[Cite as LexisNexis v. Hudia, 2018-Ohio-4046.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
MONTGOMERY COUNTY
LEXISNEXIS A DIVISION OF RELX, :
INC. :
: Appellate Case No. 28012
Plaintiff-Appellee :
: Trial Court Case No. 17-CV-1900
v. :
: (Civil Appeal from
JEREMY HUDIA : Common Pleas Court)
:
Defendant-Appellant :
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OPINION
Rendered on the 5th day of October, 2018.
...........
ANDREW C. STORAR, Atty. Reg. No. 0018802, MICHAEL W. SANDNER, Atty. Reg. No.
0064107, and MICHELLE T. SUNDGAARD, Atty. Reg. No. 0096006, 2700 Kettering
Tower, Dayton, Ohio 45423
Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellee
JEREMY HUDIA, Atty. Reg. No. 0088052, 12864 Heath Road, Chesterland, Ohio 44026
Attorney for Defendant-Appellant
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HALL, J.
{¶ 1} Jeremy Hudia appeals from the trial court’s entry of summary judgment
against him on LexisNexis’ complaint alleging breach of contract for non-payment under
a subscription agreement.
{¶ 2} Hudia advances four assignments of error. First, he contends the trial court
erred in taking judicial notice of a fact based on an Internet search rather than relying on
evidence submitted by the parties. Second, he claims the trial court erred in failing to
construe evidence in his favor when ruling on LexisNexis’ summary judgment motion.
Third, he asserts that the trial court erred in failing to rule that he acted as a “pre-
incorporation promoter.” Fourth, he argues that the trial court erred in failing to sustain his
competing summary judgment motion.
{¶ 3} The record reflects that Hudia signed a subscription agreement with
LexisNexis for online legal-research services in July 2012. Payments on the account fell
into arrears, and LexisNexis sued him personally in April 2017 to recover the balance
owed. The only real dispute below concerned whether Hudia was liable under the
subscription agreement or whether the law firm of “Jeremy Hudia Attorney at Law LLC”
was solely responsible for the delinquent payments.
{¶ 4} LexisNexis moved for summary judgment in October 2017. It presented
evidence that Hudia had executed the subscription agreement, that the account had fallen
in arrears, and that the amount owed was $4,544.38 plus interest and attorney fees. A
copy of the subscription agreement accompanied LexisNexis’ motion. The agreement
identified the subscriber as “Jeremy Hudia, Attorney at Law.” It was signed “Jeremy
Hudia.” A “customer information” page completed by Hudia identified the “organization
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name” as “Jeremy Hudia Attorney at Law.” He self-identified his organization by check-
marking a box labeled “law firm”. Although the instructions permitted him to mark all
applicable boxes, he did not mark boxes for “private corporation,” “sole proprietor,” or
“partnership/LLC.”
{¶ 5} On November 1, 2017, Hudia filed a combined response to LexisNexis’
motion and a summary judgment motion of his own. In support, he argued that the
subscription agreement was between LexisNexis and a limited-liability company identified
as “Jeremy Hudia, Attorney at Law.” He noted that the “customer information” page
identified his organization as a law firm. He also cited internal correspondence from
LexisNexis that called him a “solo LLP.”
{¶ 6} In its November 8, 2017 reply brief, LexisNexis presented evidence to
establish that Hudia did not incorporate his law practice as a limited-liability company until
February 2013. Therefore, LexisNexis argued that when the subscription agreement was
executed in July 2012, “Jeremy Hudia, Attorney at Law” was not, and could not have
been, an entity separate and distinct from Jeremy Hudia personally. That being so,
LexisNexis maintained that its July 2012 agreement was with Jeremy Hudia, who simply
was doing business as “Jeremy Hudia, Attorney at Law.” Accompanying LexisNexis’ reply
was a copy of the “Articles of Organization for a Domestic Limited Liability Company” that
Hudia had filed with the Ohio Secretary of State. LexisNexis also included a copy of a
certificate issued by the Ohio Secretary of State for “Jeremy Hudia Attorney at Law LLC.”
The certificate was signed on February 11, 2013. The actual Articles of Organization that
Hudia had submitted to the Secretary of State also were file-stamped February 11, 2013.
