Heijer v. Lux, Unpublished Decision (4-22-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 1999
DocketNOS. 73886/73887
StatusUnpublished

This text of Heijer v. Lux, Unpublished Decision (4-22-1999) (Heijer v. Lux, Unpublished Decision (4-22-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Heijer v. Lux, Unpublished Decision (4-22-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION
In this action originally instituted by appellee Charles den Heijer for judgment on two cognovit notes, appellants Anthony R. Lux and Springer Lithographic, Inc.1 appeal from the trial court order adopting the report of the special master appointed by the court to conduct an evidentiary hearing pursuant to Civ.R. 53. The order appealed from essentially granted judgment to appellees den Heijer and the accounting firm of Ivan D'Amico, Inc.2 on all claims eventually alleged below.

Appellant asserts in his many assignments of error that the trial court's order is based upon improper evidentiary rulings made by the special master, is contrary to the evidence and, further, disregards "bias" shown by the special master. After a thorough review of the record, this court disagrees with appellant's assertions and therefore affirms the trial court's order of judgment.

The record reflects appellant became involved in the printing business in 1982 when he purchased Walker Printing, Inc., a "brokering company."3 A year later, appellant obtained a partner and began a company he named Great Lakes Graphics, which did "sales and production" of printing work. Appellee, who had been the accountant for Walker Printing prior to appellant's purchase of that company, agreed with appellant to continue his services; later, appellee aided appellant in "setting up the books" for appellant's new business concern.

Appellee's services for Walker and Great Lakes Graphics included the "preparation of annual tax returns, the corporate returns, city, franchise, [and] personal property, [and] the preparation of a financial statement." Appellee's duties included neither performing the day-to-day bookkeeping for appellant's businesses nor completing either sales or payroll tax forms for the businesses.

In 1986, appellant decided to "give up the brokering part" of his business and to "develop a printing facility." Therefore, he purchased some equipment through Walker Printing, hired some new employees and notified Walker Printing's customers of the new company, which he named Springer Lithograph, Inc. Appellant was the sole shareholder for this company. Springer "leased" Walker Printing's equipment and used some of Great Lakes Printing's employees to conduct its operations. Although appellee continued his accounting services for this new venture of appellant's, once again he did not perform either day-to-day bookkeeping or complete sales and payroll tax forms for Springer.

In March, 1987 appellants Great Lakes Graphics partner became dissatisfied with appellant's use of some of Great Lakes Graphic's employees to do work for Springer. As a result, appellant at that time hired a new bookkeeper for Springer.

Appellee continued his accounting services with the understanding that he would "review" the new bookkeeper's work when preparing Springer's financial statements. Appellee was unaware the new bookkeeper neglected to file sales and payroll tax returns for Springer. Eventually, however, appellee began to notice "irregularities or errors" in the documents she provided to him. Whenever appellee became aware of obvious posting or mathematical errors, he made appropriate corrections to Springer's financial statements. Appellant did not request monthly financial statements for Springer in 1987; therefore, appellee prepared only an annual statement for that year.

In 1988, Springer began "receiving numerous letters regarding sales tax assessments." Appellant requested appellee to "[t]ake care of this problem." Appellee began a correspondence with the tax authorities on Springer's behalf.

In late 1988, at appellant's request and based upon the figures provided by the new bookkeeper, appellee began preparing financial statements for Springer on a monthly basis. The record reflects the company's financial statement for September 1988 showed a net income of $65,766.61. In October 1988, the net income figure was $134,555.38. The following month, the net income was $101,507.74; however, in December 1988, the figure had dropped to $30,853.12.

Appellee's concern over this discrepancy in net income led him to suggest to appellant that appellant hire a "third party" to "help straighten out the receivable postings for 1988." Appellant followed this suggestion in January 1989.

Appellant's new employee, Mary Lou Adams, did not try to "correct" the "original work papers" prepared by Springer's bookkeeper; rather, she obtained the actual monthly invoices and cash receipts and began to "repost" them in order to obtain a 1988 accounts receivable balance for the company. By the time Adams completed her work in late April 1989, both appellant and appellee became aware that the company's "receivables were overstated" in the 1988 monthly statements. Appellee subsequently completed the 1988 federal tax return for Springer in the fall of 1989; it displayed a net profit for the company in 1988 of only $33,012.00.

During 1989, Springer experienced a "drop" in sales as the general economy slowed and its customers' orders decreased. Furthermore, Springer made a number of "payments" to either appellant, himself, or the other companies appellant owned; these payments eventually totalled "99.7 percent of the gross profits" of the company for that year.

This combination of events led to both "cash flow" and "tax problems" for Springer. By September 1989, appellant, as Springer's owner and sole shareholder, faced substantial assessments from the Internal Revenue Service and the Ohio Department of Taxation. Appellee proposed three "plans" to appellant that were designed to aid Springer overcome its problems; in all of them, he noted a "total" of over $65,000 was needed to finance Springer.

By this time, appellant and appellee had become "friends." At trial, appellee stated appellant "asked" him for a loan. In the fall of 1989, over the course of several weeks, appellee gave appellant four personal checks in amounts that totalled $65,000.00. The checks were deposited by appellant into Springer's bank account. On October 5, 1989 appellant signed a cognovit note in the amount of $30,000 made payable to appellee. On December 21, 1989 appellant signed another cognovit note in the amount of $30,000 made payable to appellee.

In January 1990, using a Springer check, appellant made a payment to appellee on the "loan." The loan was listed as a liability on Springer's balance sheets; eventually, however, it was indicated simply as part of a debt owed by the company to appellant.

By the end of 1990, the relationship between appellant and appellee was strained. Appellant engaged another accounting firm to help him make business decisions; however, Springer continued to have financial problems. On April 4, 1992 the company filed a bankruptcy petition in the United States Federal Court. Appellee was not listed as a creditor of Springer on the petition.

On April 21, 1993 appellee filed in the trial court a complaint demanding judgment against appellant on the cognovit notes; on it, appellant, by and through counsel, had signed a "confession of judgment."4 However, on May 19, 1993, after appellee had obtained the judgment, appellant filed a motion to vacate the judgment pursuant to Civ.R. 60(B)(5).

On August 31, 1993, while his motion was pending, appellant filed a separate complaint against appellee, alleging therein claims of accounting malpractice, breach of contract, fraud and intentional infliction of emotional distress.5

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Heijer v. Lux, Unpublished Decision (4-22-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heijer-v-lux-unpublished-decision-4-22-1999-ohioctapp-1999.