[Cite as Paige v. Ohio High School Athletic Assn., 2013-Ohio-4713.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
ALEXXUS M. PAIGE, : APPEAL NO. C-130024
TRIAL NO. A-1209427
Plaintiff-Appellee, :
vs. : O P I N I O N.
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETIC :
ASSOCIATION,
Defendant-Appellant. :
Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas
Judgment Appealed From Is: Appeal Dismissed and Injunction Vacated
Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: October 25, 2013
Chris Wiest ALL, PLLC, James Bogen and Christopher Wiest, for Plaintiff-Appellee,
Fruend Freeze & Arnold, Thomas B. Bruns, Gordon D. Arnold and Lucinda
Shirooni, for Defendant-Appellant.
Please note: this case has been removed from the accelerated calendar.
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
F ISCHER , Judge.
{¶1} Defendant-appellant the Ohio High School Athletic Association
(“OHSAA”) appeals from a preliminary injunction issued in favor of plaintiff-
appellee, high-school-athlete Alexxus Paige. The injunction restrained the OHSAA
from enforcing OHSAA Bylaw 4-7-2, under which Paige had been declared ineligible
to participate in interscholastic athletics at Winton Woods High School during her
senior year. It also restrained the OHSAA from taking any adverse action against
Paige or Winton Woods for her participation in athletics. Because we conclude that
no actual controversy currently exists between the OHSAA and Paige, we grant her
motion to dismiss the appeal as moot. We also vacate that portion of the trial court’s
preliminary injunction that prohibited the OHSAA from taking any adverse action
against Winton Woods because Winton Woods was never a party to the lawsuit, and
the trial court, therefore, lacked the authority to issue the preliminary injunction
regarding Winton Woods.
{¶2} On June 1, 2012, Paige and her mother, Vivian Watkins, moved
from the family’s home in the Cincinnati Public School District to an apartment in
the Winton Woods School District. As a result of the move, Paige, who had attended
Withrow High School for her freshman, sophomore, and junior years, enrolled at
Winton Woods High School for her senior year. Both schools are members of the
OHSAA.
{¶3} The OHSAA is an association of public and private high schools
and junior high schools in the state of Ohio that regulates, supervises, and
administers interscholastic athletic competition among its member schools. As
members of the OHSAA for the 2012-2013 school year, Withrow and Winton Woods
have adopted and agreed to follow the OHSAA bylaws and regulations.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶4} OHSAA Bylaw 4-7-2 provides that a student who transfers from one
school to another after the fifth day of her ninth grade year cannot play sports at the new
school for one year from the date of enrollment unless one of the 11 exceptions applies.
Exception One provides that
[i]f, as a result of a bona fide legal change of residence made by BOTH
PARENTS, the student is compelled to transfer from one public school
district to another public school district, the Commissioner’s Office
may restore athletic eligibility at the new school provided the
Commissioner’s Office is satisfied that the transfer was not athletically
motivated. The requirement that “both parents” make the move may
be waived by the Commissioner’s Office if the marriage of the parents
has been or is in the process of being terminated or if the parents were
never married. An Affidavit of Bona Fide Residence in the form
requested by the Commissioner’s Office, must be submitted along with
any request for the application of this exception.
{¶5} Following Paige’s transfer to Winton Woods, her mother submitted
an affidavit for a bona fide legal change of residence to the OHSAA in accordance
with Exception One to OHSAA Bylaw 4-7-2. Shortly thereafter, OHSAA Associate
Commissioner Dr. Deborah Moore notified Winton Woods by letter that the OHSAA
had determined that Paige had not met the exception because her transfer had not
been compelled by a change of residence, but had been motivated by a desire to play
basketball at Winton Woods. Thus, the OHSAA concluded that under Bylaw 4-7-2,
Paige was ineligible to participate in athletics at Winton Woods during her senior
year. Paige’s mother appealed the commissioner’s determination to the OHSAA
Appeals Panel. Following a hearing, the Panel affirmed the commissioner’s ruling.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶6} On December 5, 2012, Paige filed suit in the common pleas court
seeking a preliminary injunction to enjoin the OHSAA from enforcing transfer Bylaw
4-7-2 against her. The trial court held a hearing on December 7, 2012, and granted
her request. It restrained the OHSAA from enforcing transfer Bylaw 4-7-2 against
Paige and from taking any adverse action against Paige or nonparty Winton Woods
based upon the OHSAA’s determination that Paige was ineligible to participate in
athletics during her senior year at Winton Woods. Paige filed an amended complaint
seeking that relief on December 17, 2012. The record does not reflect service of the
amended complaint upon Winton Woods. Thus, Winton Woods was never made a
party to this action.
{¶7} In this appeal, the OHSAA raises five assignments of error. But
before we can reach the merits of its appeal, we must determine if its appeal is moot.
Paige has filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the OHSAA’s appeal is moot. “The
doctrine of mootness is rooted both in the ‘case’ or ‘controversy’ language of Section
2, Article III of the United States Constitution and in the general notion of judicial
restraint.” See James A. Keller, Inc. v. Flaherty, 74 Ohio App.3d 788, 791, 600
N.E.2d 736 (10th Dist.1991) citing 1 Rotunda, Novak & Young, Treatise on
Constitutional Law: Substance and Procedure, 97, Section 2.13 (1986). “While
Ohio has no constitutional counterpart to Section 2, Article III, Ohio courts have long
recognized that a court cannot entertain jurisdiction over a moot controversy.” Id.
{¶8} A case becomes moot if at any stage there ceases to be an actual
controversy between the parties. See Miner v. Witt, 82 Ohio St. 237, 92 N.E. 21
(1910); see also Fortner v. Thomas, 22 Ohio St.2d 13, 14, 257 N.E.2d 371 (1970) (“[it]
has become settled judicial responsibility for courts to refrain from giving opinions
on abstract propositions and to avoid the imposition by judgment of premature
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
declarations or advice upon potential controversies.”). “An actual controversy is a
genuine dispute between adverse parties.” Kincaid v. Erie Ins. Co., 128 Ohio St.3d 748,
2010-Ohio-6036, 944 N.E.2d 207, ¶ 10.
{¶9} Ohio courts have held that when an individual graduates from high
school or no longer has an interest in participating in interscholastic athletic activity, an
action to participate in such activity is deemed moot. See Dankoff v. Ohio High School
Athletic Assn., 9th Dist. No. 24076, 2008-Ohio-4559, ¶ 4; Ulliman v. Ohio High School
Athletic Assn., 184 Ohio App.3d 52, 2009-Ohio-3756, 919 N.E.2d 763, ¶ 28 (2d Dist.).
Here, it is undisputed that Paige has graduated from Winton Woods High School and
will play no more high school basketball games. Thus, the power of the OHSAA to
adversely affect her rights to play interscholastic athletics has ended. Consequently,
there is no live controversy regarding the transfer rule or her participation in athletics at
Winton Woods. As a result, we agree with Paige that the portion of the trial court’s
injunction which permitted her to participate in interscholastic athletics at Winton
Woods is moot.
