[Cite as Scala v. Scala, 2025-Ohio-4550.]
STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF MEDINA )
CHRISTOPHER A. SCALA, C.A. No. 2024CA0093-M
Appellant
v. APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE WILLIAM A. SCALA, et al. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF MEDINA, OHIO Appellees CASE No. 20 CIV 0505
DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
Dated: September 30, 2025
SUTTON, Judge
{¶1} Plaintiff-Appellant Christopher A. Scala, individually, as trustee of the Christopher
A. Scala Trust, and derivatively on behalf of Kenmore Construction Co., Inc. (“Chris”) appeals
the judgment of the Medina County Court of Common Pleas granting the motion for summary
judgment of Defendants-Appellees William A. Scala (“Bill”) and Samuel P. Scala, Executor of
the Estate of Michael Scala (“the Estate.”) For the reasons that follow, this Court affirms.
I.
Relevant Background Information
{¶2} This appeal is the second appeal from the trial court in this action. In 2023, this
Court sustained, in part, Chris’s fourth assignment of error in Scala v. Scala, 2023-Ohio-2232, ¶
74 (9th Dist.) (“Scala I”), and remanded the matter to the trial court for further proceedings
consistent with the decision. Much of the relevant factual and procedural background of this case
was set forth in Scala I and we reiterate relevant portions of that background in this decision. 2
{¶3} The action in the trial court was a refiled action that began in 2017 when Chris filed
a complaint against two of his brothers, Bill and Michael Scala. Michael passed away in 2018,
and Samuel P. Scala, as the executor of the Estate, was listed as a Defendant in the refiled action.
Much of the dispute centered on a 1990 Agreement Restricting Disposition of Shares of Kenmore
Construction Co., Inc. (“Shareholders’ Agreement”) and its subsequent amendments. This appeal
concerns specifically the Second and Third Amendments to the Shareholders’ Agreement.
Kenmore Construction Co., Inc. (“Kenmore”) was founded in 1956 by the father of the Scala
siblings. The five siblings, Bill, Chris, Michael, Paul Scala, and Margaret Scala inherited the
business from their father upon his passing in 1985, and were equal shareholders. The
Shareholders’ Agreement was signed by all five siblings.
{¶4} While the five siblings were equal shareholders, Bill was president, chief executive
officer, and chairman of the board and was responsible for much of the daily operations of
Kenmore. Bill and Chris did not see eye to eye on many matters with respect to the management
of Kenmore. In fact, Chris had a difficult relationship with all of his siblings. Nonetheless,
Kenmore prospered financially under Bill’s leadership. Its primary business is the construction of
heavy highway systems, although it has additional lines of business.
{¶5} However, in 1992, when Bill returned from a vacation, Chris, Paul, and Michael
voted to oust Bill as president. Bill accepted the vote but was asked to come back within hours
when the other siblings discovered the bonding company would not bond Kenmore if Bill was not
president. Bill agreed to come back if Paul and Margaret gave Bill their voting rights for five years.
{¶6} Kenmore’s legal counsel recommended the Shareholders’ Agreement be amended
to provide for proxies and voting trusts in light of the voting rights Bill sought. Chris and Michael
sought separate counsel to see if there was a way to prevent this First Amendment to the 3
Shareholders’ Agreement from passing. The attorney informed Michael and Chris that
shareholders holding 60 percent of the shares could pass an amendment. On May 4, 1992, the
shareholders met. Michael ultimately decided to join Bill, Paul, and Margaret in voting to adopt
the First Amendment. Chris voted against the adoption of the First Amendment.
{¶7} The dynamics of the shareholders changed further when, effective December 31,
2010, Kenmore redeemed both Paul’s and Margaret’s shares, leaving Chris, Bill, and Michael as
equal 1/3 shareholders in Kenmore.
{¶8} In 2014 or 2015, Michael indicated he wanted to rid himself of his shares due to
health concerns. However, under the Shareholders’ Agreement as amended at the time, due to the
fact that the shares had to first be offered to Kenmore and then the remaining shareholders pro
rata, Bill and Chris would end up as equal shareholders, a situation Michael wanted to avoid. In
fact, neither Bill nor Michael wanted to be a 50 percent shareholder with Chris. Bill then sought
legal representation. A Second Amendment was then proposed and voted on in January 2016.