{¶ 7} Hudia sought and received permission to file a surreply to address
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LexisNexis’ argument about the date he incorporated his law practice. In his November
30, 2017 surreply, Hudia argued that the February 11, 2013 date on the certificate signed
by the Secretary of State did not represent the date that he had filed his Articles of
Organization. Hudia claimed that LexisNexis had failed to present any evidence
establishing when he had filed his Articles of Organization, which was the relevant date
for determining when his limited-liability company came into existence.
{¶ 8} More than three months after filing his surreply, Hudia filed a March 6, 2018
affidavit attempting to address his Articles of Organization. Therein, he asserted that, to
“the best of [his] recollection,” he had submitted the Articles to the Ohio Secretary of State
sometime “in the year 2012.” LexisNexis moved to strike the affidavit on the basis of
untimeliness and for other reasons.
{¶ 9} In an April 30, 2018 ruling, the trial court sustained LexisNexis’ motion to
strike Hudia’s affidavit on the basis of untimeliness. 1 The trial court also sustained
LexisNexis’ summary judgment motion and overruled Hudia’s competing motion. With
regard to Hudia’s personal liability under the subscription agreement, the trial court
reasoned:
* * * While the Subscription Agreement and Addendum were signed
by Hudia as “Jeremy Hudia Attorney at Law,” the Court finds that the
forgoing was not a distinct entity, but rather a name under which Hudia did
business as a sole proprietor. The evidence further shows that Hudia
breached the contract by failing to make monthly payments. Finally, the
1On appeal, Hudia has not challenged the trial court’s ruling on the motion to strike.
Therefore, we will not consider the contents of the affidavit.
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evidence shows damage to LexisNexis, in the amount of the sum of the
delinquent payments and the remaining payments, $4,544.38. Based on the
foregoing, the Court finds that LexisNexis has properly supported its Motion
for Summary Judgment, and the burden shifts to Hudia to show that there
is a genuine issue of material fact that precludes summary judgment for
LexisNexis or, alternatively, to show that there are no genuine issues of
material fact and that he is entitled to summary judgment.
In opposition to LexisNexis’ Motion for Summary Judgment, and in
support of his own motion, Hudia argues that the contract was not between
LexisNexis and himself, but rather between LexisNexis and Jeremy Hudia
Attorney at Law LLC. As an initial matter, the Court observes that neither
LexisNexis nor Hudia refers to Hudia as an LLC in the Subscription
Agreement and Addendum. Further, and more importantly, Jeremy Hudia
Attorney at Law LLC did not exist when Hudia signed the documents. R.C.
1705.04(A) provides that “[t]he legal existence of [a limited liability company]
begins upon the filing of the articles of organization or on a later date
specified in the articles of organization that is not more than ninety days
after the filing.” Here, the Secretary’s website represents that the “original
filing date” of the Articles of Organization was February 11, 2013 and the
copy of the Articles of Organization available on the website is file-stamped
February 11, 2013. Thus, even if the Court were to consider the self-serving
statements in the Hudia Affidavits, the fact would remain that the Articles of
Organization were filed with the Secretary on February 11, 2013—several
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months after Hudia signed the Subscription Agreement and Addendum.
Based on the foregoing, the Court finds that there are no genuine
issues of material fact and that LexisNexis is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law. * * *
(Emphases sic). (Doc. # 35 at 5-6).
{¶ 10} In his first assignment of error, Hudia contends the trial court erred in relying
on the Ohio Secretary of State’s website to conclude that his limited-liability company
came into existence on February 11, 2013. Rather than taking judicial notice of the
website, Hudia argues that the trial court should have confined itself to the parties’
summary judgment evidence, which included the Articles of Organization and the
corresponding certificate issued by the Ohio Secretary of State. In relevant part, he
asserts:
The lower court interpreted the state website as if it were saying the
actual date Hudia filed the documents was February 11, 2013. Although the
website can be interpreted that way, the actual certified forms are not
consistent with that interpretation of the website. The certified documents
show Hudia did not pay to have the filing expedited. If the lower court is
correct, and Hudia filed his documents on February 11, 2013, the state
would have reviewed, approved, and certified the documents the day they
were filed, even though they were not processed on an expedited basis.
The actual certified forms show there is a reasonable dispute
regarding whether the forms were filed on February 11th or whether that
was the date the Secretary of State reviewed and certified the forms.
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Because it was the trial court, and not LexisNexis, that cited the
website, Hudia had no opportunity in the lower court to argue whether the
website provides either a brief summary of filings or a specific and separate
finding of fact that Hudia filed documents on February 11, 2013.
