Stewart v. Stewart, Unpublished Decision (4-17-1998)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1998
DocketC.A. Case No. 16649, 16769. T.C. Case No. 96 DR 2012.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stewart v. Stewart, Unpublished Decision (4-17-1998) (Stewart v. Stewart, Unpublished Decision (4-17-1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Stewart v. Stewart, Unpublished Decision (4-17-1998), (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Appellant William H. Stewart III appeals from two judgments of the Montgomery County Common Pleas Court, Domestic Relations Division. Finding that both appeals involved the same facts, parties, and trial court case number, this court consolidated the appeals sua sponte on Dec. 4, 1997.

In his pro se brief to this court, William advances ten assignments of error containing forty-three issues for our review. His arguments allege prejudicial error in various lower-court proceedings and rulings, culminating in the trial court's final judgment and decree of divorce issued on August 15, 1997. The historical facts underlying the present dispute are relatively simple. The parties married on July 14, 1984. Appellee Cathy L. Stewart filed a complaint for divorce on November 26, 1996. Thereafter, the trial court issued a temporary order on January 6, 1997, granting Cathy temporary custody of the parties' minor child and requiring William to pay temporary child support and temporary spousal support. William, acting pro se, subsequently sought and received a hearing on the temporary support issue. A magistrate conducted the hearing and issued a February 11, 1997, order finding the temporary support "fair and reasonable."

Thereafter, William filed a litany of pro se motions, including inter alia (1) a motion for Civ.R. 60(B) relief and a hearing, (2) a motion in limine, (3) a motion to compel discovery, (4) a motion for a "court appointed expert for asset valuation," (5) a motion to strike, (6) a motion for "defendant party joinder," and (7) a motion to set aside the magistrate's order. The trial court denied each of these motions. Following a hearing on Cathy's divorce complaint, at which William again represented himself, the trial court issued a final judgment and decree of divorce. Among other things, the decree named Cathy as residential parent of the parties' child, required William to pay $325 as child support, awarded Cathy one-half of the value of William's PERS pension fund accumulated during the marriage, and awarded Cathy $1,000 toward her attorney fees. The decree did not award either party spousal support.

William subsequently filed a timely notice of appeal in case number CA 16769 from the trial court's final judgment and decree of divorce. This court on December 4, 1997, sua sponte consolidated the appeal with William's earlier appeal in case number CA 16649 from the trial court's June 8, 1997, entry and order disposing of his various motions. In an August 25, 1997, decision and entry, this court also allowed William to amend his premature notice of appeal in case number CA 16649 to include an appeal from the trial court's entry of a final divorce decree. Additionally, the entry granted William permission to file a brief not exceeding thirty-five pages. In response, William has presented this court with a seventy-four-page brief, excluding the table of contents, table of cases, authorities cited, and appendices.

Although the "argument" portion of William's brief is thirty-five pages long, his brief also includes a seven-page recitation of his assignments of error, a ten-page presentation of issues for our review, a one-page statement of the case, and twenty-one pages of facts. These portions of William's brief arenot excluded from the page limits found in Loc.App.R. 2.2 of the Second District Court of Appeals. Given William's decision to file a brief nearly three times longer than the twenty-five pages typically allowed — and more than twice as long as the thirty-five pages this court specially authorized — we are tempted to base our opinion on only the first thirty-five pages. Doing so, however, would leave this court mired amidst William's recitation of the facts. Consequently, we will consider William's loquacious arguments notwithstanding his failure to comply with this court's prior decision and entry.

In so doing, however, we note that William's verbosity and his presentation of forty-three different arguments only make it more difficult for this court to ascertain which issues truly merit close judicial scrutiny. Rather than stressing those issues legitimately warranting appellate review, William has contested virtually every sentence of every ruling made by the trial court. Such conduct lessens William's credibility before this court, as we find it unlikely that the trial court erred every time it ruled. In any event, we proceed now to the following ten assignments of error1:

I.
"The trial court erred as a matter of law and prejudiced Defendant['s] rights when it failed to issue an order of reference for hearing before the magistrate on Defendant's request for hearing following the trial court's `Temporary Order,' and the trial court abused its discretion when it failed to respond to objections or consider modification of the `Magistrate Order' prior to or at final hearing."

In his first assignment of error, William contends that no order of reference or automatic reference authorized a magistrate to conduct the February 4, 1997, hearing regarding temporary child and spousal support. Consequently, he argues that the hearing is "void." William also alleges prejudice because Loc.R. 4.21(A) of the Montgomery County Common Pleas Court, Domestic Relations Division, prohibits objections to a magistrate's pre-decree temporary support order. Finally, William contends the trial court erred by failing to respond when he objected to the magistrate's temporary support order.

We find these arguments meritless. At the outset, we note that William appeared before the magistrate and participated in the hearing without objection. After the hearing, the magistrate issued a ruling on February 11, 1997, and found the previously ordered temporary child and spousal support proper. The magistrate's order included the following notation: "This Magistrate Order pursuant to Civ.R. 75(M) shall be effective upon filing and shall not be subject to objections by either party." Nevertheless, William responded with a "Motion to Set Magistrate's Order Aside." In his motion, William raised five objections to the magistrate's ruling, none of which mentioned the absence of an order of reference. The trial court overruled William's objections in a March 28, 1997, decision and judgment and denied his motion to set aside the magistrate's order. William then filed a Civ.R. 60(B) motion to vacate the trial court's journal entry overruling his objections. That motion also failed to mention the absence of an order of reference. The trial court subsequently overruled William's Civ.R. 60(B) motion, along with numerous other motions, in a June 8, 1997, entry and order. In its ruling, the trial court stated:

"Defendant's motion for oral evidentiary hearing to vacate the Court's decision and judgment pursuant to Civ.R. 60(B)(5) is denied. Civ.R. 60(B) allows a court to relieve a party from a final judgment, order or proceeding for several reasons which are listed thereunder. The Decision and Judgment to which Defendant objects is not a final judgment. Defendant was granted a Rule 75 hearing which resulted in a Magistrate Order containing a pre-decree support order. Defendant filed objections thereto, and the Court accepted those objections and issued a Decision and Judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
Stewart v. Stewart, Unpublished Decision (4-17-1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-stewart-unpublished-decision-4-17-1998-ohioctapp-1998.