State ex rel. Luikart v. Washington Court House

2026 Ohio 111
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 2026
Docket2024-1586
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 Ohio 111 (State ex rel. Luikart v. Washington Court House) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Luikart v. Washington Court House, 2026 Ohio 111 (Ohio 2026).

Opinion

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State ex rel. Luikart v. Washington Court House, Slip Opinion No. 2026-Ohio-111.]

NOTICE This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65 South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published.

SLIP OPINION NO. 2026-OHIO-111 [THE STATE EX REL.] LUIKART v. THE CITY OF WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE. [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State ex rel. Luikart v. Washington Court House, Slip Opinion No. 2026-Ohio-111.] Mandamus—Public-records requests—R.C. 149.43(G)—A defendant’s public- records request for documents from unrelated criminal case is not a request related to defendant’s action for purposes of R.C. 149.43(G), and public office therefore cannot treat request as a discovery demand—Public office’s purported good-faith belief that request was a discovery demand under R.C. 149.43(G) does not change that reasonableness of response time is measured by date of request, not date that public office’s motion for judgment on pleadings was denied—Multiple emails sent on the same calendar day to the same office all concerning docket items in cases filed in city’s municipal court relate to the same general subject matter, thus constituting one transmission for purposes of statutory damages—Public office failed to establish that its reliance on R.C. 149.43(G) warranted SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

reducing or denying statutory-damages award—Writ denied as moot and relator awarded $1,000 in statutory damages. (No. 2024-1586—Submitted June 24, 2025—Decided January 20, 2026.) IN MANDAMUS. __________________ The per curiam opinion below was joined by FISCHER, DEWINE, BRUNNER, DETERS, HAWKINS, and SHANAHAN, JJ. KENNEDY, C.J., concurred in part and dissented in part and would award relator $45,000 in statutory damages for the reasons set forth in her separate opinion in State ex rel. Henderson v. Washington Court House, 2026-Ohio-110.

Per Curiam. {¶ 1} Relator, Aaron Michael Lloyd Luikart, made 45 requests for public records in 46 separate emails that he sent to the city attorney for Washington Court House between 4:53 p.m. and 6:59 p.m. on Sunday, November 3, 2024. Nine days later, Luikart filed a petition in this court seeking a writ of mandamus to order respondent, the City of Washington Court House, to produce the public records he requested. Luikart also requests an award of statutory damages. {¶ 2} After this court granted an alternative writ setting the schedule for the filing of evidence and briefs, the city responded to Luikart’s emails, producing 37 records and explaining that the remaining records were exempt or nonexistent. Luikart concedes that his request for a writ of mandamus is now moot, but he insists that he is entitled to $45,000 in statutory damages—$1,000 for each of his 45 public-records requests. Alternatively, Luikart claims he is entitled to at least $37,000 in statutory damages for the public records he requested that were not exempt from production. We deny the writ as moot and award Luikart $1,000 in statutory damages.

2 January Term, 2026

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY {¶ 3} Mark Pitstick is the city attorney within the Washington Court House City Attorney’s Office. In November 2024, Pitstick was prosecuting Luikart in the Washington Court House Municipal Court. On the evening of November 3, Luikart sent a series of 46 emails,1 starting at 4:53 p.m. and continuing every few minutes until 6:59 p.m. He titled each email “Public Record Request.” Each email requested one or two documents from over 40 separate cases filed in the city’s municipal court, including complaints, pleas, motions, and other case documents. None of the emails requested documents filed in Luikart’s criminal case. {¶ 4} Pitstick avers that he interpreted Luikart’s emails as requests for discovery in Luikart’s criminal case under R.C. 149.43(G). He did not respond to any of Luikart’s emails before Luikart initiated this action for a writ of mandamus. Luikart’s petition for a writ of mandamus asked that the city be ordered to produce the public records Luikart requested. Luikart also requested an award of statutory damages in the amount of $100 per day for each of his 45 public-records requests.2 {¶ 5} The city filed its answer on December 4, 2024. It also filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, asserting that the emails were requests “by a defendant . . . in a criminal action that public records related to that action be made available.” R.C. 149.43(G).

1. Both Luikart and Pitstick refer to 45 requests in their respective affidavits that were filed as evidence in this case. It is not clear which of Luikart’s emails is not accounted for. Regardless, because Luikart avers that there were only 45 requests, we assume that he concedes that one of his emails was not a public-records request.

2. Luikart also requested an additional $5,000 in damages for “inconvenience, mental anguish, delay, and harm inflicted.” However, he did not argue in support of this request in his merit brief, so he has abandoned his request for additional damages. See State ex rel. Castellon v. Cuyahoga Cty. Prosecutor’s Office, 2025-Ohio-2787, ¶ 15 (finding that a relator abandoned relief that was requested in his mandamus complaint when he did not advance an argument in support of that relief in his merit briefing).

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

{¶ 6} Thereafter, Luikart filed an amended petition for a writ of mandamus and the city filed both an answer to the amended petition and an amended motion for judgment on the pleadings. Luikart filed a response in opposition and a motion to strike. {¶ 7} On February 26, 2025, we denied the city’s amended motion for judgment on the pleadings, denied Luikart’s motion to strike, and granted an alternative writ setting the schedule for the filing of evidence and briefs. 2025- Ohio-598. {¶ 8} Following this court’s denial of the city’s motion, Pitstick instructed his assistant to work with the municipal court’s clerk to respond to Luikart’s public- records requests. The clerk provided responses 20 days later, on March 18, 2025, which Luikart claims is 135 days after he made his public-records requests and 123 days after he filed this action. {¶ 9} Luikart concedes in his merit brief that his mandamus claim was rendered moot by the city’s response to his public-records requests. He insists, however, that since his public-records requests went without response for 123 days after he filed this mandamus action, he should receive the maximum amount of $1,000 in statutory damages for each request—for a total of $45,000. Alternatively, he asserts that this court should award him $37,000 because eight of the public- records requests were ultimately subject to exceptions (or did not exist in the municipal court’s records). The city counters that it produced the records in a reasonable time after this court denied its amended motion for judgment on the pleadings and that the city’s failure to produce the records earlier was based on a good-faith belief that Luikart’s emails were requests for discovery. Even if the city failed to comply with its obligations under R.C. 149.43, Ohio’s Public Records Act, the city asserts that this court should deny damages or, at most, cap damages at $1,000 to avoid a windfall.

4 January Term, 2026

II. ANALYSIS {¶ 10} Ohio’s Public Records Act requires a custodian of public records, on request, to make copies of public records available within a reasonable period. R.C. 149.43(B)(1).

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Bluebook (online)
2026 Ohio 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-luikart-v-washington-court-house-ohio-2026.