{¶10} The OHSAA argues, however, that the case as a whole is not moot
because the trial court’s injunction also prohibited the OHSAA from taking any adverse
action against Paige or Winton Woods for permitting Paige’s participation in
athletics. According to OHSAA Bylaw 11-1-4, the OHSAA may sanction member schools
and their athletes in the event an ineligible student athlete participates in violation of the
OHSAA eligibility rules, but in accordance with an injunction or restraining order which
is later vacated, stayed, reversed, or finally determined to have been unjustified. Those
sanctions include: striking individual and team records and performances, forfeiting
victories, returning trophies and rewards, and returning certain funding.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶11} The OHSAA argues that a live controversy exists because it has an
interest in having the injunction invalidated and set aside, so that it can exercise its
possible discretion to impose the penalties under Bylaw 11-1-4 upon Winton Woods and
Paige. It further argues that Paige has an interest in preventing the OHSAA from
erasing her own team’s victories and performances. Paige, however, has no such
interest as noted in the motion to dismiss this appeal. The OHSAA relies upon an
opinion from the Second Appellate District, Ulliman, 184 Ohio App.3d 52, 2009-Ohio-
3756, 919 N.E.2d 763, to support its position. But we do not find the analysis in
Ulliman to be persuasive because the Second Appellate District engaged in no
meaningful analysis of whether the OHSAA, the school, or the student had a legally
cognizable interest in the outcome of the appeal.
{¶12} Notably in this case, Winton Woods was never made a party in the
trial court, nor was it made a party to this appeal. Further, Winton Woods has never
moved to intervene in this case, and has asserted no interest in this matter. Thus, there
is no justiciable controversy or pending action between the OHSAA and Winton Woods
concerning the validity or the enforcement of the trial court’s preliminary injunction.
Thus, we have no authority to adjudicate any potential dispute between the OHSAA and
Winton Woods over the sanctions outlined in Bylaw 11-1-4. As a result, any actions the
OHSAA may take against Winton Woods in the future are irrelevant in determining
whether a live controversy currently exists between Paige and the OHSAA. See Johnson
v. Florida High School Activities Assn., Inc., 102 F.3d 1172, 1173 (11th Cir.1997);
Jordan v. Indiana High School Athletic Assn., 16 F.3d 785, 787-88 (7th Cir.1994);
McPherson v. Michigan High School Athletic Assn., 119 F.3d 453, 458, 466 (6th
Cir.1997) (Nelson-Moore, J., dissenting).
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶13} Furthermore, no live controversy exists now between Paige and the
OHSAA. Paige’s attorney stated during oral argument that Paige had no further interest
in continuing the injunction and argued that the issues before this court are moot.
Moreover, there is no indication in the record or the parties’ briefs that Paige set any
records or won any awards while participating under the injunction. See Crane v.
Indiana High School Athletic Assn., 975 F.2d 1315, 1318 (7th Cir.1992) (student’s claims
were not moot where the student could lose individual awards). Likewise, the record
does not reveal whether there are any team records that could be stricken.
{¶14} Thus, the only remaining penalties that Paige could conceivably have
an interest in avoiding are the erasure of her individual performances and the forfeiture
of any team victories. There is some authority that when a student athlete represents to
the trial court that he or she would be personally adversely affected if the school were
penalized, an appeal is not moot despite the absence of the school as a party to the
appeal. See McPherson, 119 F.3d at 458-459; Sandison v. Michigan High School
Athletic Assn., 64 F.3d 1026 (6th Cir.1995); Pottgen v. Missouri State High School
Activities Assn., 40 F.3d 926, 928 (8th Cir.1994). However, there is also authority that
the possibility of retroactive penalties does not prevent an appeal from being moot if the
only possible penalty is forfeiture of team victories and the school, like OHSAA member
Winton Woods in this case, is not a party to the appeal. See Johnson, 102 F.3d at 1173;
see also Jordan, 16 F.3d at 788-89.
{¶15} Here, given the uncontested statements of Paige’s attorney that she
will not be personally adversely affected if Winton Woods were to be penalized, and the
fact that application of Bylaw 11-1-4 would have a meaningful impact only on Winton
Woods, a nonparty, who as a member of the OHSAA has agreed to the OHSAA rules, we
cannot conclude that there is a tangible and substantial controversy between the parties
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
with respect to the portion of the injunction enjoining the OHSAA from taking any
action against Paige and Winton Woods. Moreover, it is not even clear if there will be a
future controversy between the parties. The imposition of sanctions under Bylaw 11-1-4
is discretionary and thus speculative at best at this time. The OHSAA may choose, in its
discretion not to sanction Winton Woods, or Paige and/or Winton Woods may choose
not to protest the sanctions that are subsequently imposed. See McPherson, 119 F.3d at
45 (Nelson-Moore, J., dissenting). We, therefore, conclude that the OHSAA’s appeal as
a whole is moot. See Johnson, 102 F.3d at 1173; see also Jordan, 16 F.3d at 788-89.
{¶16} The OHSAA alternatively argues that even if this case technically
meets the standard for mootness, we should not dismiss the case as moot because an
exception to the mootness doctrine exists for cases that are capable of repetition, yet
evade judicial review. But to meet this exception, the OHSAA must show that both of
the following conditions apply: (1) the challenged action is too short in duration to
be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration and (2) there is “a reasonable
expectation that the same complaining party will be subjected to the same action
again.” State ex rel. Calvary v. Upper Arlington, 89 Ohio St.3d 229, 231, 729 N.E.2d
1182 (2000).
{¶17} We agree with the OHSAA that it has met the first prong. Here, the
basketball season ended during the pendency of OHSAA’s appeal. But because Paige
has graduated, there is no reason to suspect that either she or her parent, the parties
actually involved in this case, will again be subjected to the actions of the OHSAA.
Thus, this is not an issue that is capable of repetition yet evading review. See
Dankoff v. OHSAA, 9th Dist. Summit No. 24076, 2008-Ohio-4559, ¶ 4; see also
Johnson, 102 F.3d at 1173. Nor do we find the resolution of the issues in the
OHSAA’s appeal to raise a debatable constitutional question or to be a matter of
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
“great public importance.” See Schwabb v. Lattimore, 166 Ohio App.3d 12, 2006-
Ohio-1372, 848 N.E.2d 912, ¶ 12 (1st Dist.).
{¶18} Because there is no present controversy between Paige and the
OHSAA, we grant her motion to dismiss the appeal as moot. And because Winton
Woods is not even a nominal, much less an active party to this lawsuit, the trial court
lacked the authority to issue the preliminary injunction regarding Winton Woods
without prior notice and hearing from the school district. We, therefore, vacate that
portion of the preliminary injunction that prohibits the OHSAA from taking any
action against Winton Woods.
{¶19} We recognize that our resolution of the OHSAA’s appeal conflicts
with the opinion of the Second District Court of Appeals in Ulliman v. Ohio High
School Athletic Assn., 184 Ohio App.3d 52, 2009-Ohio-3756, 919 N.E.2d 763 (2d Dist.).
