{¶ 2} The record before us reveals that on August 31, 2000, Shannon Jeffi gave birth to J.J., the minor child who is the subject of this permanent-custody dispute. Upon his release from the hospital five weeks later, the Department of Children and Family Sеrvices placed J.J. with his foster mother, Sharon Snyder. In August 2002, the court awarded custody of J.J. to Donald Murphy, his biological father, after he completed parenting seminars and a drug rehabilitation program.
{¶ 3} On October 24, 2003, as Murphy drove to piсk up J.J. from a day-care program, a Cleveland police officer stopped him and arrested him for driving with a suspended license and for possession of cocaine.
{¶ 4} Consequently, the department filed a complaint fоr neglect in the juvenile court, seeking temporary and permanent custody of J.J. and requesting that the court immediately remove J.J. from Murphy’s custody. The juvenile court magistrate held a hearing and granted the department’s motion for prеdispositional temporary custody. Pursuant to that order, Snyder assumed foster care of J.J., pending the resolution of the department’s complaint for permanent custody.
{¶ 5} The magistrate then transferred the matter to a visiting judge for further proceedings. Following that transfer, several visiting judges presided over different hearings in the case. Judge John T. Patton entered an arraignment order on December 9, 2003, and Judge Joseph J. Nahra presided over a hearing on January 23, 2004, in which thе department amended its original complaint to include additional allegations regarding Murphy’s prior drug use. Murphy objected neither to the magistrate’s transfer order nor to the jurisdiction of a visiting judge at any subsequent hearing.
{¶ 6} The case then proceeded to trial before another visiting judge, Judge Judith A. Cross, who, following trial, awarded permanent custody of J.J. to the Department of Children and Family Services. Although he never objected to Judge Cross’s jurisdiction or assignment at trial, on appeal, Murphy argued for the first time that the magistrate lacked authority to transfer cases to visiting judges, that the judges lacked subject-matter jurisdiction, and that all subsequent proceedings and the court’s judgment became void ab initio. The Eighth District agreed and held the juvenile court’s judgment void for lack of jurisdiction. We granted discretionary review. Based on the following, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.
{¶ 7} The issue presented in this case concerns whether the magistrate’s transfer of the case to a visiting judge divested the juvenile court of subject-
{¶ 8} The department contends that the magistrate’s order is a procedural irregularity that does not affect the subject-matter jurisdiction of the juvenile court and does not alter the authority of a visiting judge to decide cases absent a timely objection.
{¶ 9} Murphy argues that Sup.R. 4(B) provides that only the administrative judge may assign cases to a visiting judge, and, therefore, the visiting judges lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to render judgment.
Subject-Matter Jurisdiction Compared with Jurisdiction over the Particular Case
{¶ 10} In Pratts v. Hurley,
{¶ 11} Subject-matter jurisdiction “connotes the power to hear and decide a case upon its merits.” Morrison v. Steiner (1972),
{¶ 12} “Jurisdiction over the particular case,” as the term implies, involves “ ‘ “the trial court’s authority to determine a specific case within that class оf cases that is within its subject matter jurisdiction.” ’ ” Pratts,
{¶ 13} Similarly, in State v. Thomas,
{¶ 14} Also, in Ex Parte Strang (1871),
{¶ 15} These cases establish the duty of a complaining party seeking review to object in the trial court and timely preserve the error for appeal and the distinction between subject-matter jurisdiction and jurisdiction over the particular case. In a court that possesses subject-matter jurisdiction, procedural irregularities in the transfer of a case to a visiting judge affect the сourt’s jurisdiction over the particular case and render the judgment voidable, not void.
{¶ 16} Sup.R. 4(B) authorizes the administrative judge to “assign cases to individual judges of the court or division [and to] * * * * [r]equest, as necessary, the assignment of judges to the court or division.” Juv.R. 40 does not extend this power of assignment to magistrates, and even the department concedes that the magistrate erred by signing the transfer order. This error, however, does not affect the subject-matter jurisdiction of the juvenile court over neglect and custody hearings. This case, like Pratts and Strang, is “not an inquiry into the jurisdiction of the court, but an inquiry into the right of the judge to hold the office.” Strang,
En Banc Procedures within Appellate Districts
{¶ 17} Further confusing the issue presented in this case is the fact that the Eighth District Court of Appeals issued two separate opinions in two different cases on this issue on the same day, with separate panels of the Eighth District Court of Appeals each reaching a differеnt result. See In re J.L., Cuyahoga App. Nos. 85668-85670,
{¶ 18} The procedure for certified conflicts does not apply to conflicts within an appellate district, Section 3(B)(4), Article IV, Ohio Constitution, and such conflicts should be resolved through en banc proceedings. See, e.g., Whitelock v. Gilbane Bldg. Co. (1993),
{¶ 19} In Eisenberg v. Peyton (1978),
{¶ 20} The en banc proceedings in Eisenberg permitted the court “to state clearly [its] position on the applicability of Civil Rule 53, * * * to indicate the lack of any effect on previous judgments which have not been appealed fоr a failure to fully comply with Civil Rule 53,” and “to review its pronouncements on the subject and reach a common policy conclusion.” Id. at 145,
Conclusion
{¶ 21} Based on the foregoing, the judgment is reversed, and the matter is remanded to the court of appeals for consideration of assignments of error that it originally declared moot.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