Chris voted against the amendment, but it was adopted via a 2-1 vote, with Bill and Michael voting
in favor of the amendment. The Second Amendment to the Shareholders’ Agreement provided if
Kenmore declined to redeem the shares, the selling shareholder could then offer the shares to any
remaining shareholder or shareholders in a proportion of the selling shareholder’s choosing.
{¶9} In November 2016, a Third Amendment to the Shareholders’ Agreement was
adopted following a 2-1 vote in favor. Chris again voted against the amendment, while Bill and
Michael voted in favor of it. The Third Amendment replaced the provision amended by the Second
Amendment. The new provision added that a selling shareholder could offer the selling
shareholder’s shares to one or more lineal descendants under conditions specified in the provision.
In addition, at that time, Michael offered his shares to Kenmore. Chris moved Kenmore to accept 4
the offer, but the motion was not seconded. Instead, Bill and Michael moved to decline the offer.
Thus, Kenmore did not redeem Michael’s shares.
{¶10} In December 2016, Michael sold his shares to Bill. Thus, Bill owned 2/3 of the
shares and Chris continued to own 1/3.
{¶11} Chris’s original lawsuit was filed in June 2017. It was dismissed and then refiled
July 14, 2020, raising fifteen causes of action. Bill and the Estate counterclaimed. Cross-motions
for summary judgment were filed and the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Bill
and the Estate, including on Chris’s second cause of action in his complaint, which alleged Bill
and Michael, as the majority shareholders of Kenmore, breached their heightened fiduciary duties
owed to Chris by amending the Shareholders’ Agreement so Bill could acquire all of Michael’s
stock without providing Chris any opportunity to acquire an equal portion of the stock. Chris
appealed, and this Court sustained, in part, Chris’s fourth assignment of error concerning Chris’s
second cause of action, breach of fiduciary duty by the majority shareholders. This Court reasoned
the provision in the Shareholders’ Agreement that Chris agreed to be bound by was a provision
explaining the procedure to amend the Shareholders’ Agreement. The provision did not deal with
the substance of the amendment itself. We stated:
Essentially, under the trial court’s reasoning, irrespective of the substance of the amendment, Chris could not succeed on a claim of a breach of fiduciary duty as long as the procedure was followed. If this were the law, majority shareholders could easily circumvent their fiduciary duties by enacting amendments to accomplish what would otherwise be impermissible. We cannot say that Chris’s contractual agreement to the procedure upon which the Shareholders’ Agreement could be amended also meant that Chris was agreeing to the substance of any amendment so long as it was adopted according to the proper procedure. A provision can be adopted pursuant to the terms of an agreement and nonetheless violate a fiduciary duty.
Scala I at ¶ 35. 5
{¶12} We also determined the trial court erred when it relied upon the business judgment
rule in finding in favor of Bill and the Estate because Chris asserted Bill and Michael violated their
fiduciary duties as majority shareholders, not as directors, and the business judgment rule applies
to disinterested directors. Id. at ¶ 36, citing Maas v. Maas,2020-Ohio-5160, ¶ 20-21 (1st Dist.).
{¶13} After the decision in Scala I, Bill and the Estate applied for reconsideration of this
Court’s decision, asking this Court to apply Crosby v. Beam, 47 Ohio St.3d 105 (1989) to the facts
of this case. Crosby sets forth the fiduciary duty owed by majority shareholders to minority
shareholders in close corporations. This Court declined to reconsider its decision, stating it would
be more appropriate for the trial court to apply the appropriate standard in the first instance. Chris
sought to appeal this Court’s decision to the Supreme Court of Ohio, which declined jurisdiction.
Scala v. Scala, 2024-Ohio-2160.
{¶14} Upon remand to the trial court, Bill and the Estate filed a renewed motion for
summary judgment on Chris’s second cause of action.