We, therefore, certify to the Supreme Court of Ohio, pursuant to Section 3(B)(4),
Article IV, Ohio Constitution, the following issue for review and final determination:
Where an injunction is issued at the request of a student, which permits the student
to participate in interscholastic athletics despite the Ohio High School Athletic
Association’s determination of ineligibility, under its Bylaw 4-7-2, Exception One,
and prohibits the OHSAA from invoking its right to sanction a member school, does
a live controversy still exist when: (1) the student is no longer participating in high
school athletics; (2) the member school where the student participated is not a party
to the appeal; and (3) the student is no longer interested in pursuing the matter on
appeal?
Judgment accordingly.
HENDON, P.J, concurs.
CUNNINGHAM, J., dissents.
CUNNINGHAM, J., dissenting.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶20} I respectfully dissent. I cannot agree with the majority that the
OHSAA’s appeal is moot. As a result, I would reach the merits of the OHSAA’s
appeal. Because Paige was afforded notice of the OHSAA’s eligibility determination
and an opportunity to be heard before its Appeals Panel in accordance with the
OHSAA’s constitution and bylaws and because the OHSAA Panel’s decision denying
her eligibility was not the result of mistake, fraud, collusion, or arbitrariness, I would
reverse the trial court’s ruling and vacate the preliminary injunction.
OHSAA and Trial Court Proceedings
{¶21} Alexxus Paige attended Withrow High School and played
basketball there from the ninth through the eleventh grades. On June 1, 2012, Paige
moved with her mother, Vivian Watkins, from the family’s home in the Cincinnati
Public School District to an apartment in the Winton Woods School District. As a
result of the move, Paige enrolled at Winton Woods High School for her senior year.
Both Withrow and Winton Woods are members of the OHSAA.
{¶22} The OHSAA is a nonprofit, voluntary, unincorporated association
of public and private high schools and middle schools in the state of Ohio that
regulates, supervises, and administers interscholastic athletic competition among its
member schools. As members of the OHSAA for the 2012-2013 school year, Withrow
and Winton Woods have adopted a constitution and bylaws by which they have agreed
to conduct their interscholastic sports programs.
{¶23} Section 4-7-2 of the OHSAA Bylaws states that a student who
transfers from one school to another after the fifth day of her ninth grade year cannot
play sports at the new school for one year from the date of enrollment unless one of the
eleven exceptions applies. Exception One states as follows:
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
[i]f, as a result of a bona fide legal change of residence made by
BOTH PARENTS, the student is compelled to transfer from one
public school district to another public school district, the
Commissioner’s Office may restore athletic eligibility at the new
school provided the Commissioner’s Office is satisfied that the
transfer was not athletically motivated. The requirement that
“both parents” make the move may be waived by the
Commissioner’s Office if the marriage of the parents has been or is
in the process of being terminated or if the parents were never
married. An Affidavit of Bona Fide Residence in the form
requested by the Commissioner’s Office, must be submitted along
with any request for the application of this exception.
{¶24} Upon Paige’s transfer to Winton Woods, the athletic director at
Winton Woods and Watkins submitted an affidavit for a bona fide legal change of
residence to the OHSAA in accordance with Exception One. The OHSAA sent an
email to Darren Braddix, the Athletic Director at Withrow High School, about Paige’s
request for an exception to the transfer prohibition. Braddix, responded as follows:
I am sure that this move was athletically motivated. There was a
problem during our last tournament basketball game where she
was benched for the remaining 3 qtrs and we proceeded to lose.
Alexxus and the coach got into it. Her parents and the coach also
got into it. From that point on she declared that she was
transferring to Winton Woods and couldn’t wait to play us. That is
all we heard 3-4 qtr last year. Winton Woods is where most of her
AAU [Amateur Athletic Union] Basketball teammates play as well
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
as one of her AAU Coaches. We wish her well but [I] am sure
Alexxus would still be here if it weren’t for Basketball.
{¶25} Shortly thereafter, OHSAA Associate Commissioner Deborah
Moore notified Winton Woods by letter that the OHSAA had determined that Paige’s
decision to transfer schools had not been compelled by a change of residence, but
had been motivated by a desire to play basketball at Winton Woods. Thus, the
OHSAA had concluded that under Bylaw 4-7-2, Paige was ineligible to participate in
athletics at Winton Woods during her senior year. Paige’s mother appealed the
commissioner’s determination to the OHSAA Appeals Panel.
{¶26} The OHSAA Appeals Panel was established in June 2012 after a
vote by OHSAA member schools authorizing the board of directors to establish an
appeals panel with exclusive jurisdiction to hear eligibility appeals. The Appeals
Panel is comprised of three superintendents from member schools in different parts
of Ohio. The rules of conduct for eligibility appeals are set forth in the 2012-2013
OHSAA Manual under the heading “Frequently Asked Questions.”
{¶27} The rules provide that the appellant or a representative of his
choosing shall have the opportunity to present evidence through witnesses or
documentary evidence, supporting the position as to why the appeal should be
granted. The rules further state that the commissioner’s office does not have
subpoena power. Therefore, it is incumbent upon the appealing party to make all
arrangements necessary for the attendance of any/all witnesses it desires to support
its appeal. The commissioner, however, has the authority to compel the attendance
of school personnel at this hearing, and may exercise that authority if it is perceived
that their attendance is necessary to assist in understanding facts necessary for the
disposition of the appeal.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶28} The rules additionally provide that the commissioner’s office will
be represented by members of the OHSAA staff who shall be present at and
throughout the appeal, as well as the OHSAA legal counsel; that OHSAA staff and
counsel will defend the decision from which the appeal is taken, and one should
expect a vigorous defense of the same; and that a great deal of deference shall be
given to the decision of the commissioner’s office. Notwithstanding this deference,
however, an appellant shall be permitted to introduce any new evidence he or she
believes is relevant to their case. Likewise, the commissioner’s office may introduce
additional evidence in support of its decision. The rules expressly state that the
burden of proof rests with the appealing party.
{¶29} At a hearing before the panel regarding Paige’s eligibility, Assistant
Commissioner Moore acknowledged that Watkins had made a bona fide move into
the Winton Woods School District. Thus, she stated that the issue before the Panel
was whether athletics had been a motivating factor for the move. Watkins, who had
appeared at the hearing on her daughter’s behalf without counsel, explained that she
and her husband had separated, and that she and Paige had moved to an apartment
in the Winton Woods School District. OHSAA staff as well as the three panel
members asked Watkins specific questions about the move and whether there had
been a problem between Paige and the basketball coach at Withrow.
{¶30} Watkins responded:
What happened-I’m not really sure. First of all, I’m more of a sit
back and observe parent. I don’t say much. The very last game of
the year, Alexxus played for a minute. After the game was over, my
husband and I, we went to the coach and we asked why Alexxus
barely played. She started. Everybody on the bench – everybody on
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
the bench was asking the same question. He stated that she wasn’t
focused * * * And he basically went on to say that there was some
things that happened in the locker room, which I didn’t really get
into. He addressed it. It wasn’t that big of an issue with us.
