Anita Gore v. Isak Mohamod et al.
No. 21AP-526
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
June 28, 2022
[Cite as Gore v. Mohamod, 2022-Ohio-2227.]
(REGULAR CALENDAR)
Rendered on June 28, 2022
On brief: Benson & Sesser, LLC, Mark D. Tolles, II, and Michael L. Benson, for appellant. Argued: Mark D. Tolles, II.
On brief: Hahn Loeser & Parks LLP, A.J. Hansel, and Masallay N. Komrabai-Kanu, for appellee Isak Mohamod. Argued: Masallay N. Komrabai-Kanu.
On brief: Kegler Brown Hill + Ritter Co., L.P.A., Jason H. Beehler, and Sasa Trivunic, for appellees Uber Technologies, Inc., Rasier, LLC, Rasier-CA, LLC, and Rasier-DC, LLC.
APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas
NELSON, J.
{1} Plaintiff-appellant Anita Gore filed a complaint making allegations that she had been injured on a date that fell outside the applicable statute of limitations period. When certain defendants moved to dismiss her claims on that basis, she moved to convert their motion into one for summary judgment, but did not otherwise oppose the motion to dismiss. Nor did she move to amend her complaint to reflect the assertion in her conversion motion that defendants had lulled her into believing that she could sue when
{2} Ms. Gore filed her complaint on September 30, 2020 against Uber driver Isak Mohamod, various corporate defendants including Uber Technologies, Inc., and five unknown “Doe” defendants. She alleged in the complaint that a little over two years earlier, “[o]n or about September 12, 2018,” she had summoned a ride from defendants. Complaint at 11. Again “[o]n or about September 12, 2018,” Mr. Mohamod responded to that request by arriving in his car. Id. at ¶ 14. Still “[o]n or about September 12, 2018,” Mr. Mohamod transported her to her destination. Id. at ¶ 17. When she had stepped out of the vehicle, her complaint recited, Ms. Gore reached back inside to retrieve some belongings. Id. at 19. As she was doing so, according to the complaint, Mr. Mohamod “closed the side door” (perhaps electronically?), catching her clothing, and drove away; she was “dragged by the side of the motor vehicle * * * until her clothing broke.” Id. at ¶ 20, 23. The complaint alleged that she suffered substantial injury “[a]s a * * * result of the negligence, recklessness, and/or actual malice of” Mr. Mohamod and/or the Doe defendants, id. at 30, and made claims sounding in negligence, “negligence per se,” and breach of contract against all defendants, along with claims of “respondeat superior” and “negligent entrustment” against the corporate and Doe defendants.
{3} Ms. Gore served her complaint on the corporate defendants (together, “the Uber Defendants“), and they moved to dismiss the action against them pursuant to
{4} Ms. Gore responded to the motion to dismiss only by moving to convert it to a motion for summary judgment. December 28, 2020 Motion to Convert. “While it is true
{5} The Uber Defendants opposed Ms. Gore‘s motion to convert. January 8, 2021 Memo Opp. Nothing further was filed in connection with the Uber Defendants’ motion to dismiss or Ms. Gore‘s motion to convert its character until the trial court denied the latter and granted the former in its Journal Entry of April 20, 2021 (some five months after the motion to dismiss had been filed).
{6} The trial court explained that
{7} Taking the allegations in the complaint as true, with all reasonable inferences drawn in favor of Ms. Gore, the trial court granted the Uber Defendants’ motion to dismiss. Id. at 3-4. Here, just as in Brisk, the trial court noted, the statute of limitations bar “was apparent on the face of the complaint.” Id. at 3. And while the complaint reflected the limitations problem, it contained ” ‘no allegations that, if proved, would establish that the [defendant] did anything that was designed to prevent [plaintiff] from filing suit.’ ” Id. at 4, quoting Doe v. Archdiocese of Cincinnati, 116 Ohio St.3d 538, 2008-Ohio-67, ¶ 8 (and
{8} Ms. Gore then did achieve service on Mr. Mohamod, but still did nothing to amend her complaint as to him. After Mr. Mohamod filed his answer, he filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings based on the statute of limitations in conjunction with the language of the complaint, and to stay discovery. June 28, 2021 Mohamod Motion. Ms. Gore did not respond to that motion in any way. On September 16, 2021, just two weeks shy of one year from the day Ms. Gore filed her complaint, the trial court granted Mr. Mohamod‘s motion for judgment on the pleadings and entered judgment in favor of all defendants. September 16, 2021 Decision & Final Judgment at 2 (noting that “[c]onstruing all material allegations in the complaint as true, there are no allegations by the plaintiff that the two-year statute of limitations is not applicable or may somehow be extended“).