{¶15} The trial court granted the renewed motion for summary judgment, stating, “[t]hat
[Michael] ultimately decided to sell all of his shares to Bill does not mean that Chris was deprived
of the same opportunity to solicit them under the [a]mendment as Bill,” and “[a]s such because the
[a]mendments treated all shareholders equally, it cannot serve as the basis for a breach of majority
shareholder fiduciary claim.” The trial court further stated, “[t]he amendments adopted by Bill
and [Michael] were undertaken for a legitimate business purpose-to prevent a 50/50 deadlock that
could threaten the long-term viability of Kenmore.”
{¶16} Chris has appealed, raising three assignments of error for our review. 6
II.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR DEFENDANTS WILLIAM SCALA [] AND SAMUEL P. SCALA AS THE EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF MICHAEL SCALA[.]
{¶17} In his first assignment of error, Chris argues the trial court erred in granting
summary judgment in favor of Bill and the Estate on his second cause of action, which alleged
breach of fiduciary duty to a minority shareholder in a close corporation by the majority
shareholders.
{¶18} This Court reviews an award of summary judgment de novo. Grafton v. Ohio
Edison Co., 77 Ohio St.3d 102, 105 (1996). Summary judgment is appropriate under Civ.R. 56
when: (1) no genuine issue as to any material fact remains to be litigated; (2) the moving party is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law; and (3) viewing the evidence most strongly in favor of the
nonmoving party, reasonable minds can come to but one conclusion and that conclusion is adverse
to the nonmoving party. Temple v. Wean United, Inc., 50 Ohio St.2d 317, 327 (1977), citing Civ.R.
56(C). A court must view the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party and must
resolve any doubt in favor of the non-moving party. Murphy v. Reynoldsburg, 65 Ohio St.3d 356,
358-359 (1992). The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of informing
the trial court of the basis for the motion and pointing to parts of the record that show the absence
of a genuine issue of material fact. Dresher v. Burt, 75 Ohio St.3d 280, 292-293 (1996).
Specifically, the moving party must support the motion by pointing to some evidence in the record
of the type listed in Civ.R. 56(C). Id. Once a moving party satisfies its burden of supporting its
motion for summary judgment with acceptable evidence pursuant to Civ.R. 56(C), Civ.R. 56(E)
provides that the non-moving party may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the moving 7
party’s pleadings. Id. at 293. Rather, the non-moving party has a reciprocal burden of responding
by setting forth specific facts, demonstrating that a “genuine triable issue” exists to be litigated at
trial. State ex rel. Zimmerman v. Tompkins, 75 Ohio St.3d 447, 449 (1996).
Crosby v. Beam
{¶19} Crosby, 47 Ohio St.3d 105, states at paragraph two of the syllabus: “[w]here
majority or controlling shareholders in a close corporation breach their heightened fiduciary duty
to minority shareholders by utilizing their majority control of the corporation to their own
advantage, without providing minority shareholders with an equal opportunity to benefit, such
breach, absent any legitimate business purpose, is actionable.” (Emphasis added.)
{¶20} In a close corporation, the majority shareholders owe a heightened fiduciary duty
to deal in the utmost good faith and loyalty with the minority shareholders. The fiduciary duty
between majority shareholders and minority shareholders is breached when the majority
shareholders control the corporation in such a way as to prevent the minority shareholders from
having an equal opportunity in the corporation absent a legitimate business purpose. Palmer v.
Bowers, 2019-Ohio-1274, ¶ 18 (9th Dist.), citing Crosby, 47 Ohio St.3d at 108-109. There is no
dispute here that Kenmore is a close corporation. Scala I at ¶ 33.
{¶21} Chris argues the Second and Third Amendments to the Shareholders’ Agreement
deprived him of having an equal opportunity in the corporation, the amendments served no
legitimate business purpose, even if preventing deadlock is a legitimate business purpose, a means
less harmful to Chris’s interests than allowing Bill to acquire all of Michael’s shares was required,
and the justification of “legitimate business purpose” is not available to Bill because of his personal
interest in acquiring Michael’s shares. 8
{¶22} Bill and the Estate argue: (1) Chris had an equal opportunity to benefit from the
Second and Third Amendments to the Shareholders’ Agreement; and (2) there was a legitimate
business purpose in preventing Chris and Bill from being 50/50 shareholders in Kenmore because
such a split may well have led to a voting deadlock and possible dissolution of the company. Bill
and the Estate further argue Crosby supra does not require the majority or controlling shareholders
to utilize less harmful means to prevent deadlock, and in a close corporation, all shareholders have
a personal interest to some extent in the outcome of shareholder votes and such personal interest
is actually taken into account by the Crosby standard.