{¶31} Watkins was also asked whether it had entered her mind that by
transferring schools Paige might not be able to play. Watkins replied, “No, it never
entered my mind. I had no idea. No. This all – This comes completely out of the
box.” When the panel member further inquired if this would have changed her mind
about moving, Watkins replied, “If she couldn’t play? Um, probably. Because my
daughter has been through enough. She enjoys basketball. But probably, I don’t –.”
The panel member responded, “Okay. That fine.” Watkins then stated, “Well
probably. If I had known I was going to come up here and take the day off work,
yeah, probably.”
{¶32} Darren Braddix, the Athletic Director at Withrow, also appeared
before the Panel. He stated that after Paige’s altercation with the coach her behavior
changed, and added:
And the following, I would say, quarter and a half of school,
Alexxus really spent the last part of that time saying, I’m
transferring. I’m leaving. I’m not playing here. I don’t want to be
here. I’m leaving. I’m going to go to Winton Woods. I mean, she
just─she was adamant that she couldn’t wait to get out of there * *
* Like I said, the teammates and principals and a lot of faculty and
staff─I mean a lot of what she said was heard and was said to a lot
of them. So it wasn’t just the athletic department. It was the entire
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
school, pretty much, knew because she had it made known─I’m
going to Winton Woods. I can’t wait to play you guys * * *.
Braddix stated that Paige’s comments along with the following facts―(1) her AAU
team practiced at Winton Woods, (2) her AAU coach is a Winton Woods assistant
coach, (3) several of her AAU teammates played for Winton Woods, and (4) the new
coach at Withrow had reached out to Paige to smooth things over, but Paige had
responded that she was “not going to feel comfortable coming back”―led Withrow
administrators to believe that Paige’s move to Winton Woods was athletically
motivated.
{¶33} After Braddix had spoken, Watkins was given an opportunity to
respond. She stated that during the end of the previous school year Paige knew they
would be moving, but she didn’t know where. She also said that Paige’s transfer to
Winton Woods had nothing to do with playing AAU basketball there. The Panel
accepted a letter from Watkins, which detailed the reasons for the move. It also
accepted a copy of the lease that Watkins had signed on May 17, 2012, for the
apartment in the Winton Woods school district. The Panel unanimously affirmed the
commissioner’s ruling.
{¶34} Paige then filed suit in the common pleas court seeking a
preliminary injunction to enjoin the OHSAA from enforcing the transfer eligibility
rule against her and from penalizing Winton Woods for permitting her participation
in athletics. The trial court held a hearing on the complaint. It permitted Paige,
Watkins, Steven Sanders, Paige’s AAU coach, David Lumpkins, the assistant
principal and assistant girls basketball coach at Winton Woods, and OHSAA
Associate Commissioner Moore to testify. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial
court granted Paige’s request, finding that the OHSAA’s decision to deny her
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
eligibility was fraudulent, arbitrary, and mistaken; that the OHSAA had violated her
fundamental due-process rights; and that Paige would be likely to succeed on the
merits at trial.
{¶35} In reaching these conclusions, the trial court found that the
OHSAA’s determination that Paige’s move had been athletically motivated was
arbitrary and fraudulent because it had been based solely upon the testimony of
Braddix, who had been upset that Paige had left Withrow. The trial court found that
Braddix’s testimony before the OHSAA and at the hearing for preliminary injunction
lacked credibility because it had been based upon hearsay statements. The trial court
then found that the testimony from Watson and Paige, and their witnesses’
testimony as to a nonathletic motivation for the move, was more credible.
{¶36} The trial court further found that Paige was likely to succeed on the
merits of her claim that the OHSAA’s decision to deny her eligibility was fraudulent,
arbitrary, and mistaken and that the OHSAA had violated her fundamental due-
process rights. The trial court held that the OHSAA had failed to afford Paige
“fundamental due process.” It focused upon the fact that Paige had not been given
the right to compel witnesses or to cross-examine Braddix during the OHSAA appeal
hearing. Finally, the trial court found that the OHSAA had made an arbitrary or
mistaken interpretation of the requirement in Exception One that “both parents”
must make a bona fide legal change of residence. As a result, the trial court
restrained the OHSAA from enforcing transfer Bylaw 4-7-2 against Paige and from
taking any adverse action against Paige or Winton Woods based upon its
determination that Paige was eligible to participate in athletics during her senior
year at Winton Woods.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
The OHSAA’s Appeal is Not Moot
{¶37} I agree with the majority that before we can reach the merits of the
OHSAA’s arguments on appeal, we must determine if the OHSAA’s appeal is moot.
Paige has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on this basis, which this court deferred for
resolution with the merits of the OHSAA’s appeal. She argues that because the
basketball season has ended and she has graduated from Winton Woods, there is
nothing for this court to adjudicate and that the OHSAA’s appeal is moot.
{¶38} I also agree with the majority that the general rule with respect to the
issue of mootness is that an actual case or controversy must exist at all stages of
appellate review. Kincaid v. Erie Ins. Co., 128 Ohio St.3d 748, 2010-Ohio-6036, 944
N.E.2d 207, ¶ 10. Only in rare instances such as where the question presented for review
is of great public interest, concerns a constitutional question, or involves exceptional
circumstances capable of repetition yet evading review, will this court decide an
otherwise moot case. Schwabb v. Lattimore, 166 Ohio App.3d 12, 2006-Ohio-1372,
848 N.E.2d 912, ¶ 12 (1st Dist.).
{¶39} In determining whether appeals from preliminary injunctions
involving the OHSAA are moot, Ohio appellate courts have looked to Sixth Circuit
case law. In Sandison v. Michigan High School Athletic Assn., 64 F.3d 1026, 1030
(6th Cir.1995), the Sixth Circuit held that the first part of a preliminary injunction
which had permitted the plaintiffs to participate in the track season at their
respective high schools was moot and did not fit within the “capable of repetition yet
evading review” exception to mootness. The Sixth Circuit’s holding was based on the
fact that the track season had ended, and the students’ graduation from high school
had eliminated any reasonable possibility that they would be subject to the same
action again. Id.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶40} The Sixth Circuit concluded, however, that the case was not moot
with regard to the second part of the preliminary injunction, which had prohibited
the Michigan High School Athletic Association (“MHSAA”) from penalizing the
respective high schools for allowing the students to compete. Id. Based on provisions
in the MHSAA’s bylaws that allowed victories to be forfeited and individual
performances to be erased, the Sixth Circuit concluded that the students still had an
interest in preventing the MHSAA from erasing from the records both their team
victories and their individual performances. Id.
{¶41} Two years later, in McPherson v. Michigan High School Athletic
Assn., 119 F.3d 453, 458, (6th Cir.1997), the Sixth Circuit, sitting en banc, followed its
earlier decision in Sandison. It held that the first part of a preliminary injunction,
which had permitted a plaintiff to participate in the basketball season at his
respective high school, was moot and did not fit within the “capable of repetition yet
evading review” exception to mootness. Id. at 459. But it concluded that the second
part of the injunction, which had prohibited the MHSAA from taking “any action which
would cause the school district to be penalized for Plaintiff’s participation in
interscholastic athletic competition,” still presented a live controversy. Id.
