Rosser v. Terminix International Co.

757 N.E.2d 820, 143 Ohio App. 3d 157
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 2001
DocketAppeal No. C-000292, C-000578, Trial No. A-9904309.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 757 N.E.2d 820 (Rosser v. Terminix International 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
Rosser v. Terminix International Co., 757 N.E.2d 820, 143 Ohio App. 3d 157 (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*159 Painter, Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants Tom and Sharon Rosser signed a termite-protection contract with the defendant-appellee, Terminix International Company. The Rossers became dissatisfied with the services provided by Terminix and sued for breach of contract. But the contract that the Rossers had signed contained a mandatory arbitration clause that obligated the parties to submit any dispute arising from their contract to binding arbitration. For this reason, the trial court ordered the parties to arbitration and granted Terminix’s motion to stay the Rossers’ suit. The Rossers appealed, and we affirmed that the dispute belonged in arbitration, noting that the policy of the law is to favor and encourage arbitration. 1 The Ohio Supreme Court declined to hear the Rossers’ appeal of our holding. 2

Some three months after the Rossers had exhausted their final appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court on the question of mandatory arbitration, the parties had still not begun the arbitration process. By this time, it had been over one and a half years since the trial court’s original order to stay the suit pending arbitration. Rather than maintaining the inert case on its active docket, the trial court, without objection from either party, ordered the case dismissed.

According to the trial court’s “conditional” order of dismissal, the case was dismissed “other than on the merits and without prejudice.” This choice of words would have typically left the Rossers free to refile their suit in the future. But, in an apparent, if not entirely clear, attempt to limit a resurrection of the case to an appeal of what would have occurred in the arbitration process, the trial court also provided that “[p]ursuant to the provisions of Ohio Revised Code Chapter 2711'[Arbitration], this case may be reactivated for good cause shown.”

Approximately one year after their suit was dismissed, the Rossers still had not participated in arbitration. According to the trial court, the Rossers had failed to pay their portion of the arbitration costs, and the process had been suspended. Instead, the Rossers refiled a virtually identical lawsuit in the same court, the intent of which was to re-argue’ the enforceability of the mandatory arbitration clause. The trial court found this course of action to be an ill-conceived and wasteful attempt to relitigate an issue firmly settled in the first case. Moreover, the trial court took exception to what it perceived as a blatant disregard for its “conditional” order of dismissal.

The trial court entered summary judgment for Terminix and also awarded sanctions against the Rossers to compensate Terminix for the litigation resources *160 it had expended in defending a settled issue. The Rossers now appeal both the trial court’s entry of summary judgment and its award of sanctions.

Because the underlying merits of the Rossers’ claims against Terminix have never been reached, we reverse the entry of summary judgment. But because the place for the merits of the Rossers’ case to be heard is in arbitration, we direct the trial court to issue another stay pending arbitration. This returns the parties to the same position they had occupied after the Ohio Supreme Court declined to hear the Rossers’ appeal. Finally, because the Rossers have frivolously attempted to circumvent the arbitration process without a good-faith argument that would alter established law and the persuasive authority of their own appealed case, we affirm the trial court’s imposition of sanctions.

We review the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Terminix de novo, using the same standard that the trial court applied. 3 Under Civ.R. 56(C), summary judgment would have been appropriate if Terminix had demonstrated that (1) there was no genuine issue of material fact, (2) Terminix was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and (3) after construing the evidence most favorably for the Rossers, reasonable minds could only reach a conclusion adverse to them. 4

The initial issue that must be decided in this case is how to characterize the trial court’s conditional order of dismissal. The Rossers contend that the first case was dismissed under Civ.R. 41(A)(1). This rule allows any civil plaintiff to dismiss a case at any time before trial simply by filing a notice of dismissal, unless the defendant has initiated a counterclaim that cannot be independently maintained. Unless otherwise agreed, this type of dismissal is without prejudice the first time the plaintiff chooses to dismiss the case. It is well-settled law in Ohio that “a dismissal without prejudice leaves the parties as if no action had been brought at all.” 5 And, generally, as a result, rulings and orders preceding the voluntary dismissal are essentially eradicated and therefore have no res judicata effect. 6

*161 Terminix, by contrast, characterizes the trial court’s conditional order of dismissal as a dismissal by order of the court under Civ.R. 41(A)(2), subject to “such terms and conditions as the court deems proper.” Terminix believes, as apparently did the trial court, that the language of the dismissal clearly prohibited the Rossers from re-filing their suit for any reason other than to appeal any decision reached in the arbitration process itself. We disagree.

While the trial court may have had the authority to issue such an order, the language of the dismissal was not sufficiently clear in this respect. The court’s order stated that the dismissal was other than on the merits and without prejudice. The further limiting language purporting to provide the Rossers with a limited opportunity to “reactivate” their case was anything but clear. There is no common-law theory or statutory provision under which a case may be “deactivated” and “reactivated” in the manner suggested. Construing the wording of the dismissal in a light most favorable to the Rossers, as we are required to do, we hold that the Rossers’ case was dismissed without prejudice and other than on the merits, whether under Civ.R. 41(A)(1) or under Civ.R. 41(A)(2).

Having determined that the Rossers’ initial suit was dismissed -without prejudice and other than on the merits, we must next determine the appropriate disposition of the Rossers’ second suit. As the trial court has pointed out, the issue of mandatory arbitration was fully and fairly litigated in the initial suit. It seems a waste of Terminix’s resources and judicial time to needlessly relitigate the issue. Yet that is precisely the general effect of a dismissal other than on the merits and without prejudice. We are required to engage in the fiction that, as between the parties, the first suit had never been brought at all, and that therefore the trial court’s original order to stay the suit and compel arbitration is not binding on the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
757 N.E.2d 820, 143 Ohio App. 3d 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosser-v-terminix-international-co-ohioctapp-2001.