[Cite as Akron Dev. Fund I, Ltd. v. Advanced Coatings Internatl., Inc., 2011-Ohio-3277.]
STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
)ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
COUNTY OF SUMMIT )
AKRON DEVELOPMENT FUND I, LTD.
C.A. No. 25375
Appellee
v.
APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT
ADVANCED COATINGS ENTERED IN THE
INTERNATIONAL, INC. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
COUNTY OF SUMMIT, OHIO
Appellant CASE No. CV 2008-01-0475
DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
Dated: June 30, 2011
MOORE, Judge.
{¶1} Appellant, Advanced Coatings International, Inc., appeals from the judgment of
the Summit County Court of Common Pleas. This Court dismisses the appeal.
I.
{¶2} Advanced Coatings International, Inc. manufactures coatings for circuit boards
and other electronics. Seeking to raise capital, it borrowed money from Akron Development
Fund I, Ltd. in exchange for two promissory notes that were secured by various assets. When
Advanced Coatings failed to pay on the promissory notes, Akron Development Fund filed a
complaint for the money due, foreclosure of security interests, and appointment of a receiver.
{¶3} Akron Development Fund attached to its complaint copies of the two promissory
notes and two security agreements given by Advanced Coatings. The first note was given on
March 25, 2003, for $125,000. The note was secured by a commercial security agreement that
gave Akron Development Fund a first priority security interest in all of Advanced Coatings’
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assets, including both tangible and intangible property. The security agreement further provided
for rights and remedies in the event of default on the loan and specifically addressed the right to
appoint a receiver. The second note was a revolving promissory note with a maximum principal
amount of $250,000 that was signed on March 12, 2004. Both the notes and the security
agreement were signed by the President of Advanced Coatings, Mr. Steven Johnson.
{¶4} Advanced Coatings failed to make payments on the notes. On August 20 2007,
Akron Development Fund sent a written demand for payment of the money owed. Two months
later, on October 9, 2007, Advanced Coatings executed the second security agreement. That
agreement expressly named three patents for coatings. This agreement was also signed by
Johnson in his capacity as President of Advanced Coatings.
{¶5} Upon default of the loans, Akron Development Fund began seeking bids to
purchase the collateral provided in the security agreements. It entered into a sale agreement with
Genesis Materials Technology, LLC, on January 3, 2008. The sale agreement provided that
Genesis would purchase the assets for $185,000, plus receiver’s costs, but it also provided that
Akron Development Fund could accept a “higher and better offer” from another buyer. A copy
of the agreement was attached to the complaint filed by Akron Development Fund. This
agreement was signed by Johnson as well, but in his capacity as the president of Genesis. At the
time, he was still serving as president of Advanced Coatings.
{¶6} The trial court appointed a receiver who filed a motion on February 12, 2008, to
approve the sale of assets to Genesis unless a “higher and better” offer was received. In the
motion, the receiver stated that “in the exercise of his business judgment, [the sale agreement] is
the best offer available and should be approved immediately.” He claimed that time was of the
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essence because Advanced Coatings was delinquent on its rental obligations for the facility it
was using and had been given a default notice by the lessor.
{¶7} The receiver’s motion also stated that Howard Hansen and another shareholder
were interested in purchasing the property and that they had inspected it. Although the receiver
had asked the court to authorize the sale to Genesis, he also asked that the shareholders of
Advanced Coatings, creditors, or other parties be given a period of ten days from service of the
motion to file a “higher and better” offer.
{¶8} At this point in the litigation, four shareholders came forward and claimed that
they were “real parties in interest.” The group, which included appellant Howard Hansen, filed a
motion on February 22, 2008, with a brief in opposition to the motion for an order approving the
sale of assets to Genesis. The shareholder group argued that Advanced Coatings should be given
time to answer the complaint and defend against it. In addition, they argued that the assets
should not be sold to Genesis because Johnson had created the limited liability company as a
way for him to obtain the patents at a reduced price, and he had not disclosed the existence of
this company to Advanced Coatings’ shareholders.