{¶42} In reaching this conclusion, the court considered the student’s
complaint, which had requested that the district court restrain the MHSAA from “taking
any action that would cause the school district to be penalized for the student’s
participation in interscholastic activities, including * * * requiring that any games be
forfeited.” Id. It also considered the MHSAA’s bylaws, which expressly provided that if
a student was ineligible, but nonetheless, allowed to play because of a court-ordered
injunction that the MHSAA shall
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
‘require all victories to [be] forfeited to opponent,’ and may vacate or
strike ‘that individual or team records and performances achieved during
participation by such ineligibles, if the injunction is subsequently
reversed or finally determined by the courts that injunctive relief is not or
was not justified.’
Id.
{¶43} The Sixth Circuit noted that the MHSAA had asked it to reverse the
trial court’s preliminary injunction and to determine that injunctive relief was not
justified. Thus, the relief sought by the MHSAA in its appeal, the Court stated
would if granted, make a difference to the legal interest of the parties
because the MHSAA would then be required to forfeit to Huron’s
opponents those team victories in which McPherson participated, and
could vacate or strike the records of McPherson and his basketball team,
a course of events that McPherson specifically sought to prevent in his
suit, and that the district court specifically ordered was prohibited.
Id. at 458, citing Crane v. Indiana High School Athletic Assn., 975 F.2d 1315, 1318 (7th
Cir.1992). Thus, the court held that because the student had an interest in preventing
the MHSAA from erasing his team victories and his own performance, the
controversy remained live. Id. at 459, quoting Sandison, 64 F.3d at 1029.
{¶44} In Dankoff v. Ohio High School Athletic Assn., 9th Dist. Summit
No. 24076, 2008-Ohio-4559, the Ninth District Court of Appeals dismissed the
OHSAA’s appeal of an order enjoining the OHSAA from prohibiting a student from
participating in athletics during his senior year. The Ninth District held that the
appeal was moot because the student had graduated and there was no longer a live
controversy regarding his participation in high school athletics. Id. at ¶ 4, relying on
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
Sandison, 64 F.3d 1026. The Ninth District distinguished Sandison, noting that the
trial court’s injunction had only restrained OHSAA from preventing the student from
bowling on the high school team, and nothing more. Dankoff, 2008-Ohio-4559, at ¶
4, and fn. 1. Although the OHSAA had argued that a live controversy still existed
because penalties could be imposed on the school under the association’s bylaws, the
Ninth District noted that OHSAA’s bylaws in their entirety were not in the record.
Id. The Ninth District, therefore, dismissed the appeal as moot. Id.
{¶45} In Ulliman v. Ohio High School Athletic Assn., 184 Ohio App.3d
52, 2009-Ohio-3756, 919 N.E.2d 763 (2d Dist.), the Second District Court of Appeals
held that an appeal by the OHSAA from a preliminary injunction―which had
enjoined it from prohibiting Ulliman’s participation in interscholastic athletics
during his senior year at Catholic Central High School and from taking adverse
action against Ulliman or Catholic Central for allowing Ulliman to participate―was
not moot even though Ulliman had filed a notice stating that he had received surgery
for a “season-ending injury” and was no longer playing high school sports. Id. at ¶
28.
{¶46} The Second District held that the OHSAA’s appeal was not moot
because the “injunction in the present case [wa]s like the one granted in Sandison,
[it] had enjoined [the] OHSAA from taking action against either Ulliman or Catholic
Central.” Id. at ¶ 33. The Second District further noted that the “OHSAA [had] also
submitted a complete copy of its bylaws, which provide[d] for forfeitures of all
athletic contests where ineligible players ha[d] been used. Other sanctions [we]re
also available including forfeiture of all championship status, fines, and return of
financial receipts.” See id., citing OHSAA Bylaws, 11-2-1 and 11-2-3, and OHSAA
Bylaws, 12-1-1 through 12-1-4. Accordingly, the Second District held that OHSAA’s
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
appeal was not moot, and that it would “consider OHSAA’s argument that the trial
court [had] erred in issuing the injunction.” Id.
{¶47} In this case, it is undisputed that Paige has graduated and is no
longer playing high school basketball. Thus, there is no live controversy regarding the
transfer rule or her participation in athletics at Winton Woods. Therefore, the portion of
the trial court’s injunction which had permitted her to play basketball is moot.
{¶48} However, in Paige’s amended complaint she specifically requested
that the trial court restrain the OHSAA from not only prohibiting her from playing
basketball as provided under Bylaw 4-7-2, but also from “penalizing Winton Woods
for Paige playing basketball at that school” under Bylaw 11-1-4. Sanctions under
Bylaw 11-1-4 could include, inter alia, the erasure of Paige’s individual game and
team performances, as well as the forfeiture of team victories in which Page played.
The trial court’s judgment entry provided:
This Court hereby grants the preliminary injunction sought by Paige.
As such, the OHSAA, as well as their agents, servants, employees,
attorneys, and all persons in active concert and participation with
them are hereby enjoined from prohibiting Paige from participation in
interscholastic athletics during her senior year at Winton Woods. This
court also enjoins OHSAA from taking adverse action against Allexus
[sic] or against Winton Woods for allowing Allexus [sic] to participate
in athletics.
{¶49} According to the OHSAA’s bylaws, which were admitted into
evidence at the hearing on the preliminary injunction, the OHSAA has the authority
to impose the following sanctions upon Paige and Winton Woods if its appeal is
successful in this case.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
BYLAW 11 — PENALTIES
11-1-1 Penalties for violation of the OHSAA Constitution, Bylaws
and Regulations shall be imposed by the Commissioner or another
administrative staff member designated by the Commissioner.
11-1-2 Penalties include: suspension, forfeiture of games, forfeiture
of championship rights, probation, reclamation of expenses for the
conduct of investigations and all other fees/expenses associated
therewith, public censure, denial of participation or fines not to
exceed $10,000 per occurrence or such other penalties as the
Commissioner deems appropriate.
11-1-4 If a lawsuit is commenced against the OHSAA seeking to
enjoin the OHSAA from enforcing any or all of its Constitution,
bylaws, sports regulations, decisions of the OHSAA, and an Order
from a Court of proper jurisdiction is subsequently either
voluntarily vacated, or stayed, or reversed or otherwise determined
by the Courts that the equitable relief sought is not or was not
justified, the Commissioner may impose any one or more of the
following in the interest of restitution and fairness to other
member school’s (sic) athletes:
a) Require that individual or team records and performances
achieved during such participation be vacated or stricken.
b) Require that team victories be forfeited to opponent.
c) Require that team or individual awards earned during such
participation be returned to the Association.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
d) Require the return of any financial receipts realized from
tournament participation.
e) Impose a monetary penalty commensurate with the expense to
the OHSAA for the litigation.
