Dugas v. Ohio Adult Parole Auth. , 2022 Ohio 1923 ( 2022 )


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  • [Cite as Dugas v. Ohio Adult Parole Auth., 
    2022-Ohio-1923
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    Greg Dugas,                                         :
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                :
    No. 21AP-491
    v.                                                  :         (Ct. of Cl. No. 2021-00107JD)
    Ohio Adult Parole Authority,                        :         (REGULAR CALENDAR)
    Defendant-Appellee.                 :
    D E C I S I O N
    Rendered on June 7, 2022
    On brief: Greg Dugas, pro se.
    On brief: Dave Yost, Attorney General, Lauren D. Emery, and
    Timothy M. Miller, for appellee.
    APPEAL from the Court of Claims of Ohio
    NELSON, J.
    {¶ 1} While he was serving 151 days in prison as a sanction for violation of post-
    release control, Greg Dugas filed and then withdrew a habeas corpus action in the Pickaway
    County Court of Common Pleas (Case No. 2019 CI 0109) and then sought a writ of habeas
    corpus from the Supreme Court of Ohio against the prison warden and the Ohio Adult
    Parole Authority on the ground that he was being unlawfully detained. See July 29, 2019
    Habeas Petition at 3, 4-5; see also id. at 10, 40 (arguing that his period of post-release
    control had been unlawfully tolled and that the asserted violations therefore occurred after
    his "PRC period expired on September 25, 2018"). By entry of September 25, 2019, the
    Supreme Court denied his motion for a default judgment and ordered "sua sponte, that
    [his] cause is dismissed for failure to state a claim." Case No. 2019-1029, September 25,
    No. 21AP-491                                                                               2
    2019 Entry; see also Dugas v. Harris, 
    157 Ohio St.3d 1416
    , 
    2019-Ohio-3797
     (merit decision
    without opinion). The following month, Mr. Dugas filed a petition presenting "[t]he same
    [habeas] petition * * * as a mandamus action" and asking that the Supreme Court bar the
    Parole Authority from exercising supervision over him; the Supreme Court granted the
    Parole Authority's motion to dismiss that matter, too. Case No. 2019-1415, October 18,
    2019 Petition at 2, 3; Dugas v. Adult Parole Auth., 
    157 Ohio St.3d 1518
    , 
    2019-Ohio-5289
    (merit decision without opinion).
    {¶ 2} On March 2, 2021, Mr. Dugas filed an action for false imprisonment against
    the Parole Authority in the Court of Claims of Ohio, alleging that he had been unlawfully
    confined under post-release control sanctions from April 2, 2019 through October 19, 2019.
    See Complaint at ¶ 14. After cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court denied
    Mr. Dugas's motion and granted judgment to the Parole Authority. September 8, 2021
    Entry Granting Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment. Although it disagreed with
    Mr. Dugas's construction of the law regarding post-release control, the trial court first and
    foremost rested its ruling on res judicata grounds: Mr. Dugas's habeas petition had claimed
    that he was being unlawfully confined, the trial court observed, and he therefore is
    "estopped from relitigating the issue of whether his confinement was lawful here, i.e.,
    whether defendant confined him without lawful privilege. Consequently, [the Parole
    Authority] is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law." Id. at 5-6. Because we
    believe that binding precedent compels us to adopt the same conclusion, we will affirm the
    trial court's judgment after outlining the case that Mr. Dugas advances.
    {¶ 3} Contrary to the suggestion of the Parole Authority, our review of a grant of
    summary judgment (as with issues of law more generally) is de novo. C0mpare Appellee's
    Brief at 10-11 (advocating a "hybrid" standard of review that might be appropriate in certain
    instances involving post-trial determinations based on bench trial factfinding) with, e.g.,
    Dailey v. Wainwright, 
    161 Ohio St.3d 233
    , 
    2020-Ohio-4519
    , ¶ 11 ("[w]e review de novo a
    decision to grant summary judgment"). The essential, undisputed facts as we glean them
    from the record are perhaps, for purposes of understanding Mr. Dugas's position, best
    presented in the form of a timeline:
    On November 25, 2013, the Monroe County Court of Common Pleas accepted
    Mr. Dugas's pleas of guilty to escape (a third-degree felony) and to grand theft auto (a
    No. 21AP-491                                                                              3
    fourth-degree felony) and sentenced him to a total of 24 months in prison. That court
    advised Mr. Dugas that following his release from prison, he could be subject to a three-
    year period of post-release control, violation of which could trigger administrative
    sanctions totaling up to one-half of his stated prison term. November 25, 2013 Monroe
    County C.P. Judgment Entry.
