Case Information
*1
[Cite as
State ex rel. Hawthorn v. Russell
,
T HE TATE EX REL . H AWTHORN ET AL ., A PPELLANTS v . USSELL ET AL ., A PPELLEES .
[Cite as
State ex rel. Hawthorn v. Russell,
Attorney General and prosecuting attorneys have standing to seek writ to challenge right to nonpublic office.
(No. 2005-0771 — Submitted October 25, 2005 — Decided December 21, 2005.)
A PPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Summit County, No. 22380.
Per Curiam . This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a complaint for a
writ of quo warranto. On October 28, 2004, appellants, Reverend Bruce E. Hawthorn
and Reverend Ronald S. Beers, filed a complaint in the Court of Appeals for Summit County. They sought a writ of quo warranto to remove appellees Walt Berry, Robert Rogers, Glenn Riggenbach, Isaac Rufener, Glen Miller, Cecil Young, and Gary Spriggs as directors of appellee Barberton Rescue Mission, Inc., a church and nonprofit corporation with its principal place of activity in Barberton, Ohio. Appellants claimed that they are lawful directors of the corporation. Appellants also named appellees Reverend Howard Russell and Reverend Richard Lupton, who are current directors of the mission, as additional respondents. Appellees moved to dismiss the complaint under Civ.R. 12(B)(6)
for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. They claimed that appellants lacked standing to bring the quo warranto action. The Attorney *2 UPREME C OURT OF O HIO General moved to intervene as a respondent and submitted an answer. In his answer, the Attorney General included as an affirmative defense that appellants lacked standing to institute the quo warranto action.
{¶ 4} On March 17, 2005, the court of appeals granted the motions and dismissed the complaint. This cause is now before the court upon appellants’ appeal as of
right. We affirm the judgment of the court of appeals. “[A]s we have
consistently held, for persons other than the Attorney General or a prosecuting
attorney, ‘ “an action in quo warranto may be brought by an individual as a
private citizen only when he personally is claiming title to a public office.” ’ ”
State ex rel. E. Cleveland Fire Fighters’ Assn., Local 500, Internatl. Assn. of Fire
Fighters
,
reliance on R.C. 2733.07 to claim ability to institute the action does not warrant a different result. R.C. 2733.07 provides, “When the office of prosecuting attorney is vacant, or the prosecuting attorney is absent, interested in the action in quo warranto, or disabled, the court, or a judge thereof in vacation, may direct or permit any member of the bar to act in his place to bring and prosecute the action.” It is undisputed that appellants are not attorneys and that no court directed or granted them leave to file their quo warranto action pursuant to R.C. 2733.07.
January Term, 2005 Furthermore, regardless of whether this is considered an issue of
standing, as we have previously held and the court of appeals found, or an issue of
legal capacity, as appellants claim on appeal, appellees specifically raised this
issue in their answer and motion to dismiss. And appellants waived their
appellate argument that this is an issue of legal capacity by failing to raise that
objection to appellees’ dismissal motion in the court below. See
State ex rel.
Mora v. Wilkinson
,
Judgment affirmed. M OYER , C.J., ESNICK , P FEIFER , L UNDBERG TRATTON , O’D ONNELL and L ANZINGER , JJ., concur.
O’C ONNOR J., not participating.
Black, McCluskey, Souers & Arbaugh and Thomas W. Connors, for appellants.
Vorys, Sater, Seymour & Pease, L.L.P., Philip F. Downey, and James A.
Hogan, for appellees.
Jim Petro, Attorney General, and Sherry M. Phillips, Principal Attorney, Charitable Law Section, Attorney General’s Office; Amer Cummingham Co., L.P.A., and Thomas M. Saxer, for intervening appellee Attorney General.
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