{¶50} The OHSAA argues, in part, that a live controversy exists because
Paige has an interest in preventing the OHSAA from erasing her individual and team
performances and requiring the forfeiture of her team’s victories. The majority
responds that Paige “. . . has no such interest as noted in the motion to dismiss this
appeal.” I must disagree. The motion to dismiss does not set forth a disclaimer of
the interest Paige asserted in her amended complaint—to protect her individual and
team performances and her team’s record of game victories—by seeking to prevent
the OHSAA from exercising its authority under Bylaw 11-1-4. Thus, a live
controversy remains between Paige and the OHSAA. If this court were to grant the
relief sought by the OHSAA in this appeal, the legal interests of both Paige and the
OHSAA would be affected—Paige’s interest in protecting her individual and team
performances and the OHSAA’s vindication of its governing authority.
{¶51} The majority states that Paige’s attorney, during oral argument,
submitted that she will not be “adversely affected” if Winton Woods were to be
penalized. This court should not countenance a party’s effort to abandon on appeal
an interest the party specifically advanced in the trial court when the relief sought by
the appealing party, if granted, would make a difference to that stated interest.
Here, Paige specifically sought to enjoin the OHSAA from sanctioning or penalizing
Winton Woods under its rules and was granted this relief.
{¶52} In this case, to find no live controversy as the majority does, strips
the OHSAA of its opportunity to realize the relief it seeks. Here, the OHSAA seeks
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
not only to vindicate its governing authority, but also to exercise its discretion to
impose sanctions against its member schools under Bylaw 11-1-4—a result which
Paige specifically sought to prohibit. In this appeal, by affirming Paige’s claimed
disinterest, the majority permits a situation whereby cases like this would always
evade review.
{¶53} Furthermore, I believe the majority reads the penalties that the
OHSAA may impose upon Paige too narrowly when it states that our record does not
demonstrate that Paige had set any records or won any awards, and therefore, a live
controversy between Paige and the OHSAA does not exist. While the penalties the
OHSAA may impose can encompass the vacating or striking of any awards or records
that Paige has individually earned, the OHSAA may also require that her individual
“performance achieved” during her participation be vacated or stricken. Her
“performance achieved” would encompass the record of statistics for any game she
participated in at Winton Woods, and would include, among other things: assists,
blocks, points scored, or steals.
{¶54} Likewise, the fact that Winton Woods is not a party to this appeal is
irrelevant to a determination that a live controversy exists in this case. In Ulliman,
Sandison, and McPherson, none of the schools appeared before the appellate courts,
yet the courts found that a live controversy remained between the student and the
athletic association. Therefore, I agree with the OHSAA that under the Second
District’s decision in Ulliman and the Sixth Circuit’s opinions in Sandison and
McPherson, the portion of the trial court’s preliminary injunction which prohibits
“OHSAA from taking adverse action against Allexus [sic] or against Winton Woods
for allowing Allexus [sic] to participate in athletics,” is not moot.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶55} I acknowledge, as pointed out by the majority, that both the Seventh
and Eleventh Circuits have held that the possibility of retroactive penalties by a high
school athletic association does not prevent an appeal from being moot where a
possible penalty is forfeiture of team victories and the school is not a party to the
appeal, and there is no evidence that the student athlete won any awards or achieved
any records during their performances. See Johnson v. Florida High School
Activities Assn., Inc., 102 F.3d 1172, 1173 (11th Cir.1997); Jordan v. Indiana High
School Athletic Assn., Inc., 16 F.3d 785, 788-89 (7th Cir.1994). In those cases,
however, the Seventh and Eleventh Circuits did not set forth the penalty provisions
of the athletic associations. So we do not know if the penalty provisions
encompassed the vacating or striking of any records of the student’s individual
performances. Furthermore, there is nothing to suggest that the students in those
cases, like the student in McPherson, sought to prohibit the athletic associations
from taking any action against the schools for which they participated.
{¶56} Here, however, there is no dispute that Paige participated in
basketball games at Winton Woods following the trial court’s issuance of the
preliminary injunction. Therefore, a record of her “achievement” during those
performances exists. Given that Paige specifically sought to prevent the OHSAA
from taking any action to penalize Winton Woods, which would encompass erasing
her own record of performance and any team victories, I believe the Sixth Circuit’s
analysis in Sandison and McPherson is more on point with the facts in this case.
{¶57} I would also point out that the Eighth and Tenth Circuits have,
likewise, held that an athletic association’s appeal of an injunction, which had
permitted a student’s participation in athletics, was not moot even though the
student had graduated, because the student had an interest in preventing the athletic
25
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
association from erasing team victories and individual performances. Pottgen v.
Missouri State High School Activities Assn., 40 F.3d 926 (8th Cir.1994) (holding that
although a student had graduated from high school, mooting the portion of an
injunction permitting him to play high school baseball, a “live controversy still
exist[ed] regarding the portion of the injunction which prohibited the MSHSAA from
imposing sanctions upon a high school for whom or against whom Pottgen [had]
played”); Wiley v. Natl. Collegiate Athletic Assn., 612 F.2d 473, 476 (10th Cir.1979)
(holding that a college track athlete’s graduation did not completely moot an
injunction allowing him to compete in college athletics because his victories, records,
and awards were still at issue). Thus, I cannot say that the OHSAA’s appeal is moot.
{¶58} But even assuming arguendo that the underlying controversy
between Paige and the OHSAA no longer exists, I would not dismiss its appeal as
moot because the issues presented in the OHSAA’s appeal involve matters of great
public importance which affect virtually all public and private middle and high
schools in the state that maintain programs of interscholastic athletics. Over three
hundred thousand students statewide participate in sports under the OHSAA
eligibility bylaws. The primary purpose of the eligibility bylaws is to provide for fair
and equitable governing of student eligibility for students who participate in athletics
in Ohio.
{¶59} Here, the trial court held that the OHSAA had violated a student’s
due-process rights and had engaged in fraud in denying her eligibility to play
basketball, and it did so by engaging in a de novo review. Resolution of this issue is
vital because what is at stake is the governance authority of the OHSAA, which has
an interest in protecting the integrity of its rules and vindicating the rights of its
member schools, who rely on the fair application of the eligibility bylaws, as well as
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
ensuring that the OHSAA not be required to litigate under a de novo review. Thus,
the outcome of the case is not only important to the OHSAA, but to its member
schools, and to those students who do abide by the OHSAA’s eligibility rules.
{¶60} In that respect, this case is similar to In re Suspension of Huffer
from Circleville High School, 47 Ohio St.3d 12, 546 N.E.2d 1308 (1989), where Mark
Huffer appealed his suspension from Circleville High School by the Board of
Education because he allegedly attended wrestling practice while under the influence
of alcohol. By the time the matter had reached the Ohio Supreme Court, Huffer had
graduated from high school. Id. at 14. The issue before the Supreme Court on appeal
was whether the school board’s policy on alcohol was unreasonable and overbroad.
