Internatl. Total Servs., Inc. v. Estate of Nichols

2019 Ohio 4572
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 2019
Docket107751
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2019 Ohio 4572 (Internatl. Total Servs., Inc. v. Estate of Nichols) 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
Internatl. Total Servs., Inc. v. Estate of Nichols, 2019 Ohio 4572 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as Internatl. Total Servs., Inc. v. Estate of Nichols, 2019-Ohio-4572.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

INTERNATIONAL TOTAL SERVICES, : INC., ET AL.,

Plaintiffs-Appellants, : No. 107751 v. :

ESTATE OF ROBERT NICHOLS, :

Defendant-Appellee. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: November 7, 2019

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CV-16-858361

Appearances:

LoPresti, Marcovy & Marotta, L.L.P., Timothy A. Marcovy, and Thomas P. Marotta, for appellants.

Heben Law, L.L.C., and Edward J. Heben, Jr., for appellee.

KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, J.:

Plaintiffs-appellants, International Total Services, Inc. (“ITS”) and

Flight Services and Systems, Inc. (“FSS”) (collectively “appellants”) appeal the trial

court’s decision granting relief from judgment in favor of defendant-appellee, Estate of Robert Nichols (“Nichols”).1 For the reasons that follow, we affirm the

trial court’s decision.

In Internatl. Total Servs., Inc. v. Nichols, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No.

105182, 2017-Ohio-9448 (“Nichols I”), this court set forth the relevant background

and procedural history:

ITS and FSS provide passenger services, ground handling, security and safety services, terminal services, and charter services to different airlines at various airports throughout the country. FSS is a wholly owned subsidiary of ITS.

In February 2016, ITS and FSS filed a complaint against [Robert] Nichols alleging breach of fiduciary duty and seeking enhanced damages under the faithless servant doctrine. Nichols was FSS’s former general manager of operations at Logan Airport in Boston, Massachusetts. Nichols was also a minority shareholder of ITS.

ITS and FSS’s complaint essentially alleges that Nichols made false statements about FSS, its chairman-CEO, and its president in an affidavit he submitted in support of his former coworker, Joseph Travers’s (“Travers”), retaliatory discharge suit in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. See Travers v. Flight Servs. & Sys., D.Mass. No. 11-10175-GAO, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31667 (Mar. 7, 2013). ITS and FSS attached Nichols’s affidavit to their complaint.

In Nichols’s Civ.R. 60(B) motion, he alleges that the statements in his affidavit were truthful and that he was illegally terminated by FSS because he would not fire Travers. Travers was the lead class action plaintiff in Fair Labor Standards Act litigation against FSS in Massachusetts. In his Civ.R. 60(B) motion, Nichols reaffirmed the validity of his affidavit. Nichols claims that appellees filed the instant complaint in retaliation for submitting the affidavit in Travers’s retaliation suit.

1 The Estate of Robert Nichols was substituted as the party-defendant after Robert Nichols passed away on November 16, 2017. In his motion, Nichols states that he had retained counsel (“original counsel”) in the summer of 2015 to collect stock redemption money due to him from ITS “as a result of [the] unjust termination of [his] employment [with FSS and] pursuant to the * * * shareholder agreement relating to the minority shareholder stock [he] owned[.]” Nichols states that he contacted his original counsel after he was served with appellee[s’] complaint in March 2016 and retained original counsel to represent him in the present case.

Nichols states, and the docket reflects, that his original counsel filed a stipulated leave to plead, and the trial court extended his answer deadline until May 6, 2016. The trial court extended the answer deadline once more until May 16, 2016. However, no answer and counterclaim was filed by Nichols or by counsel on his behalf.

On May 17, 2016, appellees filed a motion for default judgment. A default hearing was set for May 31, 2016. The docket reflects that no response to the default motion was filed and that neither Nichols nor counsel appeared at the scheduled default hearing. On June 1, 2016, the trial court entered a default judgment against Nichols and in favor of appellees in the amount of $564,912.79. The trial court’s docket reflects that notice of the default judgment entry was sent by email to counsel for all parties only.

On October 13, 2016, Nichols filed a motion for relief from judgment pursuant to Civ.R. 60(B) through new counsel. In the body of this motion, Nichols states that he last spoke with his original counsel on May 16, 2016. At that time, original counsel told Nichols he would file an answer and counterclaim on Nichols’s behalf. Nichols further states that after this conversation, original counsel did not respond to his communications and that in September 2016, he contacted and retained new counsel because he had not received any response from original counsel for several months. Nichols claims he assumed his original counsel had been diligently working on the instant matter and he was unaware of the status of the case until new counsel informed him of the fact that a default judgment had been entered against him. Nichols did not file an affidavit in support of his motion, but attached to his motion the federal court docket of the Travers litigation.

Upon receipt of Nichols’s motion for relief from default judgment, the trial court set a deadline for ITS and FSS to respond. ITS and FSS responded to Nichols’s motion and the trial court denied the motion without holding a hearing the following day. Id. at ¶ 2-10.

Nichols appealed the trial court’s decision. In Nichols I, this court

concluded that “Nichols’s grounds for relief from judgment appear on the face of

the record, and therefore, the trial court should have granted Nichols’s motion for

relief from judgment as a matter of law.” Id. at ¶ 22. However, this court also

concluded that “the trial court erred in denying Nichols’s motion for relief from

judgment without any evidentiary hearing.” Id. at ¶ 30.2 The judgment was

reversed and the case was remanded to the trial court.

Following remand, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing

on August 14 and September 5, 2018, where Nichols (1) asked the court to take

judicial notice of the court’s own docket as evidence of his original counsel’s

inexcusable neglect of the case, and (2) presented two affidavits of Robert Nichols

that were prepared and executed prior to his death. Appellants objected to the

admission of the affidavits on the grounds that they were hearsay and no exception

existed to warrant their admission. The trial court excluded the affidavits, but

agreed to take judicial notice of its own docket. Based solely on the court’s docket,

the trial court granted Nichols’s Civ.R. 60(B) motion for relief from judgment. The

court stated:

2 In State ex rel. Estate of Nichols v. Russo, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 107508, 2018- Ohio-3416, ¶ 9, 16, 18, this court noted that arguably these passages from Nichols I create an ambiguity in the decision. Nevertheless, this court dismissed Nichols’s claims for writs of prohibition and mandamus because Nichols had an adequate remedy at law — an evidentiary hearing would be held and he could appeal from that resulting judgment. Id. at ¶ 12-13, 16, 18. [The court is] going to accept the docket, because that’s a public record, and clearly shows that [original counsel] was not doing his job. So, I will grant the 60(B), but the affidavits are excluded. This is solely on the docket. * * * [T]he docket does show inexcusable neglect. It’s hard to look at the docket and not know that [original counsel] was not doing anything on the case.

(Tr. 39, Sept. 5, 2018 hearing.)

Appellants now appeal, raising as their sole assignment of error that

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2019 Ohio 4572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/internatl-total-servs-inc-v-estate-of-nichols-ohioctapp-2019.