In March 1999, the ancillary administrator of the estate of Margaret E. Meszaros filed a complaint in the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division, for a declaratory judgment. Appellant, Charles
Beginning in November 1995, Toma assisted Meszaros in the management of her financial affairs and had a power of attorney for her. Toma induced Meszaros to create a brоkerage account with Prudential Securities that designated Toma as a joint owner with the right of survivorship. Toma represented to Meszaros that he would manage her funds, pay her bills, and distribute account assets upon her death in accordance with her will.
In November 1996, Meszaros became physically incapacitated and was unable to live alone. Toma moved Meszaros from her home in Florida and placed her in a nursing home close to where he lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma. When the nursing home arrangements became unsatisfactory in late November 1996, Toma agreed to pay Rose Mary Gordyan her travel expenses and costs to move Meszaros to Ohio so that she could live with Gordyan. Toma further agreed to pay Gordyan $2,600 per month to provide the equivalent of nursing home care to Meszaros. At that time, Meszaros was totally dependent on her caregivers, Toma and Gordyan. On December 18, 1996, within a few days of mоving to Ohio, Meszaros was admitted to a hospital in Parma, Ohio, and she subsequently died on January 16, 1997.
According to Meszaros’s administrator, beginning in November 1996, Toma systematically liquidated the assets of the Prudential Securities account for his own benеfit. Most of the money drawn from Toma on the account cleared that account after Meszaros had moved to Ohio, and one check for $34,156 cleared the account well after Meszaros had died. In sum, Toma drafted checks and withdrew cash in an amount over $175,000 from the account from November 13, 1996, through January 29, 1997. Upon demand, Toma refused to return these funds to the Meszaros estate for distribution according to her will.
The administrator requested, inter alia, that the probate court enter a judgment declaring that the assets taken by Toma from the Prudential Securities account were assets of the Meszaros estate and that judgment be entered against Toma in an amount equal to all funds converted and received by him from the aсcount plus interest, less any amount actually spent by Toma for or on behalf of Meszaros.
Toma moved to dismiss the administrator’s probate court action for lack of personal jurisdiction over him, and, after a hearing, a magistrate recommended that the probate court grant the motion and dismiss Toma from the case. In his report, the magistrate noted that Toma had arranged Meszaros’s transportation to Ohio. In May 2000, appellee, Judge John E. Corrigan of the probate court, denied Toma’s motion to dismiss “after reviewing the entire file, the report of the magistrate and oral testimony.”
Judge Corrigan moved to dismiss Toma’s prohibition action for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and the court of appeals sua sponte converted the motion to a motion for summary judgment. Toma filed а brief in opposition.
In November 2000, the court of appeals denied the writ. The court of appeals held that Judge Corrigan did not patently and unambiguously lack personal jurisdiction over Toma and that Toma had an adequatе remedy by appeal to challenge Judge Corrigan’s ruling.
This cause is now before the court upon Toma’s appeal as of right as well as his request for oral argument.
Oral Argument
Toma requests oral argument pursuant to S.Ct.Prac.R. IX(2).
We deny Toma’s request for the following reasons. First, S.Ct.Prac.R. IX(2) does nоt mandate oral argument in this appeal. S.Ct.Prac.R. IX(2)(A). Second, Toma has not established that the usual factors warrant oral argument here. See State ex rel. Woods v. Oak Hill Community Med. Ctr. (2001),
Prohibition
Toma asserts that the court of appeals erred in denying the requested writ оf prohibition. Absent a patent and unambiguous lack of jurisdiction, a post-judgment appeal from a decision overruling a motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction will provide an adequate legal remedy and consequently
Toma contends that the probate court patently and unambiguously lacks personal jurisdiction over him.
R.C. 2307.382(A)(6) and Civ.R. 4.3(A)(9) authorize a court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant and to provide service of process to effectuate that jurisdiction if the cause of action arises from the defendant’s “[clausing tortious injury in this state to any person by an act outside this state committed with the purpose of injuring persons, when he [the person to be served] might reasonably have expected that some person would be injured thereby [by the act] in this state.” R.C. 2307.382(A)(6); differing wording of Civ.R. 4.3(A)(9) bracketed; see Clark v. Connor (1998),
It is not patent and unambiguous that R.C. 2307.382(A)(6) and Civ.R. 4.3(A)(9) are inapplicable here. “[C]onversion is the wrongful exercise of dominion over property to the exclusion of the rights of the owner, or withholding it from his possession under a claim inconsistent with his rights.” Joyce v. Gen. Motors Corp. (1990),
Although we recognize that the tort of conversion generally occurs where and when the actual injury takes place and not at the place of the economic consequences of the injury, see, e.g., Cycles, Ltd. v. W.J. Digby, Inc. (C.A.5, 1989),
Under the second part of the personal jurisdiction analysis, an Ohio court may assert personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant if the nonresident has certain minimum contacts with Ohio so that the case does not offend traditional due process concerns of fair play and substantial justice. Internatl. Shoe Co. v. Washington (1945),
Exercising personal jurisdiction over Toma in the probate court action appears to comport with fair play and substantial justice. One could reasоnably infer from the allegations of the administrator’s complaint that Toma, at a time when Meszaros was totally dependent upon him, facilitated her move to Ohio and paid for her care in this state by Gordyan, so that the move was not a completely unilateral choice by a third party. As alleged by the administrator, Toma himself established contacts with Ohio and then purposefully converted assets intended for the Ohio resident and her estate. Under these circumstаnces, Toma could reasonably anticipate being haled into an Ohio court to answer concerning his transactions relating to Meszaros and her estate.
Despite Toma’s contentions to the contrary, this case is not сomparable to State ex rel. Connor v. McGough (1989),
In sum, the “issuance of a writ of prohibition based on the alleged lack of personal jurisdiction is, even more than a claimed lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, аn ‘extremely rare occurrence.’ ” State ex rel. Suburban Constr. Co. v. Skok (1999),
Based on thе foregoing, the court of appeals properly denied the requested extraordinary relief in prohibition. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Toma does not contend that the probate court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over the administrator’s declaratory judgment action. See State ex rel. Lipinski v. Cuyahoga Cty. Common Pleas Court, Probate Div. (1995),
