523 N.E.2d 516 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1987
Plaintiffs-appellants, Gordon and Diane Konicek, appeal the dismissal of their replevin action by the Elyria Municipal Court.
On January 5, 1985, several members of the Elyria Police Department stopped appellant Gordon Konicek while he was operating a vehicle owned by his father, William Konicek. At the time of the traffic stop, the police officers observed that the vehicle identification number tag was only partially attached to the dash mount. Gordon Konicek was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol, and the vehicle was seized and taken to a city impound lot.
On January 7, 1985, William Konicek transferred title of the vehicle to appellant Diane Konicek. After making numerous requests to the Elyria Police Department for the return of the vehicle, on August 22, 1986, the appellants, Gordon and Diane Konicek, filed an action for replevin in the Elyria Municipal Court against the city of Elyria and the Elyria Police Department. Defendant-appellee city of Elyria filed a motion to dismiss, which was denied. The city then filed an "Application to Dispose of Property in Custody of a Law Enforcement Agency" in the Lorain County Court of Common Pleas. In addition, the city filed a second motion to dismiss, in the municipal court, based on the application filed in the court of common pleas.
Thereafter, the municipal court dismissed the appellants' action for replevin. Appellants raise one assignment of error. This court reverses.
It is a well-established general rule that the court whose power is first invoked in a controversy has the exclusive right to adjudicate the matter to the exclusion of all other courts.Merrill v. Lake (1847),
The municipal court had proper jurisdiction pursuant to R.C.
There is a time-honored maxim of the common law that a court possessed of jurisdiction generally must exercise it. Ohio v.Wyandotte Chemicals Corp. (1971),
The pendency of a prior action in another court, between the same parties, involving the same subject matter, and seeking the same relief, may be asserted in abatement of the second action. See 1 Ohio Jurisprudence 3d (1977) 541, Actions, Section 133. When this sameness is satisfactorily established, the second suit will be dismissed. State, ex rel. Miller, v. Court of CommonPleas (1949),
Had the replevin action here been the later-filed action, the municipal court would have erred in granting the motion to dismiss. Although the subject matter of the two actions is the same, the cause of action and the relief sought are not identical. The replevin action filed by appellants Gordon and Diane Konicek against the city of Elyria and its police department is a demand for possession of the vehicle, or, in the alternative, a demand for the reasonable value of the vehicle. In the action before the common pleas court, the city named William Konicek, the father of Gordon Konicek, as defendant. The city requested that the court authorize the clerk of courts to issue title to the vehicle in the name of the Elyria Police Department. During oral argument, the city indicated an amended complaint had been filed, naming the titled owner. However, the relief sought in the two actions is not the same.
There are circumstances where it is proper that the first action filed be abated because of the filing of a later action. This is so where either the second action dealt with a constitutional question, Hatch v. Tipton (1936),
The municipal court erred in dismissing the replevin action upon appellee's motion. Accordingly, appellants' assignment of error is sustained. This court reverses the municipal court's dismissal and remands the matter for further proceedings in accordance with this decision.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
BAIRD, P.J., and CACIOPPO, J., concur. *45