶40} As to the weight to be given to appellant’s affidavit, this court would note
    that the affidavit did not contain any express admission in relation to the existence of a
    valid written or the separate issue of whether appellant had “used” the credit card at any
    time in the past. In the absence of an express admission, appellees still had the burden
    of proof on these factual points in order to satisfy the federal standard for demonstrating
    entitlement to an “arbitration” stay under 9 U.S.C. 3. Penalver, 
    428 F.Supp. at 1072
    .
    Under these circumstances, even if it is assumed that appellant’s failure to address the
    pre-2002 period in her affidavit supported a possible inference that she had previously
    used the disputed credit card to make purchases, that inference was not sufficient, in
    and of itself, for appellees to carry their burden.
    {¶41} In their brief before this court, appellees cite two other evidentiary items
    which, according to them, supported the magistrate’s finding relating to the existence of
    a valid written agreement. First, they note that, as part of her affidavit attached to their
    motion, the U.S. Bank recovery manager averred that the 1991 credit card application
    was signed by both appellant and Andrew Keith. Second, appellees submit that, as an
    attachment to their separate supplemental motion for sanctions, they presented certain
    14
    documentary evidence showing that Andrew Keith had listed appellant as a co-debtor
    on the credit card debt in his federal bankruptcy filings.
    {¶42} Regarding the foregoing two items, our review of the magistrate’s written
    decision indicates that he never referred to the items in rendering his factual findings on
    the “stay” issue. Additionally, we would emphasize that, as part of his discussion of the
    other evidentiary submissions, the magistrate accepted appellant’s averment that she
    never signed the 1991 credit card application, and then predicated his entire decision on
    the finding that there was a possibility that she had used the credit card at some point
    before 2002. Given this analysis, the magistrate obviously held that the two evidentiary
    items cited by appellees were not entitled to the same weight as appellant’s averment.
    {¶43} Pursuant to the foregoing discussion, this court concludes that appellees’
    evidentiary materials were not sufficient to establish either of the following two points:
    (1) that appellant signed the credit card application prior to its submission to U.S. Bank
    in 1991; or (2) that she actually used the credit card at any time during the eleven-year
    period from 1991 to 2002. Therefore, as a matter of law, appellees failed to satisfy the
    first prong of the federal standard for obtaining an “arbitration” stay under 9 U.S.C. 3;
    i.e., they did not show the existence of a written agreement between the parties which
    contained a valid arbitration term. For this reason alone, appellees’ motion to stay the
    trial proceedings and compel arbitration should have been denied, and the case should
    have proceeded to trial on all pending matters, including the issue of whether there was
    a valid written agreement between appellant and U.S. Bank.
    {¶44} Appellant’s first assignment is well taken, and is dispositive of the merits of
    this appeal.
    15
    {¶45} Under her second assignment, appellant has raised two separate issues
    for consideration. First, she submits that appellees waived the right to seek arbitration
    by failing to assert it in a timely manner. Second, she contends that, even if she was a
    party to the underlying credit card agreement and Dodeka’s account claim was subject
    to arbitration, her counterclaim should not have been submitted to arbitration.
    {¶46} In light of our conclusion under the first assignment that appellees’ motion
    to stay should have been overruled as a matter of law, the merits of the foregoing two
    issues have become moot. Hence, this court is not required under App.R. 12(A)(1)(c) to
    address the substance of the second assignment. See Kennedy v. Oliver, 9th Dist.
    Nos. 06CA008873 & 06CA008874, 
    2006-Ohio-5814
    , ¶13.
    {¶47} Given that appellant’s first assignment of error has merit, it is the judgment
    and order of this court that the judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the case is
    hereby remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    TIMOTHY P. CANNON, P.J.,
    MARY JANE TRAPP, J.,
    concur.
    16