Equal Opportunity
{¶23} The Second Amendment to the Shareholders’ Agreement was adopted by a 2-1
vote, with Michael and Bill voting in favor and Chris voting against the amendment. The Second
Amendment provided if a shareholder wanted to rid himself of his shares, he would have to offer
the shares to Kenmore and if Kenmore declined to redeem the shares, the shareholder could offer
his shares to any remaining shareholder or shareholders in a proportion of the seller’s own
choosing. The Third Amendment added that a selling shareholder could offer his shares to one or
more lineal descendants. In accordance with the amendments, Michael offered his shares to
Kenmore, but Chris’s motion for Kenmore to accept the offer was not seconded, and Bill and
Michael moved for Kenmore to decline the offer. After Kenmore did not redeem the shares,
Michael sold all of his shares to Bill, making Bill the majority shareholder owning 2/3 of the shares
and leaving Chris owning 1/3.
{¶24} Bill and the Estate argue the Second and Third Amendments applied equally to
Chris, Bill, and Michael. Further, Bill and the Estate argue Chris’s second cause of action alleges 9
only the acts of amending the Shareholder’s Agreement were the breaches of Bill’s and Michael’s
fiduciary duty, not Michael’s transfer of stock to Bill pursuant to those amendments.
{¶25} Chris’s second cause of action as set forth in his complaint alleges in part that Bill
and Michael “as the majority shareholders of [Kenmore], breached their heightened fiduciary
duties owed to [Chris] by amending the Shareholders’ Agreement so that [Bill] could acquire all
of Michael’s . . . stock without providing [Chris] any opportunity to acquire an equal portion of
the stock[.]” The alleged motivation for the amendments is so Bill could acquire all of Michael’s
stock without providing Chris any opportunity to acquire an equal portion of the stock.
{¶26} The first prong of the Crosby standard, as applied to Chris’s second cause of action,
is whether Bill’s and Michaels’s vote to amend the Shareholders’ Agreement to allow non-pro rata
transfers of shares prevented Chris from having an equal opportunity in the corporation. At the
time the amendments were voted on, Chris, Bill, and Michael were equal shareholders. After
passage, the amendments applied equally to all the shareholders, including Chris. The fact that
one of the shareholders elected to sell all of his shares to another shareholder, however, does not
mean Chris did not have an equal opportunity under the amendments to purchase all or some of
the shares or to sell his shares to another shareholder or lineal descendant in a proportion of his
choosing. The outcome of the transfer of shares from Michael to Bill resulted in Chris and Bill
having an unequal amount of shares, but the amendments did apply equally to Chris, Bill, and
Michael, and provided all three shareholders with the same opportunity to buy or sell shares
according to the terms of the amendments.
{¶27} Therefore, there is no genuine issue of material fact that the Second and Third
Amendments to the Shareholders’ Agreement applied equally to Chris, Bill, and Michael. 10
{¶28} However, we recognize that abuse or oppression by majority or controlling
shareholders can include a “’squeeze-out’ or ‘freeze-out’ meaning the ‘manipulative use of
corporate control to eliminate minority shareholders, or to reduce their share of voting power or
percentage of ownership assets, or otherwise deprive them of advantages or opportunities to which
they are entitled.’” Maas, 2020-Ohio-5160, at ¶ 70, quoting Vontz v. Miller, 2016-Ohio-8477, ¶
31 (1st Dist.), quoting Estate of Schoer v. Stamco Supply, Inc., 19 Ohio App.3d 34, 38 (1st Dist.
1984).
{¶29} There is no question Bill and Michael voted in favor of the Second and Third
Amendments in order to reduce Chris’s voting power, as admittedly, they wanted to prevent a
50/50 split or deadlock between Bill and Chris. Chris was outvoted on the passage of the Second
and Third Amendments, but that does not necessarily mean he was oppressed. “When a person
acquires shares in a corporation, he comes in to be ruled by the majority in interest, and as long as
such majority acts within the scope of the powers conferred by the corporation, the voice of the
majority is the voice of the corporation and all of the shareholders.” Maas at ¶ 88, quoting Koos v.
