Balwas v. Balwas, Unpublished Decision (9-7-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 7, 2000
DocketNo. 75946.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Balwas v. Balwas, Unpublished Decision (9-7-2000) (Balwas v. Balwas, Unpublished Decision (9-7-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Balwas v. Balwas, Unpublished Decision (9-7-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

This is an appeal from an order of Domestic Relations Judge James P. Celebrezze that adopted the decision of Magistrate James R. Tanner Jr. Appellant Stanley Balwas (Balwas) claims it was error to deny his motions to show cause and not find appellee Donna M. Balwas (Ms. Balwas) in contempt of court. He asserts procedural errors during the hearing and suggests it was improper for the judge to refuse to take additional evidence prior to issuing the order adopting the magistrate's decision. We disagree and affirm.

The Balwases were divorced in October 1995, through a judgment entry which, inter alia, required Ms. Balwas to return a stamp and coin collection that Balwas had acquired over a life-time. In November 1, 1995, Balwas' lawyer picked up stamps and coins from the office of Ms. Balwas' lawyer and endorsed a receipt. On November 19, 1997, two years later, Balwas pro se filed a Motion For Contempt alleging Ms. Balwas violated the mandates of the divorce decree when she failed to transfer a bank account, divide the household goods and specifically charging that she sold the stamps and coin collection.1 Ms. Balwas responded by affidavit refuting the charges, averred she gave the stamps and coins to her lawyer and attached the itemized receipt signed by Balwas' lawyer, acknowledging receipt of same.

On May 26, 1998, a hearing was held on the motion with Balwas proceeding pro se and Ms. Balwas represented by her lawyer. Prior to the hearing, the magistrate granted Ms. Balwas' oral motion in limine to exclude some of Balwas' proposed witnesses because he failed to file a witness list required by local rule. He was permitted to call his sister, Janine Rapo, as a witness, and to testify on his own behalf but was not allowed to call his nephew, Adrian Rapo, nor his divorce lawyer, David Mack, as witnesses. It appears that Mack was not present on the day of the hearing.

Ms. Rapo testified that she recalled her brother had a stamp collection and, while she could not recall how large it was, contended that she believed Ms. Balwas had not returned all of the stamps. From the record, it was apparent that she was aware of the stamp collection prior to the divorce, but was not aware of which stamps had been returned and testified only that she had seen a lunch bag of stamps that she believed Mack had delivered to her brother. Balwas had shown some stamps to his sister but did not offer the stamps as evidence. He did not establish, even through his own testimony, the size of his collection, what stamps were missing or even that the returned stamps did not constitute his entire collection. His testimony consisted of the following:

A. All I'm begging the court to do is help me get my stamps back. And this whole thing shouldn't have even happened if she would have abided by the divorce decree.

We wouldn't have to be here, wasting the Court's time and my time. And everybody else that has to take time off from work. Thank you.

The only evidence Balwas attempted to offer was a September 3, 1996 letter written to him in which Mack stated that, a few days earlier, Ms. Balwas stopped at his office and, among other things, told him she sold the stamp collection to pay doctor bills that had not been paid by Blue Cross.2 Ms. Balwas' lawyer objected to the letter, claiming lack of foundation and hearsay and the magistrate sustained the objection and excluded the letter from evidence.

Ms. Balwas testified that she delivered the stamps and coins to her lawyer's office in compliance with the divorce decree. Her cross-examination by Balwas involved questions about albums but failed to establish her possession or sale of the stamps. The magistrate asked a single question:

THE MAGISTRATE: Did you tell anybody that you sold some stamps of his?

THE WITNESS: No. But I was very upset at a time when there was a bill that was not being paid because my ex-husband had gotten the money and refused to pay my doctor.

And I could have said that I was going to sell the stamps, but I don't recall stating that I absolutely sold them. That's it.

Although he was given an opportunity to follow up on this line of questioning, Balwas could not establish when a sale (or prospective sale) of the stamps occurred. It remained unclear whether the statement in the excluded letter referred to events before or after the October 1995 divorce decree.

The magistrate denied Balwas' motion and, in his findings of fact and conclusions of law, found that he failed to show that Ms. Balwas had not returned his complete stamp collection and had failed to meet his burden. Through an attorney, Balwas filed objections to the magistrate's decision. The judge overruled the objections and adopted the magistrate's decision. Balwas raises the following assignments of error:

I. THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED PREJUDICIAL ERROR AND VIOLATED THE LAW WHEN IT DENIED STANLEY BALWAS HIS RIGHT TO PRESENT WITNESSES' TESTIMONY.

Balwas contends that Loc.R. 12 of the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County, Domestic Relations Division, should have been interpreted to allow him to call witnesses without providing a witness list. The rule states the following:

No party shall be permitted to call any witness, except rebuttal witnesses, whose name was not included on the witness list or any supplement thereto, unless good cause can be shown as to why the need for such witness was not known to the party until after the time for supplementing his witness list expired, or unless the identity of the witness was otherwise known to the opposing party. The court may however, in its discretion allow either party to call any witness whose name is not included on a witness list, when doing so will serve the interests of justice.

The magistrate exercised his discretion and allowed both parties to testify, as well as Rapo, who offered testimony about the stamp collection. Balwas contends he should have been permitted to have his nephew and his attorney testify on the basis that the identity of the witness was otherwise known to the opposing party because of Ms. Balwas' prior acquaintance with both men.

One cannot show that the identity of a witness was otherwise known to a party by merely showing that the party was acquainted with the witness. The question is whether the party was previously aware that the person was going to testify as a witness in the proceedings. Balwas does not argue that Ms. Balwas or her lawyer knew he intended to call his nephew and attorney as witnesses, and nothing in the record reveals their awareness of his intentions regarding witnesses. He asserts the magistrate should have allowed him to proceed in spite of his failure to file a witness list, invoking the platitude that cases should be decided on their merits, rather than procedural technicalities.

The failure to file a witness list, however, is not a technicality because principles of fairness dictate that each party be given an opportunity to prepare for the witnesses and evidence that will be admitted in court. We are not convinced that the procedural rule in question presents an unnecessary or overly burdensome stumbling block that denied Balwas a fair opportunity to present his case on the merits. The rule is designed to ensure fairness, and does not present an undue burden in the general case, and he has failed to show any reason why it constituted an undue or unnecessary burden in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
Balwas v. Balwas, Unpublished Decision (9-7-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balwas-v-balwas-unpublished-decision-9-7-2000-ohioctapp-2000.