685 N.E.2d 270 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1996
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *261 This is an appeal from a judgment entered by the Lawrence County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, establishing a parent/child relationship between Dana Cornell (born June 14, 1980), plaintiff below and appellee herein, and John Brumfield, defendant below and appellant herein, and ordering appellant to pay support for the benefit of his son. The following errors are assigned for our review:
I. "The court below erred in determining parentage and establishing support where the issue of parentage was previously adjudicated by the court in a prior case."
II. "In the alternative, the court below erred in holding that the payments under the compromise agreement continue in addition to the child support."
The record reveals the following facts pertinent to this appeal. On June 14, 1980, Beverly Sue Cornell gave birth to appellee, Dana Cornell. It is unclear from the record whether or not Cornell was married to anyone at the time her son was born. In any event, several years later, she commenced a parentage action against appellant in the Juvenile Division of the Common Pleas Court of Lawrence County, Ohio. The original papers from that case were apparently not before the court below and are not included in the record of this case on appeal.1 However, it would appear that on December 30, 1985, an agreed judgment between the parties was entered therein and provided as follows:
"The Court finds that Plaintiff and Defendant, John D. Brumfield, have entered into a compromise agreement with regard to the support of the child, Dana C. Cornell, which agreement has been presented to the Court this date in a *262 form of a Judgment Entry and been approved by the Court as an order of the Court.
"* * *
"It is further the finding of the Court that Defendant, John D. Brumfield, by affixing his signature to this Judgment Entry, has hereby agreed that he shall not in any manner in the future proceed with a paternity action on his behalf with regard to Dana C. Cornell * * * nor will he proceed in any manner to establish legal visitation privileges with [that] child. Based on said Defendant, John D. Brumfield's agreement in this regard, it is hereby ORDERED that John D. Brumfield shall be forever barred from pursuing a paternity action in regard to Dana C. Cornell * * * and it is ORDERED that he shall also be barred from proceeding to establish legal visitation privileges with [the] child."
On July 14, 1993, appellee commenced the action below (by and through Beverly Sue Cornell, his mother and next friend) to establish a parent/child relationship with his alleged father and to obtain child support. Appellant filed an answer denying that he was appellee's father and, further, asserted that the issue of paternity had already been litigated and settled during the previous parentage action with appellee's mother. On September 2, 1993, appellant filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that the issues of paternity and support were resjudicata and that his alleged son's action was barred pursuant to, inter alia, the previous decision of this court in Nelson v.Pleasant (1991),
Blood tests were subsequently ordered and revealed a 99.90 percent probability that appellant was appellee's father. Appellant admitted paternity at that point, and on June 22, 1995, judgment was entered establishing a parent/child relationship between the two parties. The trial court also ordered appellant to pay *263 biweekly support for his son in the amount of $138 plus poundage. This appeal followed.
Appellant argues in his first assignment of error that the issues of paternity and support are res judicata by virtue of the previous parentage action and that the lower court was barred from readjudicating those issues in the present case. We disagree.2 Our analysis begins with the well-settled proposition that a final judgment between parties to litigation is conclusive as to all claims or issues therein litigated under the doctrine of res judicata. See, generally, Grava v. ParkmanTwp. (1995),
Appellant relies extensively on our previous decision inNelson to support his position. He points out that this case, like Nelson, involved the settlement of a previous parentage action and then commencement of a subsequent case to obtain additional support. The difference between this case and Nelson,
however, lies in the identity of the parties involved. Both parentage actions in Nelson supra, were commenced by the natural mother of the minor child. This was not the case here. Beverly Sue Cornell (appellee's mother) initiated the first parentage action on her own behalf. She later settled that claim with appellant. By contrast, the case below was initiated on behalf of appellee (Dana Cornell, her son). It is true that the action was brought by and through Ms. Cornell as his mother and next friend. However, this was only a pleading device. A minor has no standing to sue before he reaches the age of majority and must sue through a guardian or other like fiduciary or by a next friend. See Civ.R. 17(B); see, also, Day v. MacDonald (1990),
It is well-settled law that res judicata is operative only when there is a mutuality of parties (or persons in privity with those parties) in both the first and second suit. Whitehead,supra,
We are also not persuaded that mother and son were in privity with each other so as to relax the strict requirement of mutuality of parties. The Ohio Supreme Court has noted that such privity generally does not arise from the mere relationship of parent and child. Johnson, supra,
This ruling is consistent with our recent decision inPayne v. Cartee (1996),
Appellant argues in his second assignment of error that his agreed settlement entry of the previous parentage action with Ms. Cornell and the judgment of support entered below are "mutually exclusive." He concludes that both entries cannot be enforced at the same time and that the previous agreed judgment must be set aside in its entirety if the judgment in favor of his son below is to be affirmed. We disagree with this argument to the extent that appellant contends the two judgments are mutually exclusive. As discussed above, both mother and child have separate and distinct parentage claims under R.C. Chapter 3111. Park, supra,
At the same time, however, they both serve the same purpose. The economic obligation undertaken by the father in his compromise agreement with the mother (in their previous parentage action) was for the benefit of their child. R.C.
Thus, to this limited extent, appellant's second assignment of error is sustained. The issue of child support payment is remanded to the trial court for further *266 consideration in light of those monies, if any, already being paid under the previous agreed entry with the mother.4
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part, and cause remanded.
HARSHA and KLINE, JJ., concur.