311 N.E.2d 870 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1974
In disposing of this appeal, it is necessary to discuss a prior appeal. The plaintiff-appellee and defendant-appellants will be referred to as "appellee" and "appellants." Such reference is especially desirable because the plaintiff is appellee in both appeals and the defendants are appellants in both.
Surface indications are that the current appeal involves a relatively simple procedural issue arising from a denial of a motion to vacate under Civ. R. 60(B)(1) and (5).1 Beneath the surface it is apparent that the motion was an effort to retrieve a chance for review of substantive issues *41 lost when a previous appeal2 testing the decision of those issues was dismissed by this court for want of a timely notice of appeal. Appellee contends that the dismissal by this court was appealed to the Supreme Court of Ohio and appends to its brief a document purporting to be an entry from the Supreme Court of Ohio disposing of the appeal. However, that entry is not certified and neither it, nor the notice of appeal to which the entry is a purported response, can be located in the record. In any event the denial of the motion to vacate resulted in the present appeal. A more detailed recital of the background of the first appeal will clarify the somewhat tangled procedure that resulted in the present one.
On April 9, 1973, the appellants filed a notice of appeal from the March 5 judgment. A motion to dismiss was granted by this court on May 2, 1973, on the ground that the notice of appeal had not been filed with the trial court within thirty days of the entry [App. R. 4(A)]3.
On May 29, 1973, appellants filed a motion in the trial court to vacate judgment with a request for oral hearing. The appellants contended they had not received notice of *42 entry of judgment from the trial court4 and thus were entitled to relief under Civ. R. 60(B)(1) and (5).
On June 18, 1973, the trial court denied the motion to vacate without permitting an oral hearing. A notice of appeal from that denial was timely filed in the trial court, and the current appeal ensued.
"1. The Common Pleas Court erred in denying Defendant-Appellants a Motion to Vacate Judgment without granting a hearing to determine the validity of Defendants-Appellants claim.
"2. The Order of the Court of Common Pleas is contrary to law."
The two assignments are encompassed by the same rationale and they are, therefore, treated together. In our view both assignments lack merit. We affirm.
The purpose of a strict rule is a salutary one. It requires litigants to be alert to insure an orderly and prompt processing of appeals. Under statutes predecessor to Civ. R. 60(B), the courts of this State have strictly enforced the policy of refusing to allow the amendment of final orders for the sole purpose of renewing the appeal period to rescue a litigant from his own lethargy or lack of vigilance in filing a timely notice of appeal:
". . . The appellant seeks to do by indirection that which he cannot do directly. The time to appeal the judgment declaring that Raveca Marginean is not the widow and surviving spouse of the deceased has long since passed. Raveca Marginean now wants to again claim that she is the surviving spouse by a motion to vacate all proceedings taken in the probate of the will and matters arising therein. This she cannot do." In re Estate ofMarginean (1961), 87 Ohio L. Abs. 314, 317.
Civ. R. 60(B) is derived from a comparable federal rule of civil procedure. A motion under that rule has been held to be no substitute for appeal, Demers v. Brown (Cir. 1965),
The motion to vacate in the present case is no different in generic objective from the motions in Marginean and inDemers. The issue it raises responds to the rules established in those cases. A reversal of the order of the Court below will achieve nothing but a hearing on the question of vacation of a judgment which the circumstances would make it an abuse of discretion to grant. For it is apparent that were appellants' facts proven true on hearing, the principal consequence would be a fresh denial and a new period of thirty days within which to file a notice of appeal from that denial. The review of the substantive *44 determination thus sought was appropriate in the first appeal but was forfeited by delay.
The appellants' objective is obvious. The only pertinent factual basis set out in the affidavit6 to support the motion to vacate is a claimed failure of notice7 of the date of judgment until after the thirty-day appeal period had expired. A determination of that justification was foreclosed when the first appeal was dismissed for untimely filing of the notice of appeal. Given these facts it would violate the purpose of Civ. R. 60(B)(1) and (5) to allow it to substitute for appeal or be used to circumvent the policy of App. R. 4 (A)8 establishing an appeal period of thirty days. There was no factual issue requiring a hearing. The denial of the motion to vacate was not contrary to law. "There must be an end to litigation some day, . . . ." Ackermann v. United States (1950),
The judgment below is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
KRENZLER, P. J., and CORRIGAN, J., concur.