Ross Orthopedic Supply v. Jewish Hospital

391 N.E.2d 752, 59 Ohio Misc. 5, 7 Ohio Op. 3d 265, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 120
CourtBellefontaine Municipal Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1977
DocketNo. 77 CVF 87
StatusPublished

This text of 391 N.E.2d 752 (Ross Orthopedic Supply v. Jewish Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Bellefontaine Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross Orthopedic Supply v. Jewish Hospital, 391 N.E.2d 752, 59 Ohio Misc. 5, 7 Ohio Op. 3d 265, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 120 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

O’Connoe, J.

Defendant’s motion for a change of venue to the Hamilton County Municipal Court raises the issues of whether, under the facts herein, the defendant either, conducted activity in Logan County which activity gave rise to the claim for relief (Civil Rule 3 [B] [3]) or whether Logan County is the county in which the claim for relief [6]*6arose (Rule 3[B] [6]). -That-venue would'be:'proper in Hamilton.. County, where defendant resides :and .has -its principal pláce of business, ‘is hot disputed.

The facts, established by - the pleadings and affidavits fiíéd by the parties, are as follows. Defendant,’ ár'hospital in Hamilton County, for some time had purchased hospital products from Howmedical Products, Rutherford,, New Jersey. Plaintiff operates as a distributor for Howmedical. Plaintiff, a supplier to hospitals, solicited, defendant’s business , in Hamilton County. Defendant, placed.a telephone call from Hamilton County to plaintiff in. Logan County and subsequently mailed a confirming order to-.plaintiff. The goods were to be shipped F. O. B. to The Jewish Hospital (defendant). The goods were shipped- by plaintiff to.defendant via United Parcel Service, from Logan; to Hamilton County. .- No representative of defendant Hospital was, ever, physically present in Logan County in ¡ connection with the subject -matter of-tíiis civil action. . Defendant operates solely in Hamilton .County, and has. had no employees permanently or temporarily in Logan County.,.;. Payment for. the, goods was to be.sept by;'mail from Hamilton-County to Logan County. . ,;i . ,.

A dispute arose as to the-amount charged for several of the-items. - - . .

No controlling Ohio case law authority has. been. cited by either party.

Plaintiff' may bring its action in any one of the counties described by parts (1) through (9) of Civ., R, 3(B). Plaintiff relies on Rule 3(B)(3) requiring • that defendant “conducted activity in Logan County” which gave rise to the claim for relief, and, or,'on'Rule 3(B)(6) requiring that Logan County bú that County “in which'all or part of the claim for relief arose * *

- It has-been noted' that -parts',(3) and (6) raise similar questions and: complement each Other.-' 4 Anderson’s Ohio' Civil: Practice, ,/Section-' 149;09, Conducting', Activity, 'find’ Section- 149.12,. ;5$Í.é:re '-the'' Claim- for Relief' Arose.;A",''

, Thiee Ohio 'cases.' could be found which Were decided finder Rule 3; In Morrison v. Steiner (1972), 32 Ohio St. [7]*72d 86, defendant Steiner, a.resident of Hancock- County, went to; the Lucas County residence of the plaintiff and there inspected and eventually purchased certain bee-keeping equipment being offered for sale. by plaintiff.; The promissory note, for nonpayment of which the claim arose, was.- executed by defendant Steiner at plaintiff’s Lucas County, residence, and was made payable there. also. The Supreme Court affirmed the. denial of the motion for a change., of venue, holding that, defendant had “conducted activity.” giving rise to the claim in Lucas County and that Lucas County was the County in which the, claim “arose”; hence venue was proper under either part (3) or part (6) of Rule .3. ; ■

, • ,The opinion in Rutger Hotel Corp. v. Standard Oil Co. (Ct. App. of Hamilton Co. 1975), 324 N. E. 2d 289, addressed, the. problepi-of the residence or principal place qf business of a. corporate defendant, under parts (1). and (2) of. Rule 3(B). The activity of defendant,, giving rise to the claim, had occurred, in Florida.,

In Genl. Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Jacks (1971), 27 Ohio Misc., 115, plaintiff filed.its action in Montgomery County, to recover the deficiency due it following defend-; ant’s default, in Montgomery. County, on a note, and following the foreclosure and sale of the collateral, an ..automobile. Defendant had purchased the automobile in Greene County and there signed a retail installment contract which was subsesquently assigned to plaintiff, which, had. its main offices in Dayton, .Montgomery County, Ohio' The court puled that; venue was proper .under either, part (6) of Rule 3(B) because. defendant’s, default under the retail installment .. contract occurred in. Montgomery County where plaintiff, to whom-the.contract has. been'assigned, had its main office, or. under part (3) of Rule 3(B), because by the default, defendant' “conducted activity” which ,gave rise to the claim.. • ; , . • ¡. .. •. >■

.None of the* ¡decided cases are.,-on all fours with the in.st.ant case. - Some guidance can be .obtained’from the. Staff; Notes .to. Rule 3(B)....; Several, of the , comments, in the . Staff Notes are.pertinent.:,

[8]*8“* * * Thus generally the traditional places of trial, sneh as the county where the defendant lives * * * are retained although not necessarily made mandatory. * * *
“* * * Counties in which the defendant has had substantial contact relating to the suit * * * are favored as in present venue statutes. However, the plaintiff is not necessarily restricted to one county if other counties are available * * *. [Emphasis added.]
“Generally the law favors suits in places where the defendant resides or has a dose connection or in places where the claim for relief arose on the subject of the action is located * * *.” (Emphasis added.)

The activity of defendant does not constitute that “substantial” or “close contact” with Logan County relating to the suit contemplated by Rule 3, or contemplated by Staff Note to Rule 3(B) of the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure. A telephone call, and the mailing of a confirming order, to a distant county, following solicitation in the originating county, would make every buyer subject to suit anywhere in any county where an order was placed. Contacts of this type, i. e., a single or infrequent communication by mail or telephone, as opposed to physicial presence of a salesman or representative, will surround almost any commercial transaction; to hold that venue is proper in the seller’s county would be a complete departure from the past practice of suing defendant in defendant’s county and from the intent of the Rule to allow suit in a distant county only where “substantial” or “close” contact of defendant in that distant county had occurred. Such a holding would make the defendant, a hospital located in Cincinnati, subject to suit in any distant county to which a call had been made and confirming order sent. Further, the activity of defendant that gave rise to the claim was defendant’s refusal to pay, as a result of defendant’s questioning the amounts charged for certain items, not the placement, by telephone, of the order. Thus this Court, based solely on the facts of and the parties involved in this case, holds that this defendant did not conduct activity giving rise to the claim in Logan County; thus venue is not proper under Rule 3(B) (3).

[9]*9The second question is where the claim arose, on the. facts of the case at bar. Defendant has refused, in Hamilton County, to pay by not making out a check in Hamilton County and mailing it to Logan County.

The Staff Note to Rule 3 refers the reader to “an excellent discussion of recommendations Avhieh are incorporated in this rule” set forth in Miller, Implementing Current Theories of Jurisdiction, Yenue and Service of Process —Proposals for Revision of the Ohio Statutes, 29 Ohio St. L. J. 116 (1968).

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Related

Morrison v. Steiner
290 N.E.2d 841 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1972)
General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Jacks
268 N.E.2d 833 (City of Dayton Municipal Court, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
391 N.E.2d 752, 59 Ohio Misc. 5, 7 Ohio Op. 3d 265, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-orthopedic-supply-v-jewish-hospital-ohmunictbellefo-1977.