Parisi v. Park River West Corp., Unpublished Decision (5-28-2002)
This text of Parisi v. Park River West Corp., Unpublished Decision (5-28-2002) (Parisi v. Park River West Corp., Unpublished Decision (5-28-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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.
Opinion
Appellant claims that she was injured by the actions of a minor while a patron at the Americana Amusement Park on May 29, 1999. Appellant filed a personal injury complaint against Park River and the unidentified minor and his unnamed parent or guardian. The complaint was file stamped in the Butler County Clerk's Office with the date of May 30, 2001.
Park River filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6), arguing that the complaint was barred by the two-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims. R.C.
Appellant responded to Park River's motion, alleging that she mailed the complaint by ordinary mail on May 25, 2001, and requested a hearing. Appellant also filed a motion to correct the file-stamp date on the complaint and fashioned such motion as a Civ.R. 60 motion.
The trial court issued a decision, without a hearing, overruling appellant's Civ.R. 60 motion and dismissing appellant's complaint as time barred.
Appellant appeals and raises three assignments of error. For the reasons outlined below, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Appellant's first assignment of error argues that the trial court erred when it failed to grant a hearing on the issue of when the Butler County Clerk's Office received her complaint.
Appellant argues that she addressed the complaint to the Butler County Common Pleas Court and later learned that the court administrator's office in the same building may have received the complaint first, thereby delaying when the clerk's office received and time-stamped the complaint.
When construing a complaint for purposes of ruling on a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion for dismissal due to the bar of the statute of limitations, the complaint must conclusively show on its face that the action is barred by the expiration of the limitations period. Ins. Co. of N. Amer. v. ReeseRefrig. (1993),
The trial court found that the complaint did conclusively show that the action was barred. Simply mailing a document does not constitute a filing. Rhoades v. Harris (1999),
Appellant provided nothing for the trial court to surmise that the time-stamp was not the date of filing. The trial court was required to interpret all material allegations in the complaint as true and grant the dismissal only when it was apparent beyond doubt from the face of the complaint that appellant could prove no set of facts upon which recovery could be granted. Ins. Co. of N. Amer. at 791. The trial court did not err in ruling on the motion to dismiss without a hearing.1
Appellant's first assignment is overruled.
Appellant asserts in her second assignment that it was error to dismiss the entire complaint because the unidentified minor would be under legal disability and the tolling of the limitations period had yet to be determined.
R.C.
Appellant raises for the first time the issue of the minor defendant possibly being out of state, having absconded, or being concealed and thereby tolling the statute of limitations. Appellant also raises for the first time, and without supporting authority, the argument that Park River violated a duty or breached a contract to appellant by failing to identify the minor in a timely manner. These issues were not raised below. Ordinarily, issues not raised in the trial court are waived and may not be raised on appeal. Stores Realty co. v. Cleveland (1975),
Appellant's third assignment of error contends that the trial court's decision to grant the motion to dismiss was arbitrary, capricious, and against the manifest weight of the evidence. Appellant offers many of the same arguments advanced in her first assignment of error.
Appellant maintains that it was "entirely probable that the complaint did indeed reach the court on May 29, 2001," but did not receive a file-stamp until the next morning when it was actually delivered to the clerk's office. As we previously stated, a pleading is filed when it is delivered to the clerk of court and received by him or her to be kept in its proper place in his or her office. Ins. Co. of N. Amer.,
This is not a situation faced by the Rhoades court, in which the clerk's office acknowledged receiving the complaint, but rejected and returned it to the plaintiff for insufficient postage. Rhoades v.Harris,
Upon a de novo review of the motion to dismiss, we find that the trial court did not err in granting Park River's motion to dismiss. Appellant's third assignment of error is overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
Pursuant to App.R. 11.1(E), this entry shall not be relied upon as authority and will not be published in any form. A certified copy of this judgment entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to App.R. 27.
Costs to be taxed in compliance with App.R. 24.
Stephen W. Powell, Judge, and Anthony Valen, Judge, concur.
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Parisi v. Park River West Corp., Unpublished Decision (5-28-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parisi-v-park-river-west-corp-unpublished-decision-5-28-2002-ohioctapp-2002.