645 N.E.2d 159 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1994
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *477 Plaintiff Crossings Development Ltd. Partnership has appealed from a judgment entered against it by the Summit County Court of Common Pleas granting defendant H.O.T., Inc.'s motion for a new trial in a forcible entry and detainer action. Plaintiff argued several assignments of error in its original brief to this court. After oral argument, this court asked the parties to submit briefs on the following issue:
"Whether execution of the writ of restitution rendered issues regarding the forcible entry and detainer aspect of the case moot, prior to the trial court's ruling on appellee's motion for a new trial."
This court overrules the assignments of error contained in plaintiff's original brief because it reverses the trial court's order granting a new trial on the ground *478 that the premises at issue were restored to plaintiff prior to the time the trial court granted defendant's motion for new trial and the forcible entry and detainer aspect of this matter was, therefore, moot.
The trial court held a hearing on the forcible entry and detainer aspect of plaintiff's claim on January 15, 1993. On February 4, 1993, the trial court ruled that plaintiff had a right to possession of the premises and that "[a] proper writ of restitution will be signed if furnished." Plaintiff filed a precipe for a writ of restitution the following day, February 5, 1993.
A writ of possession was issued on February 9, 1993. On February 11, 1993, defendant moved for a stay of execution pending appeal. On February 16, 1993, prior to the trial court ruling on defendant's motion for a stay, the writ of possession was executed and defendant was removed from the premises. Later that same day, the trial court granted defendant's motion for a stay. The following day, February 17, 1993, defendant moved, apparently pursuant to R.C.
"Upon motion of the Defendant and for good cause shown, the Plaintiff is forthwith ordered to restore possession of the premises to the Defendant until further order of this Court."
Defendant apparently did not retake possession of the premises pursuant to the trial court's February 17, 1993 order. Further, defendant failed to file a notice of appeal from the trial court's judgment granting plaintiff's requested writ of restitution. Therefore, following a hearing on February 19, 1993, the trial court, on February 26, 1993, entered a journal entry vacating its February 17, 1993 order:
"It having been determined that no notice of appeal was filed herein, the order to restore premises issued February 17, 1993, is declared void and of no effect, and the motion for stay and for supersedeas bond is denied."
On March 8, 1993, defendant moved for a new trial. It did not, however, seek a stay of execution during the pendency of that motion. The trial court granted defendant's motion for a new trial on June 14, 1993:
"Upon Motion for a New Trial filed by Defendant and for good cause shown pursuant to the attached Ruling by the Court, the Court hereby orders a new trial. The Court further finds there is no just reason for delay."
On June 28, 1993, plaintiff filed a notice of appeal from the trial court's order granting defendant's motion for a new trial.
"[A] moot case arises * * * where a judgment is sought, upon a matter which when it is rendered, cannot have any practical effect upon the issues raised by the pleadings. This is the status of the case at bar. The inquiry is irresistible. Should the case be reversed[,] upon another trial below, the paradoxical situation would arise that the landlords were seeking to dispossess a tenant who had already voluntarily dispossessed himself. It would unequivocally appear that the landlord was seeking a right which he had already acquired by consummation. * * * The course, if plaintiffs secured judgment, would be to give them nothing but that which they already have and prayed for, to-wit, the possession of the premises and thus it would appear that the reason for this possession was *480 because of the situation created by the tenant in vacating the property and surrendering the occupancy thereof." Id. at 105.
At the time the trial court granted defendant's motion for a new trial in this case, plaintiff was already in possession of the premises at issue. If a new trial were held, at that trial, plaintiff would be seeking something it already had, possession of the premises. Accordingly, the issues presented by plaintiff's forcible entry and detainer action were moot at the time defendant moved for a new trial and its motion should have been denied on that ground.
Defendant has argued to this court that this matter was not moot when the trial court granted its motion for a new trial for five different reasons. None of those reasons, however, is convincing.
Defendant has first argued that the writ of possession that was issued on February 9, 1993, was defective because the trial court's ruling on February 4, 1993, was not final and because the writ was not signed by the judge of the trial court. Assuming both these arguments to be correct, neither would result in a conclusion that the forcible entry and detainer aspect of this matter did not become moot when defendant vacated the premises and failed to retake possession pursuant to a stay. It was the fact that plaintiff had possession of the premises at issue at the time defendant's motion for a new trial was granted, rather than the manner in which plaintiff got possession, that rendered its forcible entry and detainer action moot. Although alleged flaws in the writ of possession may have served as a basis for reversal on appeal of a properly stayed judgment, any such flaws did not prevent plaintiff's forcible entry and detainer claim from becoming moot upon its gaining possession of the premises at issue.
Defendant's second argument is stated as follows in its brief:
"If this court were to hold that the question of who is entitled to possession is rendered moot by reason of the fact that [defendant] has been put out of possession, then it would in effect be holding that whoever is in possession at the time is entitled to remain in possession, solely because he is and regardless of how he came to be in possession. In order to be consistent with that theory, this court would then have to likewise find that the question of who was entitled to possession would also be moot if the trial court had initially ruled against [plaintiff] and [defendant] was still in possession of the premises. The logical extension of the theory would then be that a party not in possession of a premises could never successfully appeal a decision denying or ousting the party from possession, because at the time of the appeal the party was out of possession."
The flaw in this argument is that it fails to recognize the different roles of a plaintiff and a defendant in a forcible entry and detainer action. Such an action is brought by a plaintiff out of possession for the purposes of ousting a *481
defendant in possession and having the premises delivered to the plaintiff. If the plaintiff is unsuccessful at the trial court level and appeals seeking a new trial, the matter is not moot because, if a new trial is granted, the plaintiff will still be out of possession at the time of that new trial and will still be seeking to have the defendant ousted and the premises delivered to the plaintiff. Similarly, if a plaintiff is successful at the trial court level and the defendant obtains a stay, either preventing execution of a writ of restitution or, pursuant to R.C.
Defendant's third argument is that this matter is not moot because defendant is seeking, or will be seeking, possession of the premises in the trial court. R.C.
Defendant's fourth argument is that the question of whether it is entitled to possession of the premises is "relevant to the counterclaims which [it] has filed in the trial court * * *." Any such relevance, however, did not save the forcible entry and detainer action from becoming moot upon defendant's vacating *482
the premises. Potential relevance to other possible claims between the parties to a lawsuit would never prevent issues in a particular case from becoming moot when all the relief requested in that case has been recovered. This is doubly true in regard to forcible entry and detainer actions because, pursuant to R.C.
Defendant's final argument is that a conclusion that this matter was moot at the time the trial court granted its motion for a new trial would "require this court to usurp the trial court of the authority granted to it under Civ.R. 54(B) * * * [to] `change, modify or revise such judgment at any time before it enters judgment as to any remaining claims.'" Civ.R. 54(B), however, is not applicable to forcible entry and detainer actions. Cuyahoga Metro. Hous. Auth. v. Jackson (1981),
Inasmuch as plaintiff had possession of the premises at issue prior to the time the trial court granted defendant's motion for a new trial, the forcible entry and detainer aspect of this case had become moot and that motion should have been denied. Accordingly, the trial court's judgment granting defendant's motion for a new trial must be reversed.
Judgment reversedand cause remanded.
REECE, P.J., and QUILLIN, J., concur.