Lok Home v. Robbins Co.

2022 Ohio 304
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 2022
Docket110544
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 304 (Lok Home v. Robbins Co.) 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
Lok Home v. Robbins Co., 2022 Ohio 304 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as Lok Home v. Robbins Co., 2022-Ohio-304.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

LOK HOME, :

Plaintiff-Appellee, : No. 110544 v. :

ROBBINS COMPANY, ET AL., :

Defendants-Appellees. :

[Appeal by Intervenor Northern Heavy Industries Group Co., Ltd.] :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: February 3, 2022

Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Case No. CV-19-921031

Appearances:

McDonald Hopkins, LLC, Sean D. Malloy, Jennifer D. Armstrong, Michael J. Kaczka, and Maria Carr, for appellee John K. Lane, Receiver for Hall Street Company f.k.a. The Robbins Company.

Michael P. Harvey Co., L.P.A., and Michael P. Harvey; DeHeng Chen, LLC, and Dean Cho, for appellant. EILEEN T. GALLAGHER, J.:

Appellant, Northern Heavy Industries Group Co., Ltd. (“NHI”), appeals

an order denying its motion for relief from judgment and claims the following

errors:

1. The trial court erred by failing to apply a proper Ohio Civil Rule 60(B) standard to a missed status conference.

2. The trial court erred by issuing an Ohio Civil Rule 60(B) order that is inconsistent with the docket, the hearing transcript, and the evidence submitted by the parties.

3. The trial court erred by elevating the November 18, 2020 status conference, covered by a law clerk, to an evidentiary hearing which then eviscerated NHI’s claims.

4. The trial court’s 60(B) application of law to this situation was an abuse of discretion because procedural outcomes are disfavored under Ohio law.

After careful review of the record and applicable law, we affirm the trial

court’s judgment.

I. Facts and Procedural History

The Hall Street Company, formally known as The Robbins Company

(“TRC”), is based in Solon, Ohio, and is a leading manufacturer of tunnel boring

machines. In 2016, NHI purchased approximately 61% of the stock of TRC in order

to increase TRC’s market share in China. TRC subsequently lost its ability to

maintain certain accounts with U.S. banks and suffered financial difficulties. In

2019, TRC’s president, Lok Home (“Home”), sought and obtained a cognovit

judgment against TRC in the amount of $13,980,068.12, plus interest due on certain promissory notes. To carry the judgment into effect, Home filed a motion for an

order appointing a receiver (the “Receivership Motion”) to manage TRC’s daily

operations. The court appointed the receiver on October 7, 2019, over NHI’s

objections, following a status conference attended by attorney Dean Cho (“Cho”), of

counsel for DeHeng Chen LLC (“DeHeng Chen”). Cho is not licensed to practice law

in Ohio; Cho and DeHeng Chen maintain offices in New York, New York.

The receiver sought court approval for a deadline by which parties-in-

interest had to file claims so that the receiver could collect, assess, and evaluate all

claims against TRC. The court entered an order establishing July 31, 2020, as the

deadline for filing all claims against TRC that accrued prior to the receiver’s

appointment.

NHI, through counsel, submitted a timely claim for an amount totaling

$14,215,256.00. The receiver objected to NHI’s claim and sent the claim objection

notice (“Claim Objection”) to two email addresses, including

information@dcclaw.com. (See Certificate of Service within the Objection of

Receiver to Claim filed by Northern Heavy Industries Group Co., Ltd., filed Oct. 27,

2020.) The receiver also sent the Claim Objection by regular mail to DeHeng Chen’s

New York address and to NHI’s address in Liaoning, China. The Claim Objection

provided the following instructions for filing responses:

To contest any matter in this Objection, the Claimant must file and serve a written response (a “Response”) to this Objection. Every Response must be filed with the Court and served upon the Receiver’s counsel, as listed below, so that the Response is filed and received no later than November 10, 2020. (Emphasis added.) (Objection of receiver to claim filed by NHI at p.11.) The Claim

Objection also contained the following warning:

If the Claimant fails to file and serve a Response in a timely manner pursuant to this procedure, the Receiver may present to the Court an appropriate order disallowing and expunging NHI’s claim as set forth herein without further notice or hearing.

(Objection of receiver to claim filed by NHI at p.12.) The Claim Objection included

a proposed order, marked as “Exhibit D,” sustaining the receiver’s objection and

disallowing NHI’s claims.

Two days later, on October 29, 2020, the receiver filed a “Notice of

Opportunity to Object to Objection of Receiver to Claim” (“Claims Hearing Notice”),

indicating there would be a hearing on claim objections on November 18, 2020. The

notice states, in relevant part:

At the status conference held in the above-captioned matter on October 20, 2020, the Court set a hearing on claim objections for November 18, 2020 at 9:30 a.m. Responses or objections to the Objection must be filed and served on or before November 10, 2020, and must comply with the instructions set forth in the Objection. If there are no objections to the Motion, the Court may enter an order sustaining the Objection and disallowing the Claim after expiration of the objection period.

Both the Claim Objection and the Claims Hearing Notice were electronically filed

and publicly available on the court’s docket.

NHI did not file a response to the receiver’s objection. Instead, on

November 10, 2020, NHI faxed an affidavit of its chairman, Xuemin Wang (“Wang

Affidavit”) to a judge, who was not presiding over the receivership. NHI also

emailed a copy of the Wang affidavit to certain parties, including the receiver. The court held a claims hearing via Zoom on November 18, 2020. At

the start of the proceeding, the trial court asked the parties to introduce themselves

for the record. NHI’s counsel failed to appear, but it was later learned that a law

clerk of DeHeng Chen was present. The parties were unaware of the intern’s

attendance because he did not identify himself at the roll call, did not turn on his

camera, and remained silent throughout the proceeding.

Counsel for the receiver acknowledged on the record that he had

received the Wang Affidavit via email but noted that NHI never filed the Wang

Affidavit or a response to the receiver’s objection on the docket. Because NHI did

not file a response to the Claim Objection and NHI made no argument at the hearing

in opposition to the Claim Objection, the court reviewed the Claim Objection on its

merits and entered an order, dated November 18, 2020, sustaining the Claim

Objection and disallowing NHI’s claim.

Two months later, on January 27, 2021, NHI, through counsel, filed a

motion for relief from judgment pursuant to Civ.R. 60(B). NHI argued that

counsel’s failure to file a response to the Claim Objection and to attend the claims

hearing constituted excusable neglect because (1) NHI’s counsel was unable to

electronically file its response with the trial court, and (2) the receiver’s counsel did

not provide “direct notice” of the Claim Objection to NHI. NHI also asserted that it

had meritorious claims and defenses that justified relief under Civ.R. 60(B).

The trial court held a two-day hearing on NHI’s motion for relief from

judgment.

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2022 Ohio 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lok-home-v-robbins-co-ohioctapp-2022.