Cent. Ohio Cellular, Inc., 94 Ohio App.3d 579, 588 (8th Dist. 1994). The fiduciary duty owed by
majority or controlling shareholders in a close corporation “do[es] not mean that minority
shareholders can frustrate the will of the majority simply by disagreeing over the course of
corporate action.” Id. That is, provided the majority or controlling shareholders had a “legitimate
business purpose” for the corporate action, as we will discuss below.
{¶30} While we have decided there is no genuine issue of material fact that the Second
and Third Amendments to the Shareholders’ Agreement applied equally to Chris, Bill, and Michael
in theory, we recognize Bill and Michael acted so Chris would not have an equal vote in the 11
corporation going forward. Therefore, in the interest of thoroughness, we will now address the
second prong of Crosby: legitimate business purpose.
Legitimate Business Purpose
{¶31} According to the record, Chris has often been at odds with the other shareholders,
including Bill, and unanimous agreement inside the family business was very difficult to obtain.
Chris agreed Kenmore has done extremely well under Bill’s leadership and he has no quarrel with
the financial performance of Kenmore. Bill’s leadership included putting Kenmore’s profits back
into the company, being conservative in distributing the profits to shareholders, and not borrowing
money for capital improvements and asset acquisition in order to maintain the long-term financial
health of the company and preserve it for future generations. As this Court noted in Scala I, Chris’s
disagreements with Bill led to Bill’s ouster as president of Kenmore in 1992, an action that
impaired the company’s ability to get bonded. Scala I at ¶ 5. Chris was described by family
members as being a “contrarian” and having “views . . . contrary to Kenmore’s culture,” and
because of this, Chris’s termination as an employee had been suggested. But Bill did not support
the termination of Chris’s employment because Bill did not believe their father “would have
wanted any sibling’s ouster.” Nevertheless, the record shows the relationship between Bill and
Chris led to great concern by his siblings, who were the shareholders and former shareholders of
Kenmore, about the fate of the company should Chris and Bill become 50/50 shareholders.
{¶32} By enacting the Second and Third Amendments to the Shareholders’ Agreement,
Bill and Michael sought to prevent a potential 50/50 deadlock between Bill and Chris, which they
believed could cause harm to the company and possibly lead to dissolution of the company. While
Chris averred in an October 3, 2024 affidavit he “never threatened to deadlock Kenmore at any
time[,]” the record is replete with evidence Chris and Bill did not agree on business matters and 12
there was no trust between them. Chris’s and Bill’s siblings Margaret and Paul, who are former
Kenmore shareholders, both stated they would never want to be 50/50 partners with Chris because
Chris appeared to place his personal interests ahead of the company and its employees and had
little interest in generational succession. And this Court observes that Chris has never been in a
position to cause a deadlock, because until Michael sold his shares to Bill, Kenmore has always
had an odd number of equal shareholders, first five, then three.
{¶33} Chris submitted the affidavit and report of Douglas K. Moll, a law professor whose
research has focused on closely-held businesses and oppressive majority conduct. Mr. Moll did
not believe Kenmore would be harmed by a deadlock between shareholders because a deadlock
would not affect the day-to-day operations of Kenmore as Bill would continue to run the company
because Kenmore’s corporate code of regulations stated the officers of Kenmore shall hold office
until their successors are chosen and a deadlock between shareholders would not result in Bill’s
removal. But, the record reflects that a deadlock could result in dissolution or sale of the company,
a concern expressed by current and former shareholders, and Chris himself admitted it would not
be in Kenmore’s best interests for two 50 percent shareholders to exist without a clear mechanism
for breaking deadlocks. At his deposition, Chris admitted, “[w]ithout a - - without a mechanism
could be a problem.” Preventing one shareholder from thwarting the other to the detriment of the
corporate enterprise has been found to be a “legitimate business purpose” where, as here, the
relationship between shareholders is characterized by hostility. See Horizon House-Microwave v.
Bazzy, 21 Mass.App.Ct. 190, 200 (1985).