{¶9} In their brief in opposition to the receiver’s motion, the shareholder group further
detailed Johnson’s position with Advanced Coatings. They stated that Johnson held the largest
number of Advanced Coatings shares and he had served as its chairman of the board, president,
and chief technical officer. They claimed that Johnson was the primary inventor noted on the
patents being sold and that the corporation relied on his knowledge to produce the coatings.
They argued that it would be unfair to sell to him, via Genesis, because he had rebuffed other
offers to infuse Advanced Coatings with capital and seemed poised to take the assets through
another company in breach of his fiduciary duty. The shareholder group was not objecting to the
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appointment of the receiver or the sale, but rather to the buyer attempting to purchase those
assets. Because of Johnson’s involvement with Genesis, the group claimed it could not be a
legitimate bidder.
{¶10} The receiver subsequently received an additional offer for the property from
Capital Technologies, LLC, on behalf of Proactive Investments, LLC. Faced with two
potentially competing offers, the receiver proposed a formal procedure to establish qualified bids
and to conduct an auction, if necessary.
{¶11} He submitted the proposed sale procedure to the trial court. On March 6, 2008,
the magistrate to whom the case had been assigned entered an order approving of the sale
procedure. The shareholder group filed a motion for reconsideration of the order approving any
sales procedure that would result in a sale of the assets to Genesis. The group subsequently
withdrew the motion to reconsider the order, but claimed it was not withdrawing the brief in
opposition to the receiver’s motion for an order approving the sale.
{¶12} Despite the involvement of the shareholder group, Advanced Coatings never
answered the complaint or otherwise made an appearance. On March 13, 2008, the trial court
entered default judgment in favor of Akron Development Fund for the money owed on the notes,
plus interest. The judgment also provided that Akron Development Fund was entitled to
foreclose on the collateral and patents and to “dispose of the same in accordance with applicable
law.”
{¶13} On March 14, 2008, both Capital Technologies, LLC, on behalf of Proactive
Investments, LLC, and Genesis bid on the assets. Genesis had the highest bid at $215,000. On
March 17, 2008, the receiver filed a motion to grant Genesis access to the assets prior to the
closing.
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{¶14} On March 25, 2008, the magistrate entered an order, also signed by the judge,
which set forth the events that had transpired prior to the auction. The magistrate noted that the
day before the auction, he held a hearing at which the attorneys for Akron Development Fund
and the shareholder group attended. He stated that, at the hearing, none of the parties objected to
the default judgment, the validity of the security agreements, or the right to sell the assets to
satisfy the debt. Moreover, he stated that none of the parties objected to the fairness of the
starting price set by the receiver for the auction, to the appropriateness of the receiver’s
advertising efforts, or the auction procedures.
{¶15} On the same day, a judge signed an order for the sitting judge “authorizing and
approving” the sale to Genesis as the successful bidder at the auction. The order, which was also
signed by the magistrate, directed the receiver to “consummate the sale with” Genesis and to
“close the transaction[.]” In a subsequent magistrate’s order entered March 28, 2008, the
magistrate stated that the transfer was to be completed by March 31, 2008.
{¶16} The property transferred to Genesis. On April 2, 2008, after the transfer had
taken place, the shareholder group filed objections to the March 25, 2008, order and to the
magistrate’s March 28, 2008, order setting the transfer date. The receiver then filed a motion for
an order to approve his final report, allow him to distribute the funds, discharge him and
terminate the receivership. The shareholder group filed an objection to the receiver’s motion.
On May 8, 2008, the magistrate concluded that the receiver’s motion should be granted. The
shareholder group filed objections to that decision on May 20, 2008. The court stated that “the
parties” had not filed objections to the report and adopted the magistrate’s decision on May 30,
2008.