Id.
{¶61} The Ohio Supreme Court stated that the issue was “certainly
capable of repetition, yet it may ‘evade review, ‘since students who challenge school
board rules generally graduate before the case winds its way through the court
system.’ ” Id. In reaching this conclusion, the Supreme Court did not limit its
analysis to Huffer, but rather looked at students in general. The court further found
that “the issue of the authority of local school boards to make rules and regulations is
of great public interest.” Id.
{¶62} Because this case involves the OHSAA’s ability to make and enforce
its eligibility rules and regulations among its member schools, who comprise
virtually every public and private middle and high school in Ohio, this court should
decide the merits of the case under the public interest exception to the mootness
doctrine. Accordingly, I would deny Paige’s motion to dismiss the appeal as moot and
address the merits of the OHSAA’s appeal.
The OHSAA’s Arguments on Appeal
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶63} The OHSAA raises five assignments of error. In its first assignment
of error, the OHSAA argues that the trial court erred in reversing the decision of the
OHSAA Appeals Panel when its decision was supported by reliable, probative, and
substantial evidence. In its second and third assignments of error, the OHSAA
argues that the trial court erred in reversing the decision of the OHSAA Appeals
Panel where the trial court conducted a de novo evidentiary hearing, and not only
substituted new evidence for the evidence considered by the OHSAA Appeals Panel,
but also substituted its determination as to the credibility of witnesses for the
determination of the OHSAA Appeals Panel. In its fourth assignment of error, the
OHSAA argues that the trial court erred by disregarding the Ohio Supreme Court’s
holding in Ohio High School Athletic Assn. v. Judges of the Court of Common Pleas
of Stark Co., 173 Ohio St. 239, 181 N.E.2d 261 (1962), by creating its own rules and
standards for hearings on eligibility determinations in place of the rules and
standards approved by member OHSAA schools. In its fifth assignment of error, the
OHSAA argues that “the trial court erred as a matter of law in granting a preliminary
injunction against the OHSAA where it had committed any of the above-listed
errors.” Because the OHSAA’s assignments of error are interrelated, I address them
together.
Standard of Review for Preliminary Injunction
{¶64} A trial court’s decision granting a preliminary injunction is
reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard. Garono v. State, 37 Ohio St.3d 171,
173, 524 N.E.2d 496 (1988). A trial court abuses its discretion when its decision is
unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. Blakemore v. Blakemore, 5 Ohio St.3d
217, 219, 450 N.E.2d 1140 (1983).
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶65} A party seeking a preliminary injunction must show by clear and
convincing evidence: (1) a substantial likelihood that the party will prevail on the
merits, (2) the party will suffer irreparable injury or harm if the requested injunctive
relief is denied, (3) no unjustifiable harm to third parties will occur if the injunctive
relief is granted, and (4) the injunctive relief requested will serve the public interest.
The Proctor & Gamble Co. v. Stoneham, 140 Ohio App.3d 260, 267, 747 N.E.2d 268
(1st Dist.2000); Ulliman, 184 Ohio App.3d 52, 2009-Ohio-3756, 919 N.E.2d 763, at ¶
34; see Civ.R. 65(B). While no one factor is to be given controlling weight, a trial
court errs in granting a preliminary injunction where the plaintiff is unlikely to
succeed on the merits. Toledo Police Patrolman’s Assn., Local 10, IUPA, AFL-CIO-
CLC v. Toledo, 127 Ohio App.3d 450, 469, 713 N.E.2d 78 (6th Dist.1988); see
Michigan State AFL-CIO v. Miller, 103 F.3d 1240, 1249 (6th Cir.1997).
Likelihood of Success on the Merits
{¶66} The Ohio Supreme Court has held that the decisions of the
tribunals of the OHSAA with respect to its internal affairs will, in the absence of
mistake, fraud, collusion, or arbitrariness, be accepted by the courts as conclusive.
State ex rel. Ohio High School Athletic Assn. v. Judges of Court of Common Pleas of
Stark Cty., 173 Ohio St. 329, 181 N.E.2d 261 (1961), paragraph three of the syllabus.
Thus, in order to succeed on the merits of her claim, Paige must show by clear and
convincing evidence that the OHSAA’s decision was the product of fraud, mistake,
collusion, or arbitrariness.
{¶67} The trial court held that Paige was likely to succeed on the merits of
her claim because (1) the Appeals Panel’s determination that Paige’s move had been
athletically motivated was arbitrary and based upon the fraudulent, hearsay
testimony of Darren Braddix; (2) the OHSAA had not afforded Paige fundamental
29
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
due process; and (3) the OHSAA had made an arbitrarily and/or mistaken
interpretation of the “both parents” requirement in Exception One.
Athletic Motivation for the Move
{¶68} The OHSAA argues the trial court erred in concluding that it had
acted arbitrarily and fraudulently in holding that Paige’s transfer to Winton Woods
had been athletically motivated.
{¶69} The OHSAA contends that in reaching this conclusion, the trial
court exceeded the scope of its review under State ex rel. Ohio High School Athletic
Assn. v. Judges of Court of Common Pleas of Stark Cty., 173 Ohio St. at paragraph
three of the syllabus, 181 N.E.2d 261, by conducting a de novo review of the
proceedings before the OHSAA, rehearing the matter as if the OHSAA proceedings
had not occurred, and then substituting the new evidence from the hearing on the
preliminary injunction for the evidence considered by the OHSAA Panel. The
OHSAA argues that because the transcript of the hearing before the Appeals Panel
contained sufficient, reliable, probative, and substantial evidence to support the
Panel’s finding, the trial court erred in admitting testimony and then substituting its
judgment for that of the OHSAA Appeals Panel. I agree.
{¶70} A court may, in its discretion, hold a hearing on a motion for
preliminary injunction. See Executive Mgt. Servs., Inc. v. Cincinnati State Technical
and Community College, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 11AP-600, 2011-Ohio-6767, ¶ 6-12.
“In determining whether a hearing is appropriate, the court must exercise its
discretion, assess the nature of the allegations, and circumstances, and determine
whether a hearing is warranted for that particular motion.” Id. at ¶ 12. Civ.R. 65 is
silent as to the scope of the hearing.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶71} In her complaint for a preliminary injunction, Paige did not allege
or rely upon facts outside the proceedings before the OHSAA to support her claim
that the OHSAA’s decision was the product of mistake, arbitrariness, fraud, or
collusion and that she had been denied due process. Had Paige made such an
allegation, the trial court could have, in its discretion, chosen to hear new testimony.
The trial court could have then engaged in fact finding with respect to whether the
new evidence before it demonstrated that the OHSAA’s decision was fraudulent,
collusive, mistaken, or arbitrary.
{¶72} Absent such allegations, however, the trial court was not free to
take new evidence, particularly when that evidence could have been presented to the
OHSAA, and to then use that evidence de novo to substitute its judgment for that of
the OHSAA. Rather, the trial court was confined to determining whether the
evidence that was before the OHSAA demonstrated that its decision was fraudulent,
collusive, mistaken, or arbitrary.
