Tromler v. Tromler

2025 Ohio 931
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 18, 2025
Docket2024 CA 0024
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 931 (Tromler v. Tromler) 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
Tromler v. Tromler, 2025 Ohio 931 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as Tromler v. Tromler, 2025-Ohio-931.]

COURT OF APPEALS RICHLAND COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

ELIZABETH TROMLER, : JUDGES: : Hon. Craig R. Baldwin, P.J. Petitioner - Appellee : Hon. Michael D. Hess, J. : Hon. Jason P. Smith, J. : : Judges Hess and Smith Sitting by : Assignment by the Supreme Court of : Ohio -vs- : : LASZLO TROMLER, : Case No. 2024 CA 0027 : Respondent - Appellant : OPINION

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING: Appeal from the Richland County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 2023 CPO 0461

JUDGMENT: Affirmed

DATE OF JUDGMENT: March 18, 2025

APPEARANCES:

For Petitioner-Appellee For Respondent-Appellant

CATHERINE D. GOLDMAN NICOLE A. CRUZ Weldon, Huston & Keyser, LLP Stafford Law Co., L.P.A. 76 N. Mulberry Street North Point Tower Mansfield, Ohio 44902 1001 Lakeside Avenue, Suite 1300 Cleveland, Ohio 44114 Baldwin, P.J.

{¶1} The appellant, Laszlo Tromler, appeals the trial court’s decision granting

appellee Elizabeth Tromler’s Petition for Domestic Violence Civil Protection Order.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND THE CASE

{¶2} The parties were married on or about October 30, 2016. The marriage was

tumultuous and volatile, and has resulted in multiple filings in Lorain County. The appellee

was, at all times relevant hereto, a resident of Richland County. The appellant is six feet

tall and weighs 200 pounds, while the appellee is 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighs 118

pounds.

{¶3} In January of 2023, the appellee named the appellant as respondent in a

petition for a domestic violence civil protection order filed in Lorain County Case No.

23DV091851. On January 20, 2023, the Lorain County Court of Common Pleas granted

the appellee’s petition and issued an Ex Parte Domestic Violence CPO. On July 13, 2023,

the appellee filed a dismissal of Case No. 23DV091851, and filed the Petition for Domestic

Violence Civil Protection (DVCPO) Order in the case sub judice. The appellant argues

that the appellee’s dismissal of the Lorain County matter was filed on July 19, 2023, after

her Petition was filed in this matter, and that she improperly engaging in forum shopping.

{¶4} The appellee’s two daughters, whose dates of birth are 9/30/96 and

10/20/2003, resided with her at the time she filed her Richland County Petition. An Ex

Parte DVCPO was issued on July 13, 2023, and the matter was scheduled for a full

hearing on July 27, 2023. The hearing was continued three times, at the request of the

appellee, the appellant, and by the trial court respectively. {¶5} The matter proceeded for a half-day hearing on the afternoon of November

29, 2023. At the onset of the hearing, the magistrate addressed the issue of the date on

which the appellee filed her dismissal of the Lorain County DVCPO matter; it was noted

on the record that the notice of dismissal filed by the appellee in the Lorain DVCPO matter

displays a time-stamp reading 7/13/2023. Thus, while the Lorain County court may have

noted the dismissal as “per consent 7/19” as argued by the appellant, it was nevertheless

filed by the appellee, and time-stamped by the Lorain County Clerk of Courts, on July 13,

2023. The hearing proceeded, and the appellee presented evidence that the appellant

had committed acts of domestic violence against her in Florida in 2020, and in Ohio in

2021, and on multiple other occasions - most recently in December of 2022.

{¶6} More specifically, the appellee testified that during the late evening hours of

December 21, 2022, and extending into the morning of December 22, 2022, the appellant

struck her with an open hand, pulled her hair, spit on her, kicked her, and strangled her.

He took and damaged her phone, and took and kept her car keys from her. The appellee

was afraid that the appellant was going to kill her, and did not feel free to leave. She

testified that the appellant forced her to have sex with him, and did not stop when she told

him to, while she was lying in bed in a fetal position afraid to move. The appellee made a

report to law enforcement later that same day, and submitted to a Sexual Assault Exam

at the hospital. She suffered multiple bruises, scratches, and had a toenail ripped off.

{¶7} The appellee concluded her testimony at approximately 4:00 p.m., and the

magistrate asked appellant’s counsel if he could complete his cross-examination by 4:30.

When appellant’s counsel answered that he could not, the magistrate proceeded to

continue the matter for an additional half-day hearing: MAGISTRATE METCALF: It is 4:03. I don’t mind going and keeping court

staff here until 4:30, and I was planning on doing that today if we could get

done. Do you think - -

MR. STAFFORD: Well, figuring the direct examination consumed

all of today in reference to this, my cross-examination is probably going to

be lengthier than the direct examination.

MAGISTRATE METCALF: A couple of hours, you think?

MR. STAFFORD: Correct, at least, Your Honor.

The matter was adjourned, the parties’ counsel were instructed to see the scheduling

clerk for a date and time for the continued hearing. The matter was scheduled to continue

on the afternoon of January 16, 2024.

{¶8} The hearing reconvened on January 16, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. The appellee

was the only witness called to testify by either party over both days. The appellant did not

testify on either date, nor did he appear for either hearing. The appellant was scheduled

to begin the hearing with his cross-examination of the appellee, and the magistrate

inquired as to whether the appellant was going to call any witnesses. When appellant’s

counsel advised the court that he did not anticipate calling any witnesses of his own, the

magistrate stated:

MAGISTRATE METCALF: Yes. Okay. So if you have no further witnesses

today, then you would have - - I would give you until 4:00 on this witness,

which would be three hours, we’re cutting into that, which would be more

time than was permitted on direct examination. I think it is certainly sufficient time for you to make whatever points you need to make in this protection

order hearing today.

The appellant objected for the record, and proceeded to cross-examine the appellee for

approximately three hours. The parties concluded, the magistrate took the matter under

advisement, and the parties thereafter submitted written closing arguments.

{¶9} In addition, on January 26, 2024, the appellant filed a Proffer in which he

argued that, due to time restrictions imposed by the trial court on the second day of

hearing, he had intended but was unable to present “additional evidence concerning the

parties’ unique relationship and lifestyle, and evidence concerning appellee’s character

and inconsistencies in sworn statements as to the events of December 21, 2022 and

December 22, 2022.” He further listed “additional” exhibits that would have been

presented. He also filed a Motion for New Trial on the same date.

{¶10} On March 7, 2024, the magistrate issued a Magistrate’s Decision and Entry

of a Domestic Violence Civil Protection Order (CPO) Full Hearing (R.C. 3113.31). In

addition, the court issued a Court’s Response to Appellant’s Proffer in which it found that

two of the seven exhibits about which the appellant complained were offered during the

hearing but excluded as irrelevant. A third exhibit was admitted for impeachment

purposes. The trial court considered the remaining four exhibits and found that they were

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Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tromler-v-tromler-ohioctapp-2025.