    On September 25, 2015, Mr. Dugas "was released from [prison] * * * in the
    custody of DRC, under the supervision of the Ohio Adult Parole Authority." Affidavit of
    Parole Board Hearing Officer Michael Anderson at ¶ 8; see also April 24, 2019 APA Special
    Minutes (reflecting that that Mr. Dugas "was paroled on 9-25-15").
    Also on September 25, 2015, Mr. Dugas "was taken into the custody of the West
    Virginia Division of Corrections pursuant to an out-of-state detainer to complete his
    sentence for Reckless Fleeing in a Vehicle [for] which he had been sentenced" previously.
    Anderson Affidavit at ¶ 9; Complaint at ¶ 5.
    On June 24, 2018 (or June 29, 2018 according to ¶ 6 of the Complaint; the five-
    day difference happens not to be material to the argued question of law), Mr. Dugas was
    released from the custody of the West Virginia prison authorities. Anderson Affidavit at
    ¶ 13.
    On April 24, 2019 (some three and a half years after his release from Ohio prison
    under APA supervision, and some eight months after his release from confinement in West
    Virginia), the Parole Authority declared Mr. Dugas a Violator at Large, effective March 4,
    2019. April 24, 2019 APA Special Minutes. He was "restored to parole status" effective
    April 23, 2019 while back in Ohio custody. April 24, 2019 APA Special Minutes.
    On May 21, 2019, the Parole Authority conducted a hearing on nine allegations
    that Mr. Dugas had violated post-release control. All but one of the charged violations
    related to various dates between February and April 2019, and most related to failures to
    report, trespassing, damage to property, or possession of drug paraphernalia. One count
    alleged that on June 24, 2018, he had failed to comply with a post-release control condition
    involving mental health intervention and medication compliance. Mr. Dugas "opted to
    waive appearance at this hearing and admitted to all of the [nine] charges with the
    exception of [one count alleging entering property without consent with purpose to commit
    No. 21AP-491                                                                              4
    burglary]." May 21, 2019 Sanction Receipt and Prison Term Order, with attachments. The
    Parole Authority found him guilty of all charges and imposed the 151-day sanction. 
    Id.
    Two months later, on July 29, 2019, Mr. Dugas filed his habeas petition with the
    Supreme Court of Ohio.
    {¶ 4} The parties do not dispute that upon his release from prison in Ohio on
    September 25, 2015, Mr. Dugas was placed on three years of post-release control. What
    they have argued over is whether his West Virginia prison stint that immediately followed
    that Ohio release appropriately "tolled" (that is, stopped the time from running on) the
    post-release control period. If it did, then the Parole Authority was within its powers to
    maintain supervision over him and conduct its hearing and impose sanctions. If the tolling
    was not proper, Mr. Dugas submits, then the Parole Authority lacked legal justification to
    reincarcerate him on post-release control violations not alleged until more than three years
    after the September 25, 2015 release.
    {¶ 5} Mr. Dugas makes a straightforward legal argument. Statutory law in effect at
    all relevant times, he emphasizes, directed that: "Any period of post-release control shall
    commence upon an offender's actual release from prison." See 2019 R.C. 2967.28(F)(4).
    Although that language appears to have been removed from the law effective September
    30, 2021, see R.C. 2967.28, it was there when he was sentenced for his underlying offenses,
    when he was released from an Ohio prison in 2015, when he was charged with and
    sanctioned for post-release control violations in 2019, and even when the summary
    judgment motion in his wrongful imprisonment case was decided in September of 2021.
    {¶ 6} Everyone agrees, he notes, that his actual release from prison in Ohio was
    September 25, 2015. See, e.g., May 21, 2019 Sanction Receipt and Prison Term Order
    (reciting that Mr. Dugas "was released to post-release control on Sep 25, 2015 under the
    supervision of the Ohio Adult Parole Authority"); Appellee's Amended Brief at 8
    (acknowledging that "On September 25, 2015, Mr. Dugas completed his prison sentence
    and was released under the supervision of APA"). Under the law, that's when his post-
    release control term had to "commence." Former R.C. 2967.28(F)(4). From there, he
    urges, a simple mathematical calculation establishes that his three-year post-release
    control term, and with it the power of the Parole Authority to return him to prison for
    No. 21AP-491                                                                                  5
    infractions, expired September 25, 2018. The Parole Authority, he maintains, thus lacked
    any justification for charging him and returning him to prison in 2019.