{9} Appealing to us, Ms. Gore posits three assignments of error:
[I.] The trial court abused its discretion in denying appellant‘s motion to convert Uber Appellants’ [sic] Motion to Dismiss to a motion for summary judgment.
[II.] The trial court erred as a matter of law in granting Uber Appellees’ Motion to Dismiss in its April 20, 2021 Journal Entry.
[III.] The trial court erred as a matter of law in granting Appellee, Isak Mohamod‘s, Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings in its September 16, 2021 Decision and Final Judgment.
Appellant‘s Brief at 8 (capitalizations adjusted).
{10} The first two assignments are interrelated (with Ms. Gore suggesting in effect that her motion to convert, with its reference to “equitable estoppel,” served as a sufficient response to the motion to dismiss, see Appellant‘s Brief at 28-29), and we consider them together.
{12} We review afresh the grant of a
{13} A proper
{14} A
{15} Ms. Gore lards her briefing to us with a variety of asserted facts involving what she contends here were representations made to her by an insurance company claims examiner. See, e.g., Appellant‘s Brief at 14 (asserting that “Appellees had insurance coverage” through the company), id. at 15-16 (purporting to reproduce e-mail correspondence with that company), id. at 20-21 (arguing from those non-record materials); Reply Brief at 18 (raising new contentions about negotiations). These specifics were not provided to the trial court and therefore are nowhere in the record, so we do not consider them. See, e.g., Braun v. Columbus, 10th Dist. No. 07AP-496, 2007-Ohio-7148, ¶ 11 (“Appellate courts are confined to the record that was before the trial court.
{17} Ms. Gore‘s briefing to us does not address those precedents. But she does cite, for example, to cases such as Jude v. Franklin Cty., 10th Dist. No. 03AP-1053, 2004-Ohio-2528, ¶ 11, making the point that a statute of limitations defense “generally” is not appropriately raised in a
{18} Nor are we persuaded by Ms. Gore‘s protestations that “there is no way for a party like [her] to be able to raise an equitable estoppel defense/exception [to the statute of limitations] in a Complaint.” Appellant‘s Brief at 29; compare also Reply Brief at 13-14 (arguing that she “could not have averred such facts in her Complaint, and it would have
{19} Second, and even more significantly, she did not move for leave to amend her complaint to add those assertions into the document (the sufficiency of which would be examined) in the five months or so after the Uber Defendants moved to dismiss on statute of limitations grounds and before the trial court ruled on that motion. After all, “[t]he court shall freely give leave [to amend] when justice so requires.”
{20} Ms. Gore has cited to no authority beyond
{21} Ms. Gore‘s third assignment of error contests the trial court‘s grant of Mr. Mohamod‘s motion for judgment on the pleadings as based on the statute of limitations. Ms. Gore did not file anything with regard to that motion. Her motion to convert (which argued that “the Uber Defendants [defined there as not including Mr. Mohamod] * * * indicated to Plaintiff that the statute of limitations for her claims did not expire until October 1, 2020,” Motion to Convert at 1-2) was limited to the motion filed by the Uber Defendants and was decided before Mr. Mohamod even had been served with the complaint. Ms. Gore filed no opposition to Mr. Mohamod‘s motion for judgment on the pleadings: Her third assignment of error fails for that reason alone. See, e.g., Betz v. Penske Truck Leasing Co., L.P., 10th Dist. No. 11AP-982, 2012-Ohio-3472, ¶ 34 (appellate court should “limit its review of the case to the arguments contained in the record before the trial court“).
{22} In any event, even had Ms. Gore not waived her arguments as to Mr. Mohamod, her third assignment of error would fail for at least the same reasons that we have overruled her first and second assignments. A motion for judgment on the pleadings is decided by a trial court under the same standards that control a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, and we again review a grant of such a motion afresh. See, e.g., Regulic v. Columbus, 10th Dist. No. 21AP-268, 2022-Ohio-1034, ¶ 17 (that is so “because a motion for judgment on the pleadings and a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim each turns on whether a complaint fails on its face as a matter of law“); see also id. at ¶ 18 (reiterating that a ” ‘motion for judgment on the pleadings is essentially a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim after an answer has been filed’ “) (citations omitted). Even in the
{23} Having overruled all three of Ms. Gore‘s assignments of error, we affirm the judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas.
Judgment affirmed.
LUPER SCHUSTER, P.J., and JAMISON, J., concur.
NELSON, J., retired, of the Tenth Appellate District, assigned to active duty under the authority of the Ohio Constitution, Article IV, Section 6(C).
