Cleveland Mun. Court Criminal Div. v. Edgewater Park Manor, L.L.C.

2025 Ohio 5139
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 13, 2025
Docket114829
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 5139 (Cleveland Mun. Court Criminal Div. v. Edgewater Park Manor, L.L.C.) 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
Cleveland Mun. Court Criminal Div. v. Edgewater Park Manor, L.L.C., 2025 Ohio 5139 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as Cleveland Mun. Court Criminal Div. v. Edgewater Park Manor, L.L.C., 2025-Ohio-5139.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

CLEVELAND MUNICIPAL COURT : CRIMINAL DIVISION,

Plaintiff-Appellee, : No. 114829 v. :

EDGEWATER PARK MANOR L.L.C., :

Defendant-Appellant. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: DISMISSED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: November 13, 2025

Criminal Appeal from the Cleveland Municipal Court Case No. 2023-CVH-013041

Appearances:

Mark D. Griffin, Cleveland Director of Law, James R. Russell, Jr., Chief Assistant Director of Law, and Caroline E. Lettrich, Assistant Director of Law, for appellee.

Powers Friedman Linn, PLL and Rachel E. Cohen, Thomas P. Owen, for appellant.

EMANUELLA D. GROVES, J.:

Appellant Edgewater Park Manor, L.L.C., (“Edgewater”) appeals

from the decision of the trial court denying its motion to vacate a criminal penalty judgment transfer from the Cleveland Municipal Court Housing Division (“Housing

Court”). For the reasons that follow, we dismiss the appeal as moot.

This case originally started with a citation issued to Edgewater in

January 2022 for a minor misdemeanor health-code violation for its property on

Lake Avenue in the City of Cleveland. Multiple summons were issued between

January 2022 and September 2022. A summons was issued, and the Housing Court

docket noted delivery to Edgewater in September 2022. A subsequent docket entry

in October noted “unclaimed.” Edgewater failed to appear for any of the subsequent

proceedings. In August 2023, the Housing Court entered an order documenting the

history of the case and scheduling the case for trial five days from the date of the

order. The order notified Edgewater that if a representative failed to appear, the

Housing Court “shall use all methods and means available by all applicable State

statutes and local ordinances to compel the defendant’s presence.”

Edgewater failed to appear for trial. The Housing Court issued

contempt findings with per diem sanctions in the amount of $1,000 per day. Fifty-

two days later, the Housing Court ordered the clerk of courts to enter a civil

judgment for collections in the amount of $56,000.1 The Housing Court

subsequently filed a criminal penalty judgment transfer in Cleveland M.C. No. 2023-

CVH-013041 (the “collections action”) from which this appeal is taken. In January

1 Ultimately, this contempt finding was for Edgewater’s alleged failure to appear

when the docket showed it was never served regarding a minor misdemeanor citation for which the maximum organizational fine is $1000. R.C. 2929.31(A)(12). Thus, this failure to appear resulted in a $56,000 judgment lien and an additional $16,000 collection fee when it was transferred to the civil docket. 2024, counsel for the municipal court filed a judgment lien in Cuyahoga C.P. No. JL-

24-193953 (the “judgment lien case”) against Edgewater in the amount of $72,907,

including costs and fees.

Counsel for Edgewater filed a notice of appearance in October 2024

in the Housing Court case. That case was resolved when Edgewater paid the waiver,

acknowledging responsibility for the health code violation. Edgewater did not

appeal that case. In November 2024, Edgewater filed a motion to vacate judgment

in the collections action. Edgewater argued that (1) the trial court issued a void

judgment, noting in part that the amount of the judgment was greater than the

$15,000 monetary jurisdiction of a municipal court; and (2) that the signatories to

the affidavit commencing the action signed sworn documents in violation of

R.C. 2921.13(A)(13). Edgewater asked that the trial court vacate the judgment and

dismiss the matter.

The trial court denied the motion. Specifically, it found that the action

was filed pursuant to R.C. 2329.02 and, as such, it could not vacate the Housing

Court’s original judgment unless it was void. The trial court further noted that a

judgment is void if it lacks subject-matter or personal jurisdiction. Accordingly, the

trial court refused to address any of Edgewater’s arguments that were outside the

jurisdictional questions. The trial court rejected Edgewater’s subject-matter-

jurisdiction argument finding that monetary jurisdiction of the Housing Court was

not limited to $15,000, and it was allowed to pursue the action. Further, the trial

court found that Edgewater did not challenge service of the underlying judgment and, therefore, did not raise personal jurisdiction. Accordingly, the trial court

denied the motion finding that Edgewater did not establish that the Housing

Division order was void and, therefore, that the court did not have subject-matter-

jurisdiction over the motion.

Edgewater appeals that decision.

In its first assignment of error, Edgewater argues that the trial court

erred when it failed to grant the motion to vacate because the judgment created in

the collections case was void. Specifically, it argued that (a) the municipal court

could not sue or be sued in its own name, (b) the trial court lacked jurisdiction to

issue a judgment greater than $15,000, and (c) it was never served in this matter.

In the second assignment of error, although Edgewater did not file an appeal in the

Housing Court Division case, it challenged the contempt finding, the lack of a

hearing, the amount of the per diem sanction, and the authority of the Housing

Division to submit that judgment to collections. Edgewater asks this court to reverse

the trial court’s denial of its motion to vacate, grant the motion, and order the court

to satisfy and release the lien in the judgment lien case, and dismiss the collections

action in its entirety.

During oral argument for this case, the appellee notified this court

that Edgewater filed a motion in the Housing Division case, which potentially

mooted this appeal. In order to determine the accuracy of this claim, we reviewed the online dockets for the Housing Court case, the collections case, and the

judgment-lien case and take judicial notice of the facts contained in those dockets.2

In September 2025, Edgewater filed a motion to purge the contempt

order, vacate per diem sanctions, and release the lien in the Housing Court case. On

September 17, 2025, the Housing Court filed a judgment entry and order finding

that there was an inconsistency with respect to service, and that

[g]iven the irregularity, inaccuracy or inconsistency between the docket return and the return reported on the actual envelope, the Court finds that Defendant may not have received notice of the hearing and its failure to appear was not deliberate.

Noting that Edgewater resolved the underlying citation, the Housing

Court vacated all civil contempt sanctions and civil judgments associated with the

case and ordered that any liens issued against Edgewater or its property be released.

The Housing Court ordered the clerk of courts to file a copy of the

order in the collections action, which appears on that case’s docket. Simultaneously,

the court’s counsel filed a release of judgment lien in the judgment-lien case noting

that the lien was “released, satisfied, and discharged.”

“‘Generally, courts will not resolve issues that are moot.’” State v.

Baird, 2020-Ohio-2717, ¶ 6 (8th Dist.), quoting State v. Marcum, 2015-Ohio-5237,

¶ 6 (10th Dist.), citing In re L.W., 2006-Ohio-644, ¶ 11 (10th Dist.). An appeal is

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 5139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-mun-court-criminal-div-v-edgewater-park-manor-llc-ohioctapp-2025.