While I agree with the majority opinion that the adoption of the magistrate's decision in the instant case ran afoul of the dictates of Civ.R. 53(E) and 54(A), I cannot agree with the majority's conclusion that the trial court's order is not final and appealable.
Although other appellate districts have adopted the same view as the majority,1 a conflict between districts exists. While the majority has characterized the issue as not whether a flawed entry is void, but whether it is final and appealable, such a distinction is unclear in these circumstances. The apparent reason that the majority feels that the entry is not final and appealable is because no valid final judgment has been entered in the case; in other words, the trial court has failed to enter a final order that actually "provides the prescription for action and *Page 433 reflects judicial conduct" and includes "everything necessary to a complete understanding of its effect." Hauck Bros., Inc. v.Manuel (June 27, 1991), Clark App. No. 2768, unreported. Because the judgment order that the trial court entered does not satisfy the Civ.R. 54(A) requirements of a final judgment, logic would dictate that it cannot be of any force and effect. Accordingly, under this line of reasoning, the flawed entry must be viewed as a nullity.
However, not all courts have regarded such an order as void and therefore not final and appealable. The Supreme Court of Ohio has explained that failure to adhere to the dictates of Civ.R. 53 "renders the resulting judgment voidable, not void," and that an "appellant's failure to pursue his appropriate remedies in a timely fashion acts an estoppel to a remedy" that would allow the appellant to void the judgment on such a basis. State ex rel.Lesher v. Kainrad (1981), 65 Ohio St.2d 68, 71 (holding that "[i]n order to avoid finding many alleged divorces complete nullities, ** the failure * * * to comply with [Civ.R. 53(E)] renders the resulting judgment voidable, and not void."). Various appellate districts have implicitly extended the Lesher rationale to the Civ.R. 53(E) and 54(A) issue.2 In Lucas MetropolitanHousing Authority v. Kincade (Mar. 17, 1995), Lucas App. No. L-94-211, unreported, the Sixth District addressed the issue of whether a trial court entry that read "The court hereby adopts the Referee's Findings of Fact and Conclusion of Law, and the Referee's Recommendation is hereby made the order in this case" and that was entered on the same page as the referee's report complied with Civ.R. 54(A).3 The Sixth District held:
Civ.R. 54(A) provides that a judgment may not contain, among other things, a report of [the] referee. While we are of the opinion that the better practice is to enter judgment on a document separate from a referee's report and recommendation, the judgment in the instant case is set forth in such a manner that the referee's report is not part of the judgment. That is, the judgment was entered separately after the signature of the referee and was entered on a different date.
For these reasons, the trial court did not err in overruling appellant's motion to declare the court's judgment void.
Id.
Similarly, while the Fourth District has elected to sustain those assignments of error that are based upon the adoption of an entry that runs afoul of Civ.R. 53(E) and 54(A), see Christy v.Christy (June 12, 1997), Highland App. No. 96CA902, unreported, that appellate district has generally declined to *Page 434 predicate the disposition of an appeal on such a voidable order when neither party has raised the issue. See State ex rel. SciotoCounty Child Support Enforcement Agency (July 23, 1999), Scioto App. No. 98CA2617, unreported; In re Ohm (May 29, 1998), Ross App. No. 97CA2290, unreported, at fn. 1. But, see, Fields v. Fields (Aug. 24, 1998), Lawrence App. No. 97 CA 50, unreported (placing this policy into question by reversing a judgment after raising the jurisdictional issue sua sponte, despite continuing to describe the flawed trial entry as voidable). Further, the Fourth District has explained that res judicata dictates that the failure to raise a flawed adoption as error in a timely appeal will preclude an appellate court from subsequently holding a flawed order invalid.Karnes v. Karnes (Aug. 8, 1996), Athens App. No. 95CA1666, unreported.
In fact, such reasoning has been employed by this very Court, creating a scenario in which we have contradicted ourselves. In holding that the type of entries with which we are concerned are not final and appealable, Daly v. Martin relied in part on this Court's previous decision in Walker v. Walker (Aug. 5, 1987), Summit App. No. 12978, unreported. In Walker, this Court addressed whether a flawed trial court entry adopting a referee's decision could be attacked during the appeal of a later entry in the same case,4 stating:
[W]e must next consider whether [the flawed entry] is void or voidable. * * *
* * *
[U]nless a judgment is appealed, it remains valid and the prevailing party may fully rely upon it. If the judgment was voidable and not appealed * * * it is not a nullity, it cannot be disregarded, it cannot be attacked collaterally, and it remains in full force and effect.
