Jallaq v. Jallaq

2020 Ohio 5402
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 2020
Docket19AP-602
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2020 Ohio 5402 (Jallaq v. Jallaq) 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
Jallaq v. Jallaq, 2020 Ohio 5402 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as Jallaq v. Jallaq, 2020-Ohio-5402.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Musa Jallaq, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, :

v. : No. 19AP-602 (C.P.C. No. 17CV-3025) Mohammad Jallaq et al., : (REGULAR CALENDAR) Defendants-Appellees, :

(Marcelle Rose Anthony, J.D., L.L.M., :

Defendant-Appellant). :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on November 24, 2020

On brief: Marcelle Rose Anthony, LLC and Marcelle Rose Anthony, for appellant. Argued: Marcelle Rose Anthony.

On brief: Hrabcak & Co., L.P.A., and Gregory A. Wetzel, for appellee. Argued: Gregory A. Wetzel.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

BEATTY BLUNT, J.

{¶ 1} This is an appeal from a trial court order adopting a magistrate's decision that imposes a monetary sanction on defendants' counsel and respondent-appellant, Marcelle R. Anthony (hereinafter "Anthony"), in the amount of $13,718.40. The sanction is in the favor of plaintiff's counsel and movants-appellees, Moyer Law Offices, LLC., Attorney Stephen A. Moyer, Esq., and Attorney Gregory A. Wetzel, Esq. (hereinafter "movants"), who had been named as third-party defendants in a complaint filed by Anthony on behalf of the defendants. The named parties in the case, plaintiff Musa Jallaq and defendants Mohammad Jallaq et al. are not parties to this appeal, as they have settled their dispute. 2 No. 19AP-602 The only issues for this court to decide relate to the trial court's award of sanctions against Anthony. {¶ 2} On March 28, 2017, movants filed the lawsuit that gives this appeal its caption on behalf of their client Musa Jallaq, who was a minority member of a limited liability company. The claims filed were against the managing member Mohammad Jallaq, the company itself, and an affiliated company, and asserted that the company had improperly withheld distributions. Anthony represented the defendants in that lawsuit, and on April 7, 2017, she filed a third-party complaint in the lawsuit directly against movants Moyer Law Offices, L.L.C., Stephen A. Moyer, Esq, and Gregory A. Wetzel, Esq., asserting claims for discrimination under 42 U.S.C. 1981, state and federal racketeering violations, and civil liability for aiding and abetting criminal acts. Movants obtained separate counsel, but Anthony voluntarily dismissed the third-party complaint less than 2 weeks later, on April 19, 2017. The underlying lawsuit itself was settled shortly thereafter, and dismissed on May 12, 2017. {¶ 3} One week later, movants filed the motion for sanctions that gives rise to this appeal, against both Mohammad Jallaq and Anthony. Hearings on the motion were held on November 30, 2017 and February 13, 2018. Following the close of evidence, movants dismissed their motion as to Mohammad Jallaq, and chose to proceed solely against Anthony. {¶ 4} The third-party complaint Anthony filed asserts that movants "hate or seek to destroy Arab-Americans or people or business owned by or the rate or nation origin of Arab [sic]," that the request for discovery that had been filed by the movants on behalf of their client Musa Jallaq "discriminate[s] against members and owners of [the defendant LLC], that movants "aided and abetted" their client in criminal acts and movants themselves violated R.C. 2923.32 and federal racketeering law, that movants taught their clients to prepare legal documents with "the intention of destroying business, property[,] and wealth of whistleblowers in the Arab-American community" in violation of racketeering laws, and that movants advised their client to criminally trespass and burglarize the offices of the defendant L.L.C. The third-party complaint sought $85 million dollars in damages plus punitive damages. (Mag.'s Decision at 6-7). At a hearing on the motion for sanctions, Anthony's client Muhammad Jallaq testified that he had not 3 No. 19AP-602 authorized the filing of the third-party complaint. (Tr. at 361-62.) Anthony then contended her own client had perjured himself. Id. {¶ 5} On June 13, 2019, the magistrate issued a 40-page decision granting movants' motion for sanctions. The magistrate concluded that Anthony failed to present any evidence to support the claims in the complaint, that she had no good-faith basis to believe in the veracity of the claims, and that the claims were not warranted under existing law, and moreover could not be supported by a good-faith argument for an extension, modification, or reversal of the law or for the establishment of new law. The magistrate observed: [T]he purely fantastic nature of her claims was exposed once it was clear that [Ms. Anthony's client] Muhammad Jallaq ardently disapproved of [the third-party complaint's] contents. In this respect, Third-Party Defendants have insisted that [Ms. Anthony] advanced claims that she knew could never be substantiated. The undersigned is compelled to agree * * * the information adduced at the hearing failed to even provide a scintilla of evidence in support of such claims when directed at Third-Party Defendants * * * [d]espite holding a two-day hearing, including rigorous cross-examination of witnesses, the Magistrate was not left with any factual findings that form a basis or justification for these causes of action against [the third-party defendants] * * *. After a review of the hearing evidence, with emphasis on the testimony of Ms. Anthony and [her client] Muhammad Jallaq, the Magistrate is compelled to conclude that the Third-Party Complaint cannot survive even the subjective good faith standard. Based on the foregoing findings, it is determined that while Ms. Anthony read and drafted this pleading, it cannot be said that she harbored good grounds to support it to the best of her knowledge, information and belief.

(Mag.'s Decision at 30-33.) Accordingly, the magistrate found that sanctions against Anthony were warranted under R.C. 2323.51 and Civ.R. 11. Id. at 36. Based on the evidence of the attorneys and fee experts presented at the hearing and following "the well-recognized lodestar method" for calculating fee awards, the magistrate awarded movants sanctions against Anthony in the amount of $13,718.40. Id. at 39. {¶ 6} Anthony filed 32 separate objections to the magistrate's decision. In her objections, she reasserted most of the same factual and legal claims she presented at the hearing. She further suggested that movants may have "preapproved or wrote in whole or 4 No. 19AP-602 in part the Magistrate's Decision of June 13, 2019, and it was not the separate independent work of the [the] Magistrate * * *." (Am./Supp. Objs. to Mag. Decision Filed June 13, 2019 at 24.) {¶ 7} On September 4, 2019, the trial court issued an 11-page order overruling all objections and adopting the magistrate's decision. The trial court stated that the suggestion that movants may have drafted the magistrate's decision: is an outlandish claim that has no basis in fact. The Court is stunned that Defense Counsel would allege such wrongdoing against this Court's Magistrate, who has shown nothing but fair and reasonable attention to the Motion for Sanctions, along with writing his decision without any outside influence. Ultimately, Defense Counsel is treading a very fine ethical line in her motion practice and would be wise to closely examine her filings for accuracy before submitting them in the future.

(Order Adopting Mag.'s Decision & Overruling Am./Supp. Objs. to Mag.'s Decision at 3.) (hereinafter Order) at 10. This timely appeal followed. Anthony now asserts eight separate assignments of error with the trial court's decision. {¶ 8} We review the trial court's decision to overrule objections and adopt the magistrate's decision for an abuse of discretion.

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