{¶34} Chris acknowledged a corporate deadlock would be a problem, but argues Bill and
Michael were obligated to utilize a means to avoid possible deadlock that was less harmful to
Chris’s interests, such as an irrevocable voting proxy or Bill becoming a 50.1 percent shareholder 13
instead of a 66 2/3 percent shareholder. We decline to expand Crosby in this way. First, “it is not
for the courts to second-guess the choices the majority shareholders make[.]” Koos, 94 Ohio
App.3d at 592. The Crosby standard set forth in 47 Ohio St.3d 105, paragraph two of the syllabus,
states in order to be actionable, the majority or controlling shareholders’ actions must be without
any legitimate business purpose. This is currently the law in Ohio as set forth by the Supreme
Court of Ohio and Crosby does not require utilization of a less harmful means. We cannot say the
Second and Third Amendments to the Shareholders’ Agreement did not serve any legitimate
business purpose, specifically the stated purpose of avoiding deadlock, even where other options
to avoid deadlock may have been available. Second, Chris admitted he never approached Bill with
any resolution, other than Chris be a 50 percent shareholder.
{¶35} Finally, Chris also argues Bill had a personal interest in becoming 66 2/3 percent
owner and is not entitled to argue that the actions of himself and the Estate had a “legitimate
business purpose.”
{¶36} However, in a close corporation, nearly every vote or decision by a shareholder will
likely impact that shareholder’s personal interests, many times to the shareholder’s advantage.
Indeed, the Crosby rule applies where majority or controlling shareholders utilize their majority
control to their own advantage. Crosby, paragraph two of the syllabus. The protection for minority
shareholders is that an action by the majority or controlling shareholders to their own advantage
from which minority shareholders do not equally benefit is required to be for a legitimate business
purpose. Those circumstances are what trigger the heightened scrutiny set forth in Crosby.
Further, if Chris’s motion that Kenmore purchase Michael’s shares had passed, Chris’s percentage
of shares would have increased from 33 1/3 percent to 50 percent, which would have benefitted
him personally, and he admitted “every decision you make when you’re involved in a close 14
corporation has some level of personal interest involved because you’re the owner of the
company.”
{¶37} Based on the evidence filed in support of and opposed to the motion for summary
judgment, there is no genuine issue of material fact that the passage of the Second and Third
Amendments to the Shareholders’ Agreement had a legitimate business purpose; to prevent
deadlock between corporate shareholders.
{¶38} We must also address a position taken by the dissent. The dissent states the trial
court “failed to follow this Court’s remand instructions in our prior decision.” We disagree. In
Scala I, we reasoned that despite Chris’s agreement to the procedures for amending the
Shareholders’ Agreement, an amendment adopted pursuant to that procedure could still violate a
fiduciary duty owed to Chris. Id. at ¶ 35. We then determined the trial court erroneously relied
on the business-judgment rule in granting summary judgment in favor of Bill and the Estate. Id.
at ¶ 36-37. On remand, the trial court applied the “legitimate business purpose” standard set forth
in Crosby to the facts of the case when granting the renewed motion for summary judgment.
Again, the Crosby standard is, “[w]here majority or controlling shareholders in a close corporation
breach their heightened fiduciary duty to minority shareholders by utilizing their majority control
of the corporation to their own advantage, without providing minority shareholders with an equal
opportunity to benefit, such breach, absent any legitimate business purpose, is actionable.”
(Emphasis added.) Id. at paragraph two of the syllabus. Therefore, the only issue to be decided
by the trial court was whether there was a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether
preventing corporate gridlock was a legitimate business purpose.
{¶39} Further, when Bill and the Estate asked this Court to apply Crosby to the facts of
the case in their application for reconsideration of Scala I, this Court specifically stated, “[a]s this 15
Court is a reviewing Court, we conclude it is more appropriate for the trial court to apply the
appropriate standard in the first instance.” (Emphasis added.) On remand, the trial court did so.
{¶40} Therefore, Chris’s first assignment of error is overruled.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADOPTING, VIRTUALLY VERBATIM, [BILL AND THE ESTATE’S] PROPOSED “JOURNAL ENTRY” GRANTING THEIR “RENEWED” [MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT].