    {¶ 7} But, responds, the Parole Authority, its policies and practices specify that: "If
    a PRC offender [that is, as we understand the term, an offender who is on post-release
    control] is released * * * to an * * * out-of-state detainer, the time between the date the
    offender is released to the detainer and the date the offender is released from the detaining
    authority shall be considered lost time." Parole Authority Policy 100-APA-27(VI)(D)(2).
    The policy further recites that: "Pursuant to ORC 2967.15, lost time is the specific period of
    time during which an offender's period of supervision or prison term is tolled or not
    credited. Lost time can result from being declared a violator-at-large, violator in custody
    out-of-state, * * * or other reasons. Lost time can modify an offender's * * * close of
    supervision date." Parole Authority Policy 100-APA-27(IV) (definition of "lost time"). On
    that basis, the Parole Authority reasons, Mr. Dugas's post-release control period was tolled
    during his West Virginia incarceration from September 25, 2015 to June 24, 2018, and the
    events of 2019 came well within his three years of post-release control.
    {¶ 8} Parole Authority Policy cannot trump Ohio statute, Mr. Dugas counters. The
    General Assembly has specified when a post-release control period is to be tolled, and has
    restricted such tolling to matters arising from new conduct by someone already on post-
    release control after his or her initial release from prison (and the consequent start of that
    person's post-release control term). R.C. 2967.15(C)(1) dictates that: "The time between
    the date on which a person * * * is declared to be a [post-release control] violator or violator
    at large and the date on which that person is returned to custody in this state under the
    immediate control of the adult parole authority shall not be counted as time served * * * as
    a part of the term of post-release control." By its plain terms, R.C. 2967.15 tolls time only
    for post-release control "violator[s]," he contends, and he was not declared a violator until
    after his three-year post-release control period had expired. Compare R.C. 2967.15(D) ("A
    person * * * who has violated a term or condition of the person's * * * post-release control
    shall be declared to be a violator if the person is committed to a correctional institution
    outside the state * * *.").
    {¶ 9} The legislature has explicitly identified the circumstances under which post-
    release control periods are to be tolled, Mr. Dugas explains, and the Adult Parole Authority
    No. 21AP-491                                                                              6
    cannot invoke administrative "policy" to amend that law. See, e.g., Appellant's Amended
    Brief at 6 (quoting from R.C. 2967.15 as the governing " 'explicit textual source' "). The
    statutes tell the Parole Authority when to start counting the post-release control period
    (which, pursuant to former R.C. 2967.28(F)(4) was to "commence" upon an offender's
    release from Ohio prison), and, pursuant to R.C. 2967.15, when to stay the count, Mr. Dugas
    contends.
    {¶ 10} The Parole Authority in its briefing to us does not respond directly to
    Mr. Dugas's statutory argument as premised on R.C. 2967.15. Nor does it mention former
    R.C. 2967.28(F)(4). Rather, it attempts to bootstrap statutory license by making reference
    to a grant of rule-making authority relating to its "imposition" of "sanctions" for post-
    release control violations—a matter somewhat afield, perhaps, from the question of when
    statutorily limited periods of post-release control may be extended through tolling. See
    Appellee's Brief at 13-14 (citing R.C. 2967.28(E)).
    {¶ 11} The trial court in its alternative rationale adopted that rule-making
    argument, repeating that R.C. 2967.28(E) provides the Department of Corrections power
    "to adopt rules to assist the [Parole Authority] in determining post-release control
    sanctions." Summary Judgment Decision at 6. Recognizing that here the issue is not so
    much the determination of particular sanctions but whether the post-release control term
    remained in effect at the time sanctions were imposed, the trial court went on to invoke the
    Parole Authority's Policy 100-APA-27(VI)(D)(2). That policy, the trial court said, was
    adopted "[p]er [the] authority" of R.C. 2967.28(E). Summary Judgment Decision at 6. We
    note that the policy itself recites that its authority comes from the far more general
    provisions of R.C. 5120.01 (relating not to post-release control specifically, but to the
    powers of the Director of the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction).