Presumably, the website can only compile information from the formal,
certified documents, which do not provide a clear filing date. The information
on the website is subject to reasonable dispute, and the lower court erred
in taking judicial notice of facts from the website.
(Footnotes omitted) (Appellant’s brief at 8).
{¶ 11} Upon review, we find Hudia’s argument to be unpersuasive. He concedes
that the Secretary of State’s website “can be interpreted” as showing that he filed his
Articles of Organization on February 11, 2013. But no interpretation is required. The
website explicitly states that he filed his Articles of Incorporation on that date. See Ohio
Secretary of State, https://businesssearch.sos.state.oh.us/?=businessDetails/2173058
(accessed Oct. 2, 2018). We conclude that a party is entitled to an opportunity to be heard
as to the propriety of taking judicial notice, and the better practice would have been for
the trial court to notify the parties that it intended to take judicial notice from the website
before doing so. Evid. R. 201(E). Alternatively, perhaps Hudia should have disputed this
noticed fact in the trial court “after judicial notice has been taken” as also permitted by the
rule. Id. Nonetheless, assuming, purely arguendo, that the trial court should not have
consulted the Ohio Secretary of State’s website,2 in our de novo review we observe that
2 But see Stumpff v. Harris, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23354, 2010-Ohio-1241, *8 (“We
take judicial notice, however, that [the appellant’s business] remains listed as an active
corporation on the Ohio Secretary of State’s web site.”).
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the actual Articles of Organization accompanying LexisNexis’ summary judgment motion
establish the same thing. Those Articles, which Hudia had submitted to the Ohio
Secretary of State, bear a file-stamped date of “2013 FEB 11 PM 12:01.” In light of this
uncontroverted evidence, we disagree with Hudia’s claim that his certified forms are
inconsistent with the trial court’s interpretation of the website. The record contains no
evidence supporting a contrary conclusion or demonstrating a genuine issue of material
fact on the question. Hudia’s argument in the trial court that he submitted the Articles at
some ethereal date in 2012 creates no genuine issue about when the Articles were “filed.”
The “legal existence of the corporation begins upon the filing of the articles” unless a later
date is specified. R.C. 1701.04(D)
{¶ 12} Because the record contains uncontroverted evidence that Hudia’s Articles
of Organization were filed on February 11, 2013, the trial court correctly concluded as a
matter of law that “Jeremy Hudia Attorney at Law LLC” did not exist in July 2012 when
the parties entered into their subscription agreement. Therefore, the trial court correctly
concluded that when Hudia signed the agreement as “Jeremy Hudia” or “Jeremy Hudia,
Attorney at Law,” he was doing so in his individual capacity. The first assignment of error
is overruled.
{¶ 13} In his second assignment of error, Hudia contends the trial court erred in
failing to construe the documents certified by the Ohio Secretary of State in his favor when
ruling on LexisNexis’ summary judgment motion. In support, he merely repeats the issues
addressed above. He reasons that his Articles of Organization reasonably could not have
been filed with the Secretary of State on February 11, 2013 because they were certified
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by the Secretary of State that same day.
{¶ 14} Although Hudia finds it implausible that the Articles of Organization were
filed and certified on the same day without being expedited, the summary judgment
evidence establishes that such a scenario did occur. As set forth above, the Articles of
Organization bear a file-stamped date of “2013 FEB 11.” The corresponding certificate
issued by the Secretary of State bears the same date. Construing this uncontroverted
evidence in Hudia’s favor leads us to conclude that Hudia in fact did file his Articles of
Organization on February 11, 2013. It is not self-evident that the Articles could not have
been filed and certified on the same day, and the record contains no evidence
demonstrating a genuine issue of material fact with regard to the file-stamped date on the
Articles that Hudia filed with the Secretary of State. Therefore, we again see no error in
the trial court’s determination that “Jeremy Hudia Attorney at Law LLC” did not exist in
July 2012 when the parties entered into their subscription agreement. The second
assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 15} In his third assignment of error, Hudia contends the trial court erred in failing
to hold that he acted as a pre-incorporation promoter when he signed the subscription
agreement. Even if no limited-liability company existed when he signed the agreement,
Hudia claims the trial court should have found him no longer liable under the agreement
after the formation of “Jeremy Hudia Attorney at Law LLC.” In support, he reasons that
the agreement was only an agreement with the soon-to-be-formed limited-liability
company and not with him personally. That being so, he reasons that his potential liability
terminated after the company was formed and it adopted the agreement and began
performing thereunder.