{¶41} In his second assignment of error, Chris argues the trial court erred in adopting the
proposed journal entry granting summary judgment submitted by Bill and the Estate. No rule
prohibits trial courts from adopting a party’s proposed order or journal entry. See State v. Riley,
2024-Ohio-5712, ¶ 15. In fact, the local rules of many trial courts, including the Medina County
Court of Common Pleas, allow and, for some motions, require the submission of proposed orders
or journal entries. “A trial court may adopt as its own a party’s proposed [order] if it has thoroughly
read the document to ensure that it is completely accurate in fact and law.” Mentor v. CSX Transp.,
Inc., 2005-Ohio-3386, ¶ 41 (11th Dist.), quoting Adkins v. Adkins, 43 Ohio App.3d 95 (4th Dist.
1988), paragraph three of the syllabus. The trial court’s adoption of a party’s proposed decision
is not in error unless the facts or law set forth therein are erroneous. See New Haven Corner Carry
Out, Inc. v. Clay Distrib. Co., 2002-Ohio-2726, ¶ 26 (3d Dist.).
{¶42} Because we have determined after a de novo review that the trial court did not err
in granting summary judgment in favor of Bill and the Estate, the trial court did not err in utilizing
the language in their proposed journal entry.
{¶43} The dissent has criticized the trial court for ordering Bill and the Estate to submit a
proposed judgment entry before “it heard from the other side.” However, the local rules of the 16
Medina County Court of Common Pleas actually require the movant to submit a proposed journal
entry granting the motion with the motion. Medina County Local Rule 5(G) states:
Proposed Journal Entries The movant shall prepare a proposed journal entry granting the motion and submit it to the Court along with the motion. Failure to submit a proposed journal entry may result in delay in ruling or denial of the motion.
(Emphasis added.) We cannot fault the trial court for complying with its own rules. As for the
dissent’s expressed concern that the trial court may not have conducted “the required independent
review of the filings,” there is no indication in the record or in the trial court’s entry granting the
renewed motion for summary judgment that the trial court did not conduct a thorough and
independent review before granting the motion.
{¶44} For these reasons, Chris’s second assignment of error is overruled.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR III
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING [CHRIS’S] MOTION TO SUPPLEMENT THE RECORD TO INCLUDE DRAFT “ENTRIES” [BILL AND THE ESTATE] ONLY E-MAILED TO THE COURT.
{¶45} In his third assignment of error, Chris argues the trial court erred in denying his
motion to supplement the record with the proposed journal entries Bill and the Estate emailed to
the trial court.
{¶46} This Court reviews the decision of the trial court concerning supplementation of
the record for an abuse of discretion. “A trial court’s grant or denial of a motion to supplement
will not be overturned unless the court abuses its discretion.” Blake v. Unemp. Rev. Comm. Admr.,
2017-Ohio-166, ¶ 23 (9th Dist.), citing Wolk v. Paino, 2011-Ohio-1065, ¶ 23 (8th Dist.).
{¶47} While the trial court denied Chris’s motion to supplement the record with the
proposed entries, the proposed entries are included in the record of this case as exhibits to Chris’s
motion. As such, even assuming error, the error would be harmless. 17
{¶48} Therefore, Chris’s third assignment of error is overruled.
III.
{¶49} For the forgoing reasons, Chris’s assignments of error are overruled. The judgment
of the Medina County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
There were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common
Pleas, County of Medina, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy of
this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to App.R. 27.
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of
judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the period
for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(C). The Clerk of the Court of Appeals is instructed to
mail a notice of entry of this judgment to the parties and to make a notation of the mailing in the
docket, pursuant to App.R. 30.
Costs taxed to Appellant.
BETTY SUTTON FOR THE COURT
FLAGG LANZINGER, P. J. CONCURS. 18
CARR, J. DISSENTING.
{¶50} I respectfully dissent from the judgment of the majority for several reasons. First,
I would conclude that the trial court failed to follow this Court’s remand instructions in our prior
decision. “Absent extraordinary circumstances, such as an intervening decision by the Supreme
Court, an inferior court has no discretion to disregard the mandate of a superior court in a prior
appeal in the same case.” Nolan v. Nolan, 11 Ohio St.3d 1 (1984), syllabus. Nothing in this
Court’s prior opinion suggested that we were remanding the matter for the trial court to consider
an entirely new motion for summary judgment.