    {¶ 12} Moreover, the policy itself recites that its definition of "lost time" is
    established "[p]ursuant to ORC 2967.15"—the statutory section invoked by Mr. Dugas to
    show that tolling is triggered by post-release control violator status, not by conduct
    adjudicated before the commencement of post-release control. Parole Authority Policy
    100-APA-27(IV) ("lost time" definition). And the policy states its "purpose" as being "to
    establish a standard procedure for the calculation and determination of lost time pursuant
    to [actual] Administrative Rule 5120.1-1-31." Parole Authority Policy 100-APA-27(II)
    No. 21AP-491                                                                                 7
    ("Purpose"). That administrative rule appears to relate, again, to violations committed
    after supervision has begun: thus, the first subsection sets the scope of the rule by providing
    authority to file a detainer against an offender "whenever there is reasonable cause to
    believe that such offender has violated or is about to violate any of the terms or conditions
    of his supervision or sanction and commits an overt act toward such violation." Ohio
    Adm.Code 5120:1-1-31(A). But again, neither the trial court nor the Parole Authority in its
    briefing here reckon with the implications of R.C. 2967.15.
    {¶ 13} Against that backdrop of the arguments on the merits of the tolling in
    Mr. Dugas's case, we turn to the specific assignments of error that Mr. Dugas posits. He
    asserts:
    [I.] The facts set down by Judge Sheeran are erroneous and, are
    so in error as to be subject to a Plain Error Rule;
    [II.] Res judicata does not apply as Judge Sheeran has
    determined, that is a plain error;
    [III.] Judge Sheeran's construction of "False Imprisonment" on
    pages 6-7 of his order, including his purported reliance upon
    the case of Florence v. Ohio Adult Parole Auth., C.R. No.
    08CVH08-12427, 2009-Ohio-Misc. LEXIS 5547 at * 10
    (Sept. 3, 2009), is all in error;
    [IV.] Judge Sheeran's "rubber-stamping" of the APA's internal
    tolling policy, § 100-APA-27(V)(D)(2), [as] [a] [lawful] [policy],
    is in error; the policy is unlawful ON ITS FACE;
    [V.] Even if the said policy, § 100-APA-27(V)(D)(2), is upheld
    as lawful on its face, Judge Sheeran's case-specific finding in
    this particular case are in error nonetheless because the APA
    did NOT – in this specific case – use its requisite statutory
    procedures (i.e., Special Minutes Forms/Parole Board
    Minutes) to actually, i.e., FACTUALLY TOLL Dugas's PRC
    period;
    [VI.] NO TOLLING OCCURRED in this case, factually, nor
    could it occur; legally; Dugas's Monroe County PRC term
    lawfully expired on September 25, 2018, and because NO
    TOLLING OCCURRED nor could occur, Dugas's
    [re]incarceration after that date was – as both legal and factual
    matters, "without lawful authority."
    (Sic passim.)
    No. 21AP-491                                                                                  8
    {¶ 14} Mr. Dugas's argument under his first assignment of error evidences concern
    (understandable concern, in light of his legal argument) that the trial court's factual
    account, like the Anderson affidavit it cites, muddies the date on which he was declared a
    post-release control Violator at Large, and thereby perhaps inadvertently suggests that that
    tolling event may have fallen within three years of his September 2015 Ohio prison release.
    See, e.g., Entry Granting Summary Judgment at 3 ("The West Virginia Division of
    Corrections released plaintiff on June 24, 2018, but plaintiff failed to comply with the
    reporting obligation imposed by his PRC and was declared by the APA to be a violator at
    large"); Anderson Affidavit at ¶ 13-14 ("Mr. Dugas was released from the custody of the
    West Virginia Division of Corrections on June 24, 2018. * * * In spite of his reporting
    obligations, Mr. Dugas failed to report to the Ohio Adult Parole Authority upon his release
    and he was declared to be a violator at large"). But the trial court made no affirmative
    misstatement of fact there, and the trial court's ruling was not based on a premise that
    tolling was unnecessary to the imposition of sanctions. We overrule Mr. Dugas's first
    assignment of error.
    {¶ 15} Mr. Dugas argues under his second assignment of error that the trial court
    was wrong about the res judicata effect of the Supreme Court's dismissal of his habeas
    petition for failure to state a claim. His position, in effect, would permit a prisoner to mount
    a Supreme Court challenge to the legality of his confinement on post-release control
    violation, lose that case (perhaps after making arguments obscured by tangential
    explorations), serve out the balance of his sanction, and then maintain suit against the
    Parole Authority for wrongful imprisonment. Because we will overrule Mr. Dugas's second
    assignment of error and affirm the trial court's judgment on the basis of its res judicata
    conclusion, our determination of this assignment of error will control the result of the
    appeal and we will not rehearse the other assignments.