Id., citing Eisenberg v. Peyton (1978), 56 Ohio App.2d 144, 151;Lesher, supra. *Page 435
Therefore, this Court concluded, the proper course of action to attack the validity of the flawed adoption by the trial court was through appeal. In Daly, relying upon instead of overruling Walker, this Court then held that such a flawed adoption could not be appealed. As a result, this Court's explication on the entry of flawed orders that imperfectly adopt magistrate decisions informs parties that, although the proper course of action to attack such an entry is to appeal, if the party does so, we will then dismiss the appeal for lack of a final appealable order.
To hold an entry that imperfectly adopts a magistrate's decision void is to indulge in a legal fiction that posits that, without literal compliance with Civ.R. 53(E) and 54(A), a court did not intend to render a final decision in a case and that the parties involved cannot adequately understand what the court thought it was ordering. Such a holding ignores that a party does not appeal because he or she cannot tell from a final court entry what his or her rights and obligations have been determined to be; rather, an appeal arises because an appellant knows what the court has ordered, even if the form of that order is imperfect, and that party disagrees.
There could hardly be a case in which the application of Daly would result in a more unfortunate outcome. The record is replete with incidents of abuse that Jesmone Dortch has allegedly endured, from being hit by her mother to withstanding an attempt to make her drink a mixture of juice and pills. It is troubling that Dortch, who has been involved in litigation of one form or another for over seven years, now must be subjected to yet additional legal proceedings as a result of the holding herein. Despite the issue of who could and should care for Dortch first having arisen in the early part of this decade, despite the passage of years in which Dortch has been transferred from her mother to her maternal grandmother to her father, and sometimes to the Children Services Board, while the issue of who owed whom money to care for Dortch shuffled through litigation, and despite the issuance of numerous orders on the various issues that have affected this child's well-being for nearly half of her entire life, the legal proceedings surrounding Dortch remain unresolved — and the case will now be returned to the trial court so that a new order can be issued regarding support arrearages and the appellate process can begin yet anew.
Such an outcome is neither just nor necessary when the flawed magistrate decision could just as sensibly be regarded as voidable and therefore subject to potential attack on appeal. To hold otherwise elevates form over substance in the face of compelling reasons for adopting a better view. Holding the type of order described herein to be void rather than voidable erects a needless procedural barrier to appellate review that merely compromises any notion of judicial economy and frustrates not only the parties to a case, but justice as well. Accordingly, I would interpret *Page 436 Civ.R. 53(E) and 54(A) in light of the mandate of Civ.R. 1(B), which provides that the Rules "shall be construed and applied to effect just results by eliminating delay, unnecessary expense and all other impediments to the expeditious administration of justice."
I would therefore hold the order herein to be final and appealable and reach the merits of the case, so that the issues can be resolved and the parties involved could finally begin to proceed with their post-litigation lives.
1 See, e.g., Tishman Midwest Management Corp. of Ohio v. Hunt (Mar. 30, 1987), Montgomery App. No. 9938, unreported (Second District); Reiter, supra (Third District); Martin v. Martin (June 24, 1994), Portage App. No. 93-P-0065, unreported (Eleventh District).
2 This Court in particular has explicitly applied Lesher to the Civ.R. 53 and 54(A) issue. See Walker v. Walker (Aug. 5, 1987), Summit App. No. 12978, unreported.
3 The term magistrate has since replaced the designation referee.
4 In summary, the chain of events were as follows: On October 7, 1986, the trial court had entered a judgment entry that merely adopted the report of the referee and failed to include a specific monetary award to the plaintiff. Thereafter, on January 13, 1987, the trial court denied defendant's motion for relief from execution, finding that the October 7, 1986 entry, read in conjunction with other prior orders, granted plaintiff a valid judgment for a specified sum. The trial court did not enter judgment for the award of money in its January 13, 1987 order, but instead recognized that such an award had already been ordered. On appeal, this Court held:
[The January 13, 1987] judgment was regular upon its face and cannot be used to collaterally attack the October 7, 1986 judgment. The parties here understood what the trial court did. The defendant complained, however, that the trial court did not properly fulfill its judicial responsibilities as required by [Civ.R.] 53 when it failed to specify the amounts for which the judgment was being given. Since the October 7, 1986 judgment was not challenged in a timely appeal, the judgment, although it could have been challenged as avoidable, is valid and remains in full force.
(Emphasis added.) Walker, supra.