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{¶17} Two of the shareholders, Brendan Hogan and Howard Hansen, filed a notice of
appeal. This Court determined that the trial court’s order was not a final appealable order
because the trial court merely adopted the magistrate’s decision without independently entering
judgment. We therefore dismissed the appeal.
{¶18} On remand, the case remained inactive until it was consolidated with a separately
filed action by Advanced Coatings against Johnson, his wife Melody Johnson, and Genesis. The
case was set for a settlement conference in the common pleas court on December 29, 2009.
Although these cases had been consolidated, Akron Development Fund was excused from
attending the settlement conference in response to its motion filed November 17, 2009. In that
motion, Akron Development Fund sought to be excused from the conference because all its
claims against Advanced Coatings had “been fully adjudicated” and it had assigned its judgment
to Proactive Investments, the company that had bid against Genesis during the auction for the
assets.
{¶19} On February 1, 2010, the Johnsons and Genesis sought to have the trial court
issue an order to terminate the receivership and turn over the proceeds to Akron Development
Fund. They attributed the fact that the receivership remained open to “a clerical error” because
the previous order issued by the trial court was not in the proper form to constitute a final,
appealable order. They asked the court to confirm the sale and close the receivership, even
though the assets and the sale proceeds had transferred almost two years earlier.
{¶20} The court entered judgment on those issues. According to the trial court’s order,
the court had been unaware that the first appeal had been dismissed until the motion to
consolidate these cases was filed. After a hearing in which the receiver, Appellant Hansen, and
another shareholder testified, the trial court overruled the objections to terminating the receiver’s
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report and confirmed the receiver’s sale. It then closed the receivership. It is from that order that
this appeal is taken.
II.
{¶21} Before reaching Appellants’ assignments of error, this Court must first address
whether this appeal is properly before it or whether the judgment sought in the case has been
satisfied and the case has become moot. Once the rights and obligations of the parties have been
extinguished through satisfaction of the judgment, a judgment on appeal cannot have any
practical effect upon the issues raised by the pleadings. It is well established “‘that a satisfaction
of judgment renders an appeal from that judgment moot.’” Bankers Trust Co. of California, N.A.
v. Tutin, 9th Dist. No. 24329, 2009-Ohio-1333, at ¶8, quoting Blodgett v. Blodgett (1990), 49
Ohio St.3d 243, 245.
{¶22} Although this case has had a lengthy procedural history, it is important to focus
on what appellants are seeking from this Court. Appellants have argued that the Court should set
aside the sale and place the patents back in Advanced Coatings’ name so that they could be
resold to a buyer other than Genesis and for a higher price. The patents and their proceeds are no
longer available to this court, however, because they have transferred to the purchaser, Genesis,
the funds have been distributed, and the judgment between Akron Development Fund and
Advanced Coatings has been satisfied.
{¶23} In Banker’s Trust, the plaintiff foreclosed on property that was then sold at a
sheriff’s sale. Id. at ¶3. The defendant had a life estate interest in the property. Id. at ¶2. After
the trial court confirmed the sale, it ruled that the lender was entitled to the proceeds because the
mortgage lien was superior to the defendant’s life estate interest. Id. at ¶3. Although the
defendant had sought a stay of the trial court’s judgment, the sheriff disbursed the proceeds to
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the lender when that stay expired. This Court held that the individual subject matter of the case,
defendant’s right to the funds based on her life estate, was no longer under the control of the
court because the matter had been extinguished by the distribution of the proceeds. Id. at ¶16.
The matter was moot because once the rights and obligations of the parties had been
extinguished, any further judgment from an appellate court could not have any practical effect on
the issues raised by the pleadings. Id.
{¶24} In this case, the remedy sought by appellants is to recover the assets so that the
trial court can conduct a new sale. They have argued that the case is not moot because no
satisfaction of judgment was entered below. Further, they have argued that the distribution of
proceeds took place in violation of a stay. Neither argument has merit.