    {¶ 16} "Under the doctrine of res judicata, 'a final judgment or decree rendered on
    the merits by a court of competent jurisdiction is a complete bar to any subsequent action
    on the same claim between the same parties or those in privity with them.' " Jones v.
    Wainwright, 
    162 Ohio St.3d 491
    , 
    2020-Ohio-4870
    , ¶ 6, quoting Brooks v. Kelly, 
    144 Ohio St.3d 322
    , 
    2015-Ohio-2805
    , ¶ 7 (and adding that therefore "[r]es judicata bars a successive
    habeas petition when the petitioner either raised or could have raised the same issues in his
    No. 21AP-491                                                                               9
    first habeas action"); see also, e.g., Dailey, 
    2020-Ohio-4519
    , at ¶ 12 (merits judgment bars
    subsequent action between parties on same claim).
    {¶ 17} As the trial court noted, Summary Judgment Decision at 5, we previously
    have held that a ruling on a habeas petition involving whether a prisoner was unlawfully
    held can estop the parties in a wrongful imprisonment suit "from relitigating the issue of
    whether [the prisoner] was unlawfully held." Stroud v. Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist.
    No. 03AP-139, 
    2004-Ohio-580
    , ¶ 23 (further noting at ¶ 25, citations omitted, that " '[f]alse
    imprisonment occurs when a person confines another intentionally " 'without lawful
    privilege and against his consent' " ' "). If Mr. Dugas is estopped from relitigating the
    lawfulness of his confinement (that is to say, the issue of whether the Parole Authority had
    privilege to hold him), his wrongful imprisonment case appropriately fails on summary
    judgment. See Summary Judgment Decision at 5-6.
    {¶ 18} Here, Mr. Dugas does not contest the identity of the parties involved, but in
    effect contests whether the Supreme Court's dismissal of his habeas petition for failure to
    state a claim was a determination on the merits of whether he was unlawfully held. He
    argues that a sua sponte dismissal for failure to state a claim never can be a dismissal on
    the merits. See, e.g., Appellant's Amended Brief at 63 (emphasis in original) ("there is
    simply NO WAY the Supreme Court itself would even consider undertaking a full merits
    determination of an Ohio offender's habeas corpus claim on a sua sponte basis; if the
    Supreme Court's intention was to in fact rule on the case's substantive merits, then that
    necessarily means the Supreme Court has determined that the action DID IN FACT state a
    claim upon which relief 'can be granted' ").
    {¶ 19} That is not our understanding of binding Supreme Court precedent. The
    Supreme Court has instructed:
    [D]ismissal grounded on a complaint's 'failure to state a claim
    upon which relief can be granted' constitutes a judgment that
    is an 'adjudication on the merits.' As a result, res judicata bars
    refiling the claim. See Hughes v. Calabrese, 
    95 Ohio St.3d 334
    ,
    
    2002 Ohio 2217
     (this court's earlier dismissal of a prohibition
    complaint barred a successive complaint brought in an
    appellate court). Because the appellate court's dismissal of the
    previous action [for failure to state a claim] invokes res
    judicata, it " ' "bars all subsequent actions based upon any claim
    No. 21AP-491                                                                                10
    arising out of the transaction or occurrence that was the subject
    matter of the previous action." ' "
    State ex rel. Arcadia Acres v. Ohio Dept. of Job & Family Servs., 
    123 Ohio St.3d 54
    , 2009-
    Ohio-4176, ¶ 15 (further citations omitted).
    {¶ 20} We have noted that this holding came less than a year after the Supreme
    Court had said in Fletcher v. Univ. Hosps. of Cleveland, 
    120 Ohio St.3d 167
    , 2008-Ohio-
    5379, ¶ 17, that "a dismissal for failure to state a claim is without prejudice except in those
    cases where the claim cannot be pleaded in any other way. Collins v. Nat'l City Bank, 2d
    Dist. No. 19884, 
    2003-Ohio-6893
    , ¶ 51." In George v. State, 10th Dist. No. 10AP-4, 2010-
    Ohio-5262, ¶ 14, we observed that "Arcadia Acres * * * clearly concludes that a dismissal,
    pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6), is with prejudice to refiling * * *." Arcadia Acres, we further
    noted, "does not distinguish nor even mention the conflicting statements in Fletcher.
    Nonetheless, Arcadia Acres represents the latest clear pronouncement by the Supreme
    Court of Ohio on the issue and as such we are bound to follow it." 
    Id.
