Tillimon v. Clifton

2019 Ohio 4198
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 11, 2019
DocketL-19-1029
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 Ohio 4198 (Tillimon v. Clifton) 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
Tillimon v. Clifton, 2019 Ohio 4198 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as Tillimon v. Clifton, 2019-Ohio-4198.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT LUCAS COUNTY

Duane J. Tillimon Court of Appeals No. L-19-1029

Appellant Trial Court No. CVG-03-19999

v.

Don Clifton, et al. DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellee Decided: October 11, 2019

*****

Duane J. Tillimon, pro se.

MAYLE, P.J.

{¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Duane J. Tillimon, appeals the January 24, 2019

judgment of the Toledo Municipal Court, Housing Division, denying his motion to hold

defendant-appellee, Don Clifton, in contempt of court for failing to appear to answer

interrogatories and for failing to appear for oral examination.1 For the reasons that

follow, we reverse.

1 Tillimon and the trial court characterize this judgment entry as a denial of Tillimon’s “motion to show cause.” Tillimon’s motion was actually termed a “motion for finding of I. Background

{¶ 2} This matter has a long history. It began on October 27, 2003, when Tillimon

filed a landlord complaint against his tenants, Don Clifton and Christine Lipper. Clifton

and Lipper (“the tenants”) answered and counterclaimed. In an order journalized on

December 8, 2003, the trial court entered judgment in favor of Tillimon for possession of

the premises at issue. Tillimon was ultimately awarded a money judgment against

Clifton and Lipper for $20,142.69 in an order journalized on May 19, 2005. During the

course of the litigation, Tillimon was also granted sanctions against the tenants and their

former attorney for violating an order compelling discovery.

{¶ 3} Tillimon’s judgments have not yet been satisfied and have ballooned due to

interest, fees, and costs incurred in the more than 14 years since the judgments were

awarded. Efforts to collect the judgments have been in fits and starts as bankruptcy

petitions, a rash of tangential disputes, several appeals to this court, and Tillimon’s

inability to locate the tenants caused delays along the way. Upon discovering Clifton’s

whereabouts, Tillimon made renewed efforts to collect against him beginning in 2017.

This appeal arises from those recent efforts, which are briefly summarized in the timeline

below:

contempt and arrest warrant pursuant to R.C. 2705.02, R.C. 2705.06 and R.C. 2333.05 & R.C. 2333.11 (Instanter).” The trial court denied the motion, but set the matter for a hearing for Clifton to show cause “why he shall not be held in contempt of court for failing to appear to answer interrogatories and for failing to appear for an oral examination.” We refer to Tillimon’s motion as a motion for finding of contempt.

2.  March 18, 2017: Tillimon filed an application for proceedings in aid of execution,

seeking an order requiring Clifton to appear for a debtor exam, answer written

questions, and produce documents.

 March 22, 2017: The court granted Tillimon leave to proceed in aid of execution.

Clifton was ordered to appear for a debtor’s exam on April 19, 2017.

 April 6, 2017: Clifton sought a continuance because (1) he intended to hire an

attorney; and (2) he was going to be working at Jeep seven days a week, ten hours

a day. He asked that the matter be rescheduled for July of 2017.

 April 19, 2017: The court granted a continuance to May 31, 2017.

 May 31, 2017: Clifton appeared without an attorney, but refused to answer

questions or produce documents. The trial court granted a continuance until

June 28, 2017.

 June 28, 2017: Clifton failed to appear. Tillimon moved the court to order Clifton

to show cause why he should not be held in contempt and asked that if Clifton

again fails to appear, that he be arrested and held in custody until he produces

documents and answers questions “to [Tillimon’s] satisfaction.”

 July 31, 2017: The court denied Tillimon’s motion to show cause.

 December 1, 2017: The court, on its own motion, ordered Clifton to appear for

examination on January 10, 2018.

3.  January 10, 2018: Without explanation, the docket entry states that “proceeding in

aid is hereby dismissed.”

 April 24, 2018: The court ordered Clifton to appear on June 13, 2018. The order

provided that Clifton was “subject to a finding of CONTEMPT and ORDER OF

ARREST should [he] fail to Answer the Interrogatories and Produce the

Documents requested in the DEBTOR DISCLOSURE FORM (Exhibit #1)

within (7) days of the delivery of this Order, or fail to appear at the time and place

specified * * *.”

 June 13, 2018: Clifton did not appear. Tillimon moved for a “finding of contempt

and arrest warrant pursuant to R.C. 2705.02, R.C. 2705.06, and R.C. 2333.05 &

R.C. 2333.11 (Instanter).”

 July 5, 2018: The trial court denied Tillimon’s motion, but set the matter for a

hearing at which Clifton was to show cause “why he shall not be held in contempt

of court for failing to appear to answer interrogatories and for failing to appear for

an oral examination.” The hearing was scheduled for July 31, 2018.

 July 30, 2018: Clifton filed a motion for continuance with the court, indicating

that he would “not make it to the court date tomorrow the 31st” because he would

be “off to Cleveland Clinic” due to “dysphagia and aspirate [sic] food and water

into [his] lungs.” He informed the court that he would be “in and out till the end

of Sept, mid Oct, [so] please make it for a couple months.” Clifton attached two

documents to his motion: (1) a report from his attending physician estimating a

4. period of disability extending to September of 2018; and (2) a claim form

containing a diagnosis of “dysphagia, aspiration, superficial thrombophlebitis[,

and] anxiety disorder” and listing dates of service for EGDs and “HA” on

December 6, 2017, April 2, 2018, April 5, 2018, and May 7, 2018. Tillimon

opposed Clifton’s motion for continuance.

 August 27, 2018: The magistrate recommended that Clifton’s motion be denied as

untimely, that Clifton be held in contempt, and that a warrant be issued; however,

because Clifton filed documentation indicating that he suffered from ailments that

may persist until September 31 [sic], 2018, the court rejected the magistrate’s

recommendation and instead scheduled the matter for a show cause hearing on

October 18, 2018.

 November 6, 2018: The show cause hearing was postponed until December 13,

2018, for reasons not reflected in the docket.

 December 13, 2018: Clifton did not appear for the show cause hearing.

Nevertheless, the trial court denied Tillimon’s motion. It held that (1) the Ohio

Constitution, Article I, Section 15, provides that “no person shall be imprisoned

for debt in any civil action,” therefore, “a contempt proceeding is not a proper

method by which to collect a civil judgment”; (2) “the law provides other methods

for collecting civil judgments”; and (3) Clifton provided medical documentation

indicating that he was unable to appear for a hearing because he was undergoing

treatment.

5. {¶ 4} Tillimon appealed and assigns the following errors for our review:

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR #1

THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSABLE [sic] ERROR,

AND ABUSED ITS DISCRETION, WHEN IT DECLARED R.C. 2333.11

ORDER OF ARREST MAY ISSUE AND R.C. 2705.06

IMPRISONMENT UNTIL ORDER OBEYED TO BE

UNCONSTITUTIONAL BECAUSE THE STATUTES VIOLATE OHIO

CONSTITUTION ARTICLE 1.15 NO IMPRISONMENT FOR DEBT[.]

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR #2

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2019 Ohio 4198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillimon-v-clifton-ohioctapp-2019.