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{¶ 16} Upon review, we note that Hudia never raised the foregoing argument in the
trial court. As set forth above, he insisted in opposition to summary judgment that the
original parties to the subscription agreement were LexisNexis and Jeremy Hudia
Attorney at Law LLC. He did not assert that he acted personally but that his liability under
the agreement was extinguished after his law firm incorporated. LexisNexis countered
Hudia’s opposition to summary judgment with evidence proving that the limited-liability
company did not exist when the subscription agreement was executed. In his surreply,
Hudia still did not profess to have been a pre-incorporation promoter whose liability was
extinguished after creation of the limited-liability company. Rather, he continued to insist
that the subscription agreement was between LexisNexis and Jeremy Hudia Attorney at
Law LLC. In fact, he conceded that LexisNexis would be entitled to summary judgment if
the trial court found that the subscription agreement was with him personally. (Doc. # 29
at 4). Because Hudia never asked the trial court to find that he acted individually only as
a corporate promotor whose liability later was extinguished, the trial court did not err in
failing to do so. Hudia has waived that issue on appeal by failing to raise it at any time
below. See Freedom Mtge. Corp. v. LeBlanc, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 25119, 2012-
Ohio-5100, ¶ 12 (declining to consider the appellant’s argument that a novation relieved
him of liability under a note where such an argument was “[c]ompletely absent from his
brief in opposition to summary judgment” in the trial court).
{¶ 17} In any event, Hudia’s argument also fails on the merits. “[A] corporation,
which is incapable of authorizing an agreement made on its behalf prior to its existence,
may nevertheless adopt the agreement after its incorporation. Adoption may be
manifested by the corporation’s receipt of the contract’s benefits with knowledge of its
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terms.” Illinois Controls, Inc. v. Langham, 70 Ohio St.3d 512, 522, 639 N.E.2d 771 (1994).
{¶ 18} But even where a corporation may be liable for the breach of an agreement
executed on its behalf by a pre-incorporation promoter, it does not follow that the promoter
necessarily is relieved of liability. “[T]he promoters of a corporation are at least initially
liable on any contracts they execute in furtherance of the corporate entity prior to its
formation.” Id. at 523. “Formation of the corporation following execution of the contract is
a prerequisite to any release of the promoters from liability arising from the pre-
incorporation agreement,” but formation of the corporation, alone, is not sufficient. Id.
“[W]here a corporation, with knowledge of the agreement’s terms, benefits from a pre-
incorporation agreement executed on its behalf by its promoters, the corporation and the
promoters are jointly and severally liable for breach of the agreement unless the
agreement provides that performance is solely the responsibility of the corporation or,
subsequent to the formation of the corporate entity, a novation is executed whereby the
corporation is substituted for the promoters as a party to the original agreement.” Id. at
525.
{¶ 19} Here the subscription agreement does not specify that performance
thereunder is solely the responsibility of “Jeremy Hudia Attorney at Law LLC.” The
agreement does not mention the then-non-existent company at all, and Hudia signed the
agreement simply as “Jeremy Hudia” or “Jeremy Hudia, Attorney at Law.” Nor does the
record contain any evidence of a novation in which the company agreed to assume
responsibility under the agreement and LexisNexis agreed to release Hudia from liability
thereunder. See Williams v. Ormsby, 131 Ohio St.3d 427, 2012-Ohio-690, 966 N.E.2d
255, ¶ 18 (recognizing that a novation requires evidence of a “clear and definite intent on
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the part of all the parties to the original contract to completely negate the original contract
and enter into the second”). For the foregoing reasons, we would reject Hudia’s argument
about acting as a corporate promoter even if it were properly before us. The third
assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 20} In his fourth assignment of error, Hudia contends the trial court erred in
overruling his summary judgment motion. Having determined above, however, that the
trial court properly entered summary judgment in favor of LexisNexis, we conclude that it
did not err in overruling Hudia’s competing motion. Accordingly, the fourth assignment of
error is overruled.
{¶ 21} The judgment of the Montgomery County Common Pleas Court is affirmed.
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FROELICH, J. and TUCKER, J., concur.
Copies mailed to:
Andrew C. Storar
Michael W. Sandner
Michelle T. Sundgaard
Jeremy Hudia
Hon. Steven K. Dankof