     In keeping with the
    decision of this court in George, we again acknowledge that we are not in a position to
    overrule precedent from the Supreme Court. See also Clemons v. Ohio Bur. of Workers'
    Comp., 10th Dist. No. 13AP-691, 
    2014-Ohio-1259
    , ¶ 15 ("a dismissal for failure to state a
    claim upon which relief can be granted operates as an adjudication on the merits," citing
    Arcadia Acres and George); One Energy Ents., LLC v. Ohio Dept. of Transp., 10th Dist.
    No. 17AP-829, 
    2019-Ohio-359
    , ¶ 25 (citing Arcadia Acres and George). Further, we are
    not persuaded under the undisputed facts of this case that the earlier sort of analysis would
    avail Mr. Dugas in any event.
    {¶ 21} Mr. Dugas cites to Collins from the Second District Court of Appeals as
    invoked by Fletcher, but that case preceded Arcadia Acres. Acknowledging that his habeas
    petition had "attempted * * * to litigate the intrinsic merits of the tolling policy" that he
    seeks to put at issue in this subsequent case, Appellant's Amended Brief at 60 (emphasis
    omitted), he makes effort to pursue a rationale that could fit with Collins. He postulates
    that the Supreme Court dismissed his habeas petition for failure to state a claim because
    R.C. 2725.05 prohibits the sort of claim he made about being held unlawfully through a
    sanction for postconviction release violation. Id. at 60-61. We are not persuaded, in part
    because R.C. 2725.05 bars use of the habeas writ where the petitioner was "under process
    No. 21AP-491                                                                                11
    issued by a court or magistrate, or by virtue of the judgment or order of a court," and does
    not speak to Parole Authority findings of violation.
    {¶ 22} We find no authority that R.C. 2725.05 precludes a habeas claim in the
    context raised by Mr. Dugas. Claims that a prisoner is being held beyond the expiration of
    his sentence or contrary to constraints on the Parole Authority have been advanced through
    habeas petitions. See, e.g., Hernandez v. Kelly, 
    108 Ohio St.3d 395
    , 
    2006-Ohio-126
    , ¶ 12
    (superseded by statute on other matters) ("Hernandez is not challenging his sentencing
    entry. He is instead challenging the Adult Parole Authority's decision -- not a court's
    decision -- to place him on postrelease control and the APA's subsequent decision to
    sanction him for violating the terms of that control. Habeas corpus will lie to challenge
    certain decisions of the Adult Parole Authority because there is no remedy of appeal
    available. See State ex rel. Jackson v. McFaul (1995), 
    73 Ohio St.3d 185
    , 187"); see also,
    e.g., State ex rel. Bryant v. Warden, Franklin Med. Ctr., 10th Dist. No. 20AP-258, 2021-
    Ohio-562, ¶ 8 (dismissing habeas claim where "petitioner's maximum sentence has not yet
    expired and petitioner has not been unlawfully restrained"); compare Coleman v. Stobbs,
    
    23 Ohio St.3d 137
     (1986) (establishing two-part test for determining whether APA delay in
    holding parole revocation hearing entitles alleged violator to habeas relief).
    {¶ 23} We conclude that that the trial court was correct in finding on the undisputed
    facts that the Supreme Court's dismissal of Mr. Dugas's habeas petition for failure to state
    a claim does have preclusive, res judicata effect. The Ohio Court of Appeals for the Eleventh
    Appellate District had occasion very recently to determine that a Supreme Court dismissal
    of a writ action for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, as expressed in
    "a merit decision without an opinion," bars re-litigation of the same issue between the
    parties. State ex rel. Peaspanen v. Ashtabula Cty. Auditor's Office, 11th Dist. No. 2020-A-
    0052, 
    2022-Ohio-166
    , ¶ 1, 33-38 (quoting extensively from Arcadia Acres). So too here.
    {¶ 24} We overrule Mr. Dugas's second assignments of error and affirm the
    judgment of the Court of Claims of Ohio on that basis. Mr. Dugas's third, fourth, fifth, and
    sixth assignments of error therefore become moot and we overrule them for that reason.
    We already have overruled his first assignment of error. Further, we deny as moot a motion
    by Mr. Dugas to lengthen deadlines for any future filings in this matter, and we deny his
    No. 21AP-491                                                                         12
    two motions to review and overrule earlier procedural rulings made in the course of this
    appeal by a judge of this court.
    Motions denied; judgment affirmed.
    LUPER SCHUSTER, P.J., and JAMISON, J., concur.
    NELSON, J., retired, of the Tenth Appellate District, assigned
    to active duty under the authority of the Ohio Constitution,
    Article IV, Section 6(C).
    _________________