Ossai-Charles v. Charles

935 N.E.2d 944, 188 Ohio App. 3d 503
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 2, 2010
DocketNos. CA2010-01-009 and CA2010-02-011
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 935 N.E.2d 944 (Ossai-Charles v. Charles) 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
Ossai-Charles v. Charles, 935 N.E.2d 944, 188 Ohio App. 3d 503 (Ohio Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Ringland, Judge.

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant and cross-appellee, Gregory Charles, appeals from an order of the Warren County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, increasing his child- and spousal-support payments, finding him in contempt for failing to comply with the terms of his divorce decree, and ordering him to pay past-due support and a portion of the attorney fees of his former wife, plaintiff-appellee and cross-appellant, Mary Ossai-Charles, who cross-appeals from the same order. We dismiss Gregory’s appeal and Mary’s cross-appeal for lack of a final, appealable order.

{¶ 2} Under the terms of the parties’ 2006 divorce decree, Mary was designated as the legal custodian and residential parent of the parties’ two minor children, and Gregory was granted visitation. Gregory was ordered to pay child support in the amount of $1,051.18 per month plus 8.8 percent of any bonus that he received and one-half of the parties’ eldest child’s private-school tuition. He was also ordered to pay Mary spousal support for five years (or until she remarried or began cohabitating with an unrelated person) in the amount of $2,000 per month plus 80 percent of any bonus that he received.

[505]*505{¶ 3} On May 22, 2008, the Warren County Child Support Enforcement Agency (“CSEA”) issued an administrative decision recommending that Gregory’s monthly child-support obligation be reduced to $525.59 since the parties’ eldest child had turned 18 years old, was on track to graduate from high school on June 2, 2008, and thus would become emancipated on that date. The CSEA’s administrative recommendation triggered the filing of numerous motions by both parties in the Warren County Domestic Relations Court, in which they requested, among other things, a modification of child and spousal support, with Mary requesting an increase, and Gregory, a decrease, in both amounts.

{¶ 4} In August 2009, the magistrate issued a decision increasing Gregory’s monthly child- and spousal-support obligations to $691.09 and $3,125, respectively, but terminating his obligation to pay a percentage of his bonuses as additional child and spousal support. The magistrate also found Gregory in contempt for failing to pay the appropriate amount of support on his bonus payments and his share of the parties’ eldest child’s tuition. The magistrate determined that Gregory owed Mary $11,391.04 in additional child- and spousal-support payments on his bonuses less any payments made by him to date, $1,507.97 in tuition payments, and $6,500 for a portion of her attorney fees. The magistrate concluded by noting that Gregory “may have an arrearage (or an overpayment) with regard to on-going spousal and child support as will be determined by a C.S.E.A. audit.”

{¶ 5} In January 2010, the trial court issued what it declared to be a final, appealable order, partially sustaining two of Gregory’s objections to the magistrate’s decision but overruling the parties’ remaining objections and adopting the magistrate’s decision, as amended, as its own.

{¶ 6} Gregory appeals, and Mary cross-appeals, from the trial court’s order, raising seven assignments of error and five cross-assignments of error. Before addressing the assignments of error, we consider whether the trial court’s order was, in fact, a final, appealable order, as the trial court claimed it to be. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that it was not.

{¶ 7} Gregory argues that the trial court erred when it failed or refused to allow the CSEA to perform a new audit of his child- and spousal-support accounts after it misconstrued one of his objections to the magistrate’s decision in which he had argued that the magistrate erred by not directing the CSEA to conduct the new audit before issuing a decision on the question of arrearages or overages on his support accounts.

{¶ 8} In February 2009, Gregory filed a motion requesting that the CSEA be directed to audit his child-support account to determine the total amount of his overpayments for child support after the parties’ eldest child became emancipated. In its August 2009 decision, the magistrate sustained Gregory’s motion and [506]*506directed, the CSEA to conduct a new audit of his child- and spousal-support accounts and to advise the parties of the results. Gregory filed an objection to the magistrate’s decision, arguing that the magistrate should have ordered the CSEA to conduct a new audit of his support accounts before making any finding against him on the question of arrearages or overages. He also argued that his “overpayment towards support of the [parties’] emancipated child should wipe out any arrearages.”

{¶ 9} The trial court overruled Gregory’s objection, finding that if Gregory wished to have an audit performed by CSEA, it was his duty to have the audit “performed prior to trial,” and since he failed to do so, he was not “entitled to a ‘second bite at the apple’ after the Magistrate’s Decision.” The trial court added, “Should the Court allow an audit to be performed at this time, it would make a mockery of the system as no judgment would ever be final,” and therefore, the trial court “decline[d] to grant an audit.” However, the trial court appears to have overlooked the fact that at least five months before the magistrate issued a decision in this matter, Gregory requested that the CSEA be directed to perform a new audit of his child- and spousal-support accounts; the magistrate sustained that request and directed the CSEA to conduct such an audit. Moreover, when the trial court adopted the magistrate’s decision, it implicitly upheld the magistrate’s directive to the CSEA to perform a new audit of Gregory’s child- and spousal-support accounts, even though the trial court had stated that allowing “an audit to be performed at this time * * * would make a mockery of the system.”

{¶ 10} The inconsistency in the trial court’s order strongly suggests that the trial court misunderstood Gregory’s objection: Gregory was not arguing that the magistrate erred by not directing the CSEA to conduct a new audit of his child- and spousal-support accounts — indeed, the magistrate already had done so in her decision — rather, he was arguing that the magistrate should not have made any decision regarding the issue of arrearages or overages on his support accounts until the CSEA had conducted a new audit of his support accounts.

{¶ 11} Mary contends that the trial court did not prohibit the CSEA from conducting a new audit of Gregory’s support accounts, and Gregory has represented in his brief that while this appeal was pending, the CSEA did, in fact, conduct a new audit of his child- and spousal-support accounts. However, the trial court’s order creates confusion regarding whether the trial court meant simply to overrule Gregory’s objection on the timing of the new audit or whether the trial court meant to prohibit, altogether, the CSEA from performing a new audit of Gregory’s support accounts.

{¶ 12} Section 3(B)(2), Article IV of the Ohio Constitution grants courts of appeals jurisdiction “as may be provided by law to review and affirm, modify, or reverse judgments or final orders” of the trial courts within their appellate [507]*507district. This constitutional provision is implemented, primarily, by R.C. 2505.02, which defines the types of orders that constitute a “final order.” If an order appealed from is not final and appealable, a court of appeals has no jurisdiction to rule on the appeal and must dismiss it, sua sponte, even if no party has raised the issue. Curry v. Blanchester, Clinton App. Nos.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
935 N.E.2d 944, 188 Ohio App. 3d 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ossai-charles-v-charles-ohioctapp-2010.