{¶51} Notably, when the matter was remanded, the trial court initially denied the motion
for leave to file a renewed motion for summary judgment. Only after a motion for reconsideration
was filed, relying in part on an entry of this Court denying a motion for reconsideration of the prior
appeal, did the trial court grant the motion for leave. I would not view this Court’s entry denying
the motion for reconsideration as being instructive to the trial court as to how to proceed on
remand. And to the extent it might be viewed that way, I do not read the entry to imply that the
trial court was required to consider an entirely new motion for summary judgment.
{¶52} Even assuming that it was proper for the trial court to consider the motion for
summary judgment, I dissent with respect to the majority’s analysis of the merits. I would
conclude that Bill and the Estate failed to meet their initial summary judgment burden. In the
renewed motion for summary judgment, Bill and the Estate essentially argued that they were
entitled to summary judgment solely based upon statements in the trial court’s prior judgment
entry. For example, Bill and the Estate claimed that Chris could not demonstrate a legitimate
business purpose because “as [the trial court] already found, there is no genuine dispute that the
Second Amendment was ‘legitimate exercise[] of shareholder power,’ as Bill and Mike were 19
‘motivated to protect the best interests of Kenmore in avoiding a 50/50 deadlock among the
remaining shareholders and potential corporate dissolution.’” In so doing, Bill and the Estate cited
to a single page of the trial court’s judgment entry. That page is a portion of the trial court’s prior
judgment entry addressing counts two and four of the complaint. In the initial appeal, this Court
specifically sustained a portion of the assignment of error related to those two counts. See Scala
v. Scala, 2023-Ohio-2232, ¶ 30, 38 (9th Dist.). It seems to be Bill’s and the Estate’s position that
because this Court did not specifically disavow the language above, we approved of it, and it is
the law of the case. This is an untenable argument, particularly in these circumstances, wherein
this Court reversed that part of the trial court’s decision. See id. Thus, given the limited argument
and evidence that Bill and the Estate presented in their renewed motion for summary judgment, I
would conclude that they failed to meet their initial summary judgment burden. Further, as Chris
was the non-movant, he did not have a burden until Bill and the Estate met theirs. See Bressi v.
Thompson, 2024-Ohio-2244, ¶ 14 (9th Dist.), quoting Dresher v. Burt, 75 Ohio St.3d 280, 293
(1996).
{¶53} And while sustaining the first assignment of error would render the remaining
assignments of error moot, I pause to briefly address the second and third assignments of error.
The trial court’s adoption of the proposed order submitted by Bill and the Estate under the
circumstances in this case was improper. When the trial court agreed to consider Bill’s and the
Estate’s renewed motion for summary judgment, it also ordered Bill and the Estate to submit a
proposed entry awarding summary judgment. The trial court cited to Medina C.P., Gen.Div.,
Loc.R. 5(G). Loc.R. 5 addresses motions in general, not motions for summary judgment. In fact,
motions for summary judgment have an entire rule dedicated to them, i.e. Loc.R. 6. Loc.R. 6 does
not require the movant to file a proposed judgment entry. Accordingly, I find it concerning that 20
the trial court only ordered Bill and the Estate to submit a proposed judgment entry, and that it did
so before it heard from the other side. It is possible members of the public could view that course
of action as the trial court having already decided the matter without reviewing all the filings. This
makes the trial court’s nearly wholesale adoption of the proposed entry only days after the reply
brief was filed even more troubling; I cannot have confidence that the trial court conducted the
required independent review of the filings. See State v. Riley, 2024-Ohio-5712, ¶ 15.
APPEARANCES:
DAVID G. UTLEY, Attorney at Law, for Appellant.
MARION H. LITTLE, JR. and CHRISTOPHER J. HOGAN, Attorneys at Law, for Appellant.
ORVILLE L. REED, III, Attorney at Law, for Appellant.
DAVID P. BERTSCH, Attorney at Law, for Appellant.
MATTHEW W. NAKON, RACHELLE KUZNICKI ZIDER, and MICHAEL R. NAKON, Attorneys at Law, for Appellees.
BENJAMIN M. FLOWERS, Attorney at Law, for Appellees.