214 N.E.2d 265 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1966
This is an appeal under Section
Appellant was charged with violation of Section
Paragraph (A) of Section
A charge under these paragraphs must involve conduct by a broker as a broker, i. e., the misrepresentation or dishonest act must relate to the brokerage business of the broker. Under the definition of a "real estate broker" found in Section
In our opinion, the record as certified by the agency is incomplete. It does not contain the agency's order. The action taken by the commission upon the charges as made appears only in an unverified copy of an alleged order attached to the notice of appeal filed by the appellant. This copy is not, of course, certified by the agency.
Under Section
Appellee argues that the copy of the order attached to appellant's notice of appeal constitutes compliance with the statute, and, in any event, constitutes a "waiver" of the requirement of a complete record. Assuming that a copy may be substituted for the original, the copy here is not certified by the agency, and therefore cannot be a compliance with the statute. The contention as to "waiver" goes to the existence of prejudice — a factor not found in the mandatory procedural requirements of the statute.
If the issue presented by the procedural defect here were one of notice to the appellant or prejudice in the presentation of his appeal, we would agree that no reversal would be warranted. However, the problem is one of an incomplete record. In most civil actions the solution is to send the file back to the agency to have the original order placed in the transcript and recertified by the court. This court was recently given that power with respect to a bill of exceptions. See Section
This court can sympathize with the Attorney General's position that the people of Ohio through their administrative agencies are entitled to a day in court on the merits of a case. Perhaps a procedural oversight which does not prejudice the opposite party should not carry the harsh result of dismissal of the charges. However, in the field of administrative law, the rules are strictly applied, and at least the harshness falls equally upon both sides. Compare Starr v. Young, Admr. (1961),
The judgment of the Common Pleas Court and the order of the commission will be reversed and vacated.
Judgment reversed.
BRYANT, P. J., and TROOP, J., concur. *164