{¶25} Appellants are correct that an executed satisfaction of judgment filed with the
court may terminate an appeal. See Blodgette, 49 Ohio St.3d at 245. That is not, however, the
only way to measure satisfaction of judgment such that a case becomes moot. Rather, a cause of
action may also become moot if it has been extinguished by some event. For example, the
foreclosure in Bankers Trust was extinguished by distribution of the proceeds of the sheriff’s
sale. Bankers Trust at ¶16. In Tschantz v. Ferguson (1991), 57 Ohio St.3d 131, 133, a court of
claims’ ruling on issue of immunity rendered a case moot. In Singer v. City of Fairborn (1991),
73 Ohio App.3d 809, 817, a zoning change by referendum rendered an action against a city
moot. In Boncek v. Stewart (Oct. 23, 2002), 9th Dist. No. 21054, at *3, the property at issue was
sold. The key inquiry in those cases was whether the relief sought on appeal was available. See
City of Akron v. Am. Tax Funding, LLC, 9th Dist. No. 24530, 2009-Ohio-3358.
{¶26} In this case, there was a default judgment against Advanced Coatings and there
was no question that Akron Development Fund was entitled to foreclose on the property. The
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assets were sold at auction and transferred to Genesis. Akron Development Fund received its
money from the sale of the assets and its claims were satisfied. In its motion to be excused from
the settlement conference, it expressly declared to the trial court that its claims were “fully
adjudicated[.]” Therefore, the remedy that appellants seek, to place the patents back in
Advanced Coatings name, is no longer available.
{¶27} Appellants have also argued that the proceeds were distributed in violation of a
stay. There was no stay in place, however, when the patents were sold at auction and when they
actually transferred to Genesis. On March 25, 2008, the magistrate signed an order, also signed
by Judge Paul Gallagher for Judge Stormer “authorizing and approving” the sale to Genesis as
the successful bidder at the auction. The order directed the receiver to “consummate the sale
with” Genesis and to “close the transaction[.]” In a subsequent magistrate’s order, the
magistrate stated that the transfer was to be completed by March 31, 2008. On April 2, 2008, the
shareholder group filed objections to the March 25th order regarding the sale to Genesis. Prior
to their filing the objections, however, title to the patents had transferred. Appellants have
argued that the transfer should not have taken place because there were objections that should
have stayed the order. Even if the objections were proper, the stay is triggered by the filing of
the objections and becomes effective at that time. At the time the patents were transferred, the
trial court had signed the order. Because the objections had not yet been filed, no such stay was
in place.
{¶28} Although the trial court held a later hearing on this matter and issued its April 30,
2010, order, the focus of controversy – the sale of the patents – was no longer before it. Even
assuming at that point that the trial court could somehow set aside the sale, it chose not to do so.
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Accordingly, its decision to overrule the objections to the referee’s order would have effectively
ended any stay resulting from those objections.
{¶29} The remedy that Appellants seek is no longer available. Moreover, when the
assets were transferred and when the trial court distributed the sale funds to Akron Development
Fund to satisfy the promissory notes, any actual controversy that remained for this Court to
address was extinguished. Accordingly, the appeal is moot.
III.
{¶30} The present appeal is moot. It is, therefore, dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of
judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the
period for review shall begin to run. App.R. 22(E). The Clerk of the Court of Appeals is
instructed to mail a notice of entry of this judgment to the parties and to make a notation of the
mailing in the docket, pursuant to App.R. 30.
Costs taxed to Appellant.
CARLA MOORE
FOR THE COURT
CARR, P. J.
WHITMORE, J.
CONCUR
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APPEARANCES:
H. ALAN ROTHENBUECHER, and ROBERT M. STEFANCIN, Attorneys at Law, for
Appellant.
MARC B. MERKLIN, and KATE M. BRADLEY, Attorneys at Law, for Appellee.
WILLIAM CHRIS, Attorney at Law, for Appellee.
JOHN GUY, Attorney at Law, for Appellee.
TODD ANTHONY MAZZOLA, Attorney at Law, for Appellee.