Spier v. American University of the Caribbean
This text of 443 N.E.2d 1021 (Spier v. American University of the Caribbean) 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
This cause came on to be heard upon an appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County.
Defendants-appellants (collectively, defendants) appeal from a summary judgment granted against them for the funds expended by two dissatisfied students who withdrew from the defendants’ newly organized medical school after attending it for the first six weeks of its existence. While the case raises a series of questions about the relationship between a medical school and its students and about the remedies, if any, available to dissatisfied students, we dispose of this appeal on procedural grounds because under Civ. R. 56(C) summary judgment should not have been granted.
I. Procedural Posture
Plaintiffs-appellees Spier and Filipponi (collectively, plaintiffs) sued defendants for breach of contract and for fraud. 1 The essence of their claim is that the brochure sent to them by defendant Tien prior to their applications for enrollment contained false and fraudulent representations about the medical school. 2 They asked for return of fees and tuition and their out-of-pocket expenses. Defendants denied all allegations of misrepresentation, breach of contract and fraud.
Plaintiffs moved for, and were granted, summary judgment on their cause of action for breach of contract, leaving unresolved the claim of fraud and certain other interpleaded claims not relevant to the current appeal. The judgment entry stated that there was no just reason for delay, thus complying with Civ. R. 54(B).
Defendants present two assignments of error, both of which have merit: first, the court erred in granting summary judgment; second, the court erred in not discharging a prejudgment attachment of defendants’ accounts, the statutes having been held to be unconstitutional.
II. Summary Judgment
The granting of summary judgment was erroneous because the cognizable documents before the trial court disclose *29 genuine issues of material fact. We refer to the “cognizable documents,” because Civ. R. 56(C) sets forth a specific list of documents that may be considered and the court may not consider any other documents. 3 In the instant case, we can consider the pleadings, the plaintiffs’ answers to interrogatories, their depositions, the deposition of defendant Tien and the affidavit of Barbara G. Watts (attached to the motion for summary judgment). Documents attached to the motion as mere exhibits, even though allegedly certified to be from the records of the State Board of School' and College Registration, are not cognizable.
In order to determine whether there are genuine issues of material fact, the presence of which makes summary judgment inappropriate, we must first identify the causes of action alleged by plaintiffs and the defenses set up by defendants; these define the issues. Plaintiffs’ claims as students dissatisfied with the medical school fall in that murky area where fraud, deceit, breach of contract and rescission converge and overlap. We can eliminate the tort claims in this appeal, because although the “First Count” of the complaint may be interpreted as sounding in both contract and tort, the parties and the court treated the motion and the judgment as being in contract only. What is not clear, however, is whether the judgment was sought or awarded on the basis of breach of contract by reason of want of consideration, breach of contract by reason of failure of consideration, or fraud in the inducement entitling the plaintiffs to rescission. It seems clear that they sued on an express contract rather than an implied one, 4 because the claimed *30 misrepresentations were all set forth in defendants’ brochure.
We find unresolved issues of material fact, no matter which of the three contract claims are examined. The unresolved issues are: whether certain of the representations were in fact false, whether the plaintiffs were actually-deceived by any of the representations that were factually inaccurate, and if so, whether any of those representations were material to the contract or to plaintiffs’ expenditure of funds. 5 With such issues of material fact patent on the face of the record, the court erred in granting summary judgment.
III. Prejudgment Attachment
We find merit in defendants’ second assignment of error because the statutes in R.C. Chapter 2715 that authorized prejudgment attachment and that were used to attach defendants’ accounts were held to be unconstitutional. Peebles v. Clement (1980), 63 Ohio St. 2d 314 [17 O.O.3d 203]. A statute declared unconstitutional is void from the date of its enactment. Hogg v. Zanesville Canal & Mfg. Co. (1832), 5 Ohio 410. It is a mere nullity. Cincinnati, Wilmington and Zanesville RR. Co. v. Clinton County (1852), 1 Ohio St. 77. While there are exceptions to the retroactive effect of a judicial determination of unconstitutionality, Linkletter v. Walker (1965), 381 U.S. 618 [33 O.O.2d 118], we believe the application of the attachment statutes to the then existing and continuing attachment of defendants’ accounts does not fall within those exceptions. The court below had authority to attach only under the statutes, and they were unenforceable because they did not meet all five of the minimum due process safeguards required by Peebles. The attachments cannot stand.
The order from which the defendants appealed was the overruling of their second motion to discharge the attachments. Plaintiffs assert that defendants must be precluded from this appeal because they had failed to appeal an adverse ruling on their first motion to discharge the attachments. We are not persuaded. We note that the first motion attacked the insufficiency of plaintiffs’ affidavit accompanying their motion for attachment, and that the trial court simultaneously overruled the first motion to discharge and allowed the plaintiffs to file a new affidavit that complied with R.C. Chapter 2715. The first motion to discharge merely pointed to a defect in the attachment affidavit that was simultaneously corrected. It is the rule that an order denying a motion to discharge is a final appealable order for matters expressly raised in the motion and all other issues that might have been raised. Toledo Paper Box Co. v. Jay Lane, Inc. (Hamilton App. 1935), 20 Ohio Law Abs. 334; Farmers Bank & Trust Co. v. Cooper Tire & Battery Co. (1930), 37 Ohio App. 54. The application of this rule, however, would be patently unfair in the *31 instant case.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
443 N.E.2d 1021, 3 Ohio App. 3d 28, 3 Ohio B. 29, 1981 Ohio App. LEXIS 10015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spier-v-american-university-of-the-caribbean-ohioctapp-1981.