{¶73} Ohio appellate courts have held that a decision of the OHSAA is
arbitrary when a bylaw in question has not been properly adopted by member
schools of the OHSAA in compliance with OHSAA regulations or when the bylaw in
question is “without determining principles.” Ulliman, 184 Ohio App.3d 52, 2009-
Ohio-3756, 919 N.E.2d 763, at ¶ 61-63. They have additionally held that an OHSAA
decision is arbitrary where it “is not supported by reliable, probative, and substantial
evidence and is not in accordance with the law.” See Scott v. Ohio High School
Athletic Assn., 5th Dist. Stark No. 1999CA00269, 2000 Ohio App. LEXIS 3193, *24
(July 10, 2000), quoting Massillon City School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v. Ohio High School
Athletic Assn., 5th Dist. Stark No. 7247, 1987 Ohio App. LEXIS 9541 (Nov. 5, 1987).
31
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶74} Here, no evidence was presented that Bylaw 4-7-2 was improperly
adopted in violation of OHSAA regulations or that Exception One was without
determining principles. Nor was there evidence that the OHSAA Panel’s decision to
deny Paige eligibility under Exception One was arbitrary and fraudulent. The record
from the proceedings before the OHSAA shows that the Appeals Panel considered all
the evidence before it, including the hearsay testimony by Braddix, and found
evidence pointing toward a primarily athletic reason for the move to be more
credible than the evidence to the contrary. Although Watkins denied that her family
had any issue with the Withrow basketball coach for failing to play Paige during the
last game, her statements before the Appeals Panel supported Braddix’s testimony
that Paige had been benched by the coach after one minute in a playoff game where
she had started.
{¶75} Watkins’ testimony also supported the conclusion that, although a
“sit back and observe” parent, she was concerned enough to speak to the coach
immediately after the game. And although Watkins denied that Paige’s move to
Winton Woods was motivated by the desire to play basketball there, she had no
response to Braddix’s description of Paige’s declarations that she “was transferring to
Winton Woods and couldn’t wait to play us.” Watkins, furthermore, told the OHSAA
Panel that had she known Paige would have been ineligible to play basketball at
Winton Woods, she probably would not have made the move. The Panel, moreover,
had evidence before it, that Watkins had signed a lease for the apartment on May 17,
2012, while Paige was still attending Withrow High School.
{¶76} The trial court ignored this evidence before the OHSAA panel,
instead focusing solely on Braddix’s testimony. The trial court held that because
Braddix’s testimony was based upon hearsay, the OHSAA had erred in relying upon
32
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
it because it was fraudulent and arbitrary. The trial court then disregarded this
evidence in light of the fact that some of it had been presented through hearsay
testimony. But the OHSAA is a private association that employs an informal hearing
process and is not bound by all of the rules of evidence. Thus, its decisions may be
based in part on hearsay. Moreover, it was within the OHSAA’s purview to consider
both direct and indirect evidence and to weigh it for what it was worth.
{¶77} In granting the preliminary injunction, the trial court afforded
more weight to the testimony from Paige, her mother, and her AAU and Winton
Woods coaches at the hearing on the preliminary injunction, finding their testimony
to be more credible than the testimony given by Braddix, and Moore’s testimony as
to Paige’s and her mother’s motivation for the move. Because the record does not
support the trial court’s conclusion that OHSAA’s determination, that Paige’s
transfer to Winton Woods had been primarily for athletics, was based upon fraud or
arbitrariness, the trial court erred in finding Paige likely to succeed on that claim on
this basis.
Due Process
{¶78} The trial court also held that Paige had not been afforded
fundamental due process. It relied upon the fact that Paige had not been entitled to
compel witnesses before the Appeals Panel and she had not been entitled to cross-
examine Braddix, the key antagonist to her eligibility to play at Winton Woods. But,
participation in interscholastic sports is not a property right that gives rise to due-
process protections under the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution or
state constitutions. See Menke v. Ohio High School Athletic Assn., 2 Ohio App.3d
244, 246, 441 N.E.2d 620 (1st Dist.1981); Hamilton v. Tennessee Secondary School
33
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
Athletic Assn., 552 F.2d 681, 682 (6th Cir.1976) (holding that a student’s interest in
interscholastic athletics falls outside due-process protections).
{¶79} But even assuming arguendo that Paige was entitled to procedural
due process, there is no evidence that she was denied the process she was due.
Following Winton Woods’s request for an eligibility ruling, Moore, the associate
commissioner, provided Winton Woods with a letter detailing the reasons for its
finding that Paige was ineligible. Paige’s mother, Watkins appealed the
Commissioner’s decision to the OHSAA Appeals Panel. Watkins appeared at the
hearing on her daughter’s behalf without counsel or witnesses. She gave a statement,
answered questions by the OHSAA, presented documentary evidence, and was
afforded an opportunity to respond to Braddix’s statements at the hearing. Thus,
Paige was afforded the same process during the appeals procedure that Winton
Woods and Withrow, as members schools, would have been afforded. As a result,
the trial court erred in finding that Paige was likely to succeed on the merits of her
due-process claim that her right to fundamental due process had been violated.
“Both Parents” Requirement in Exception One
{¶80} Finally, the OHSAA argues that the trial court erred in justifying its
decision to issue the preliminary injunction on the basis that the OHSAA had
mistakenly interpreted the “both parents” requirement in Exception One to the
transfer bylaw. I agree.
{¶81} Associate Commissioner Moore conceded at the beginning of the
OHSAA Appeals hearing that Watkins had made a bona fide legal change of
residence. Thus, the sole focus of the hearing was whether Paige’s transfer to the
Winton Woods School District had been athletically motivated. Because the
OHSAA’s decision to deny Paige’s eligibility was based solely upon its determination
34
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
that her move had been athletically motivated, the trial court’s interpretation of the
“both parents” requirement in Exception One was unnecessary to a determination of
the issues before it. Consequently, the trial court erred in finding Paige likely to
succeed on the merits on this basis when it did not even serve as the reason for the
OHSAA’s decision that she did not meet the criteria for application of Exception One.
Conclusion
{¶82} Accordingly, I agree with the OHSAA that the trial court abused its
discretion when it found that Paige had a likelihood of success on the merits of her
claim. As a result, I need not address the remaining prongs of the preliminary
injunction standard. See Ulliman, 184 Ohio App.3d 52, 2009-Ohio-3756, 919 N.E.2d
763, at ¶ 70. Therefore, I would sustain the OHSAA’s five assignments of error,
reverse the judgment of the trial court, and vacate the preliminary injunction. I
further agree that the majority’s determination that the OHSAA’s appeal is moot
directly conflicts with the Second Appellate District’s opinion in Ulliman v. Ohio
High School Athletic Assn., 184 Ohio App.3d 52, 2009-Ohio-3756, 919 N.E.2d 763
(2d Dist.). I, therefore, support its determination that this case should be certified to
the Supreme Court for review on this basis.
Please note:
The court has recorded its own entry this date.
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