Youngstown State Univ. v. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Emps.

2013 Ohio 5862
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 2013
Docket13 MA 104
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2013 Ohio 5862 (Youngstown State Univ. v. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Emps.) 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
Youngstown State Univ. v. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Emps., 2013 Ohio 5862 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as Youngstown State Univ. v. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Emps., 2013-Ohio-5862.]

STATE OF OHIO, MAHONING COUNTY

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

SEVENTH DISTRICT

YOUNGSTOWN STATE UNIVERSITY, ) et al., , ) ) CASE NO. 13 MA 104 PETITIONERS-APPELLANTS, ) ) OPINION - VS - ) AND ) JUDGMENT ENTRY YOUNGSTOWN STATE UNIVERSITY ) ASSOCIATION OF CLASSIFIED ) EMPLOYEES, ) ) RESPONDENT-APPELLEE. )

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS: Civil Appeal from Common Pleas Court, Case No. 13CV433.

JUDGMENT: Appeal dismissed for Lack of a Final Appealable Order.

JUDGES: Hon. Joseph J. Vukovich Hon. Timothy P. Cannon Judge of the Eleventh District Court Of Appeals, Sitting by Assignment. Hon. Cynthia Westcott Rice Judge of the Eleventh District Court Of Appeals, Sitting by Assignment.

Dated: December 19, 2013 [Cite as Youngstown State Univ. v. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Emps., 2013-Ohio-5862.]

APPEARANCES:

For Petitioners-Appellants: Attorney George Crisci 55 Public Square, 4th Floor Cleveland, Ohio 44113 (For Youngstown State University)

Attorney Anthony Donofrio Deputy Law Director City of Youngstown 26 South Phelps Street Youngstown, Ohio 44503 (For City of Youngstown and Jay Macejko)

Attorney William Blanchard South Bridge West 755 Boardman Canfield Road Building F, Suite 4 Youngstown, Ohio 44512 (For Jay Macejko)

For Respondent-Appellee: Attorney Ira Mirkin Attorney Charles Oldfield 100 Federal Plaza East P.O. Box 849 Youngstown, Ohio 44503 [Cite as Youngstown State Univ. v. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Emps., 2013-Ohio-5862.] PER CURIAM:

{¶1} Appellants Youngstown State University and former City of Youngstown prosecutor Joseph Macejko have appealed a decision of the Mahoning County Common Pleas Court regarding subpoenas issued to YSU’s general counsel Holly Jacobs and the city’s former prosecutor by appellee Youngstown State University Association of Classified Employees in an arbitration action. The trial court refused to quash the subpoenas in their entirety but granted YSU’s request for a protective order with respect to any privileged, confidential, or otherwise protected information sought by the union during questioning of these witnesses at the arbitration hearing. Still, YSU and the former city prosecutor appealed. This court requested jurisdictional memoranda as to whether there existed a final appealable order. For the following reasons, this appeal is dismissed for lack of a final appealable order. STATEMENT OF THE CASE {¶2} Ivan Maldonado, a member and president of the Union, was terminated by YSU in 2009 for allegedly making threats to other employees, misfeasance, malfeasance, nonfeasance, incompetence, inefficiency, and neglect of duty. He was charged criminally with misdemeanor menacing and later with felony and misdemeanor charges involving falsification. {¶3} The Union filed a grievance on behalf of Maldonado, which initiated arbitration proceedings under a collective bargaining agreement. The arbitration proceedings were stayed pending the resolution of the criminal charges. {¶4} In 2010, the Union filed a public records request to YSU seeking correspondence and documents about Maldonado that were exchanged between YSU and the city prosecutor’s office. When YSU refused to provide the documents, the Union filed a mandamus action in this court seeking to compel the production of the records. {¶5} In conducting discovery in the mandamus action, the Union delivered a subpoena duces tecum to the prosecutor’s office requesting all documents pertaining in any way to the misdemeanor prosecution and all documents exchanged between YSU and the city prosecutor’s office pertaining to Maldonado. Thereafter, the Union -2-

filed a motion to compel in the mandamus action and the city filed a motion to quash the subpoena. This court ordered the city to present all documents for an in camera review. State ex rel. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Employees v. Youngstown State Univ., 7th Dist. No. 10MA63 (J.E. Sept. 3, 2010). {¶6} This court then quashed the subpoena with respect to all documents that were not previously disclosed to the Union. State ex rel. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Employees v. Youngstown State Univ., 7th Dist. No. 10MA63 (J.E. Feb. 9, 2011). This court pointed out that the documents fell into three categories: emails between Attorney Jacobs and the city prosecutor, the prosecutor’s case file in the misdemeanor case, and the city prosecutor’s felony investigation file. Id. at 6. {¶7} It was noted that the city prosecutor’s office represented not only the city but acted to some degree as legal advisor to YSU’s police department and thus to a limited extent also represented YSU and that Attorney Jacobs, as general counsel for YSU, would also represent YSU’s police department. Id. at 8. It was further pointed out that the city prosecutor prosecutes in the name of the city and the state and that Attorney Jacobs, as general university counsel, is an Assistant Attorney General of Ohio. Id. at 10-11. {¶8} This court concluded that six categories of privilege and exemption applied to the documents sought that were not already disclosed: attorney-client privilege, work product, common interest privilege, trial preparation records, confidential law enforcement investigatory records, and confidential documents obtained through the Attorney General’s database. Id. at 6-15. {¶9} Also in conducting discovery in the mandamus action, Attorney Jacobs was deposed by the Union. After she refused to answer certain questions on grounds of attorney-client privilege or work product privilege, the Union filed a motion to compel. Based in large part on this court’s February 9, 2011 entry quashing the subpoena for documents issued to the city, this court overruled the Union’s motion to compel Attorney Jacobs regarding the questions she refused to answer in deposition. State ex rel. Youngstown State Univ. Assn. of Classified Employees v. Youngstown -3-

State Univ., 7th Dist. No. 10MA63 (J.E. Mar. 15, 2011). This court reviewed the deposition transcript and determined that all of the objections related to privileged matters, including those related to the public records act. Id. at 4-5, citing to 16 pages in the transcript containing objections. {¶10} This court asked for motions regarding final disposition of the mandamus action, and the Union then voluntarily dismissed its mandamus action presumably as the rulings essentially disposed of any arguments it would make in its public records request. {¶11} Maldonado was acquitted of all charges in both courts. Arbitration was then reactivated. The Union requested that a subpoena to appear at the arbitration hearing issue to Attorney Jacobs and the former city prosecutor. When the issue of quashing was raised to the arbitrator, he apparently voiced that such a matter should be brought before the trial court. {¶12} Thus, on February 19, 2013, YSU filed in the trial court a petition to quash or in the alternative a motion for a protective order. Specifically, YSU asked for an order quashing the subpoenas “to the extent such subpoena seeks production of privilege and confidential information.” In the alternative, YSU moved for a protective order, asking the court to protect the confidential and privileged information and prohibit the Union from obtaining information it has already twice sought and twice been denied. The former city prosecutor filed a similar motion briefly urging that his testimony would require the disclosure of privileged or protected matter and that the issue of such disclosure was already ruled upon by this appellate court and then adopting the reasons set forth in YSU’s petition.

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