669 N.E.2d 53 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1995
On June 2, 1995, this court overruled the executor's motion to dismiss this appeal based upon the contention that the trial court's order denying admission of counsel pro hac vice was not appealable. During oral argument, however, the panel sua sponte
announced that it would reconsider whether the trial court's order was final for purposes of this court's subject-matter jurisdiction conferred by Section
The order denying the admission of David N. Lefkowitz as counsel pro hac vice arises out of the executor's application to probate the will for the estate of Rena F. Myers, deceased, in Hamilton County. The order did not determine the action or prevent a judgment. Therefore, pursuant to R.C.
The order appealed from in this case arises from an action to admit a will to probate. The initial question is whether such an action existed at common law or equity, as opposed to being created by statute. The answer is expressly set forth inOstrander v. Preece (1935),
"The right to transmit or inherit property is not an inherent or natural right [Nunnemacher v. State (1906),
"`The right to make a disposition of property by will is neither a natural, nor, in the United States, a constitutional right. It is solely the product of statutory enactment * * *. The testamentary privilege, and its extent and limitation, depend wholly upon statute, not only as to their existence, but as to the mode in which it may legally be exercised. The legislature, both in England and the United States, has repeatedly prescribed to whom property may be given by will, how much may be disposed of by will in particular cases, and what species of interest will be wholly exempt from testamentary disposition. And as the Legislature has conferred the power, so the Legislature may restrain its operation, confine it to particular classes of persons, or abolish it altogether, so far as the wills of persons who die after the enactment of the statute are concerned.' 1 Underhill on Wills, 23, Section 16."
As stated succinctly in Hunter's Case (1834),
"The application to make probate of a will is not included in the definition either of an action or suit. It belongs neither to the common law nor equity jurisdiction conferred upon the court of common pleas, but appertains to the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the English courts, which is specially conferred upon courts of common pleas as courts of probate." *492
Having determined that the underlying action in the present case did not exist at common law or equity but was, rather, created by statute, we hold pursuant to Polikoff that the action is a "special proceeding." The next question that must be asked, therefore, is whether the order appealed from affects a "substantial right." In re Adoption of Greer (1994),
As stated by the court in Bell v. Mt. Sinai Med. Ctr. (1993),
"An order which affects a substantial right has been perceived to be one which, if not immediately appealable, would foreclose appropriate relief in the future. See, generally,Union Camp Corp. v. Whitman (1978),
The order which is appealed from in the present case is the trial court's order denying admission of counsel pro hac vice.
In Russell v. Mercy Hosp. (1984),
More recently, in State ex rel. Keenan v. Calabrese (1994),
In addressing the issue of whether an appeal is an adequate remedy for a criminal defendant whose counsel has been disqualified, however, the court in Keenan indicated that it still considered its analysis in Russell valid with respect *493 to the lack of effective posttrial review of an order disqualifying counsel in a civil case. The court stated:
"[A]ppeal is an adequate remedy here. An appeal following conviction and sentence would be neither impractical nor ineffective since any error in granting the motion would, in certain circumstances, be presumptively prejudicial. Flanagan v.United States (1984),
Finally, we note that the United States Supreme Court has determined that an order disqualifying counsel in a civil case is not a final judgment on the merits of the litigation for purposes of Section 1291, Title 28, U.S.Code.3Richardson-Merrell, Inc. v. Koller (1985),
Being an interpretation of its own final judgment rule as embodied in a federal statute, Section 1291, the court's decision in Koller is not, of course, binding on the Ohio Supreme Court's interpretation of R.C.
Polikoff, by overruling the balancing test adopted inAmato v. Gen. Motors Corp. (1981),
At present, however, the Ohio Supreme Court has not expressly adopted the logic of Koller and continues to cite Russell. We must assume, therefore, that Russell remains valid authority with respect to whether, in an action that is a special proceeding under Polikoff, an order disqualifying counsel affects a substantial right. As noted, under the analysis ofRussell, disqualification affects a substantial right because it implicates a significant interest — the right to choose *495 one's own counsel — and is not subject to effective post-trial review. Having concluded that this particular aspect ofRussell still survives Polikoff, we must go on to address the question whether the analysis in Russell applies with equal force here.
The interest sought to be protected in Russell was, as we have seen, the right to counsel of one's choice. It does not disparage this right to note that it is not absolute. Unlike the situation in Russell, in which an Ohio citizen was denied Ohio counsel, we are here concerned with a person's attempt to have counsel not a member of the Ohio bar represent him in an Ohio court. Lawyers not admitted in Ohio "have no absolute right under state or federal law to practice in Ohio," Royal Indemn.Co. v. J.C. Penney Co. (1986),
Not only is the interest implicated here different from that in Russell, but the motion and the facts underlying the motion are also considerably different. In Russell, counsel was removed from the case because of a conflict of interest; the disqualification was, therefore, absolute. In contrast, at the time the motion for David Lefkovitz to appear pro hac vice was made, the appellant here had already retained an Ohio probate attorney. The appellant had, therefore, to a large degree exercised his right to freely select Ohio counsel.
Moreover, after the executor filed written opposition to the motion to admit David Lefkowitz pro hac vice, the appellant's Ohio trial counsel filed a written reply asserting that David Lefkovitz would only be "admitted as co-counsel and that the undersigned would remain as trial counsel." In sum, what we have in the present case is a situation in which the trial court has simply refused the motion of a foreign attorney to appear prohac vice not as trial counsel but merely as designated cocounsel in the proceedings. Unlike the absolute disqualification due to a conflict of interest in Russell, there is nothing in the trial court's order denying the motion to appear pro hac vice which would prohibit David Lefkovitz from remaining in the case of counsel and continuing to advise appellant.
It is difficult, therefore, to see how the analysis inRussell remains applicable to the case at bar. The core concern in Russell was the difficulty in establishing prejudice upon review, i.e., the problem of discerning with hindsight "whether and how the original counsel might have handled the matter differently." Russell, supra,
Patently, unlike the complete disqualification of counsel inRussell, the order of the trial court denying David Lefkovitz from appearing pro hac vice as cocounsel does not substantially affect the right of appellant to counsel of his choice since it does not otherwise impede Lefkovitz's involvement in the case in an advisory or of-counsel capacity. Moreover, should Lefkovitz decide to remain involved in the case in this capacity, any prejudice which the appellant perceives as a result of Lefkovitz's failure to appear as designated "cocounsel" in the proceedings can be effectively brought to the trial court's attention through appellant's chosen Ohio trial counsel, thus preserving error and thereby ensuring effective post-trial review.
Based upon all these factors, we conclude that, although the order appealed from is one made in a special proceeding, it is not one that affects a substantial right, and therefore it is not a final order under R.C.
Judgment accordingly.
HILDEBRANDT and SUNDERMANN, JJ., concur.
Moreover, if read literally, the syllabus of Polikoff, as one court has noted, "renders all orders in suits that were recognized at common law as not being final appealable orders."Stevens v. Grandview Hosp. Med. Ctr. (Oct. 20, 1993), Montgomery App. No. 14042, unreported, 1993 WL 420127. This court made a similar observation in Niemann v. Cooley (1994),