614 N.E.2d 1072 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1992
Plaintiffs-appellants, State Farm Fire Casualty Company, Lawrence Beckman, and Betty Beckman ("appellants"), appeal from a judgment in the Seneca County Court of Common Pleas which granted summary judgment to defendants-appellees, Fostoria Power Equipment Company ("FPE") and Doyle Distributing Company ("Doyle"). Such judgment also rendered moot Doyle's third- and fourth-party complaints for indemnification and contribution against third-party defendants-appellees, Fujitsu General, Ltd. ("Fujitsu") and Drew National Corporation ("Drew").
Appellants originally filed a complaint for damages sustained to the Beckmans' residence as a result of a fire in 1988. Their complaint sought damages from FPE, Handy Manufacturing Company, d.b.a. Western Manufacturing Corporation ("Handy"), Kupanoff Imports, Inc., d.b.a. Kupanoff Associates, Inc. ("Kupanoff"), and a John Doe corporation. The basis of their product liability action was that the fire to their home was caused by a defective Heatmate model 700 kerosene heater. Service was never perfected on Kupanoff and Handy was voluntarily dismissed as a party in 1990.
In May 1990, FPE filed a third-party complaint seeking indemnification and contribution from Doyle, the distributor of the kerosene heater. Appellants *280 never amended their complaint to include Doyle as a party defendant. In September 1990, Doyle filed third-party and fourth-party complaints against Fujitsu and Drew, the manufacturer and importer, respectively, of the kerosene heater. Service on Fujitsu, a Japanese company, was perfected in accordance with the Hague Convention. Appellants never amended their complaint to include Fujitsu, the manufacturer, as a party defendant.
Motions for summary judgment were filed by Doyle and FPE against appellants based on R.C.
"The trial court erred in granting defendant Fostoria Power Equipment Company's motion for summary judgment."
Appellants argue that FPE and Doyle should not have been dismissed as they are still subject to possible liability under R.C.
"(A) Subject to division (B) of this section, a supplier is subject to liability for compensatory damages based on a product liability claim only if the claimant establishes, by a preponderance of the evidence, that either of the following applies:
"(1) The supplier in question was negligent and that negligence was a proximate cause of harm for which the claimant seeks to recover compensatory damages;
"(2) The product in question did not conform, when it left the control of the supplier in question, to a representation made by that supplier, and that representation and the failure to conform to it were a proximate cause of harm for which the claimant seeks to recover compensatory damages. * * *
"(B) A supplier of a product is subject to liability for compensatory damages based on a product liability claim under sections
"(1) The manufacturer of that product is not subject to judicial process in this state[.]"
Thus, appellants hope to attach liability to Doyle and FPE by virtue of R.C.
Therefore, the ultimate question is whether the manufacturer in the matter sub judice, Fujitsu, is subject to judicial process in this state. As we read this section and for purposes of this appeal only, "judicial process" refers to personal jurisdiction and whether the trial court herein had personal jurisdiction over Fujitsu.
Unlike subject matter jurisdiction, personal jurisdiction can be waived. Civ.R. 12(H). Civ.R. 12(B) requires that a defense of lack of personal jurisdiction must be presented either in the defendant's answer or by a motion prior to the filing of defendant's answer. Franklin v. Franklin (1981),
Herein, Fujitsu neither raised lack of personal jurisdiction as a defense in its answer, in any motion prior to the filing of its answer, nor in an amendment to its original answer. Therefore, it waived the defense of personal jurisdiction by failing to timely raise such defense. By waiving the defense, Fujitsu impliedly consented to the personal jurisdiction of the court. Therefore, the manufacturer of the kerosene heater was subject to judicial process in the Seneca County Court of Common Pleas, Ohio, and R.C.
Appellants argue in their brief that R.C.
Thus, the trial court's decision, and our affirmance thereof, that Fujitsu was subject to the personal jurisdiction of the trial court, did not leave appellants without a remedy. Rather, appellants inflicted that problem upon themselves by failing to timely amend their complaint, thereby extinguishing the possibility of appellants seeking liability against the manufacturer.
For the above stated reasons, this assignment of error is overruled and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
THOMAS F. BRYANT and SHAW, JJ., concur.