[Cite as Woods v. Marcano, 2018-Ohio-4324.]
Court of Appeals of Ohio
EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
Nos. 106710, 106711 and 106712
DOUG WOODS D.B.A. WHAT A LOVELY HOME
PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT
vs.
CIERA MARCANO, ET AL.
DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES
JUDGMENT:
REVERSED; REMANDED
Civil Appeal from the
Garfield Heights Municipal Court
Case Nos. CVG1702100, CVG1702342 and CVG1703011
BEFORE: E.A. Gallagher, A.J., E.T. Gallagher, J., and Jones, J.
RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: October 25, 2018
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
Jazmine R. Greer
4208 Prospect Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio 441143
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE MONIQUE WILLIS
Brian W. Sharkin
Law Office of Brian W. Sharkin
P.O. Box 770824
Lakewood, Ohio 44107
FOR APPELLEE CIERA MARCANO
Ciera Marcano, pro se
495 Janette Drive
Richmond Heights, Ohio 44143
FOR APPELLEE ANNETTE KELLOM
Annette Kellom, pro se
5250 Theodore Street
Maple Heights, Ohio 44137
EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, A.J.:
{¶1} This appeal involves three separate eviction actions plaintiff-appellant Doug Woods,
d.b.a. What a Lovely Home (“Woods”), filed in the Garfield Heights Municipal Court against
defendant-appellees Ciera Marcano (Appeal No. 106710), Annette Kellom (Appeal No. 106711)
and Monique Willis (Appeal No. 106712). In each case, the trial court dismissed Woods’ claims
for damages on the ground that Woods “was not the owner of the subject property” and the
property was “titled in a fictitious name.” For the reasons that follow, we reverse the trial court’s
judgment in each of these cases and remand the matters for further proceedings.
Factual and Procedural Background
{¶2} In July 2017, Woods, pro se, filed a forcible entry and detainer action (Garfield
Heights M.C. No. CVG1702100) to evict Willis from a house on Brunswick Avenue in Maple
Heights, Ohio (the “Brunswick Avenue property”) and to recover damages for “unauthorized
persons living at property,” “unauthorized change of locks,” “destruction of property” and
“non-payment of water bill” (the “Willis case”). In August 2017, Woods, pro se, filed a forcible
entry and detainer action (Garfield Heights M.C. No. CVG1702342) to evict Kellom from a house
on Theodore Street in Maple, Heights, Ohio (the “Theodore Street property”) and to recover
damages for “non-payment of utilities” and “destruction of property” (the “Kellom case”). In
each case, the parties reached an agreement regarding restitution of the premises and hearings
were set on Woods’ claims for damages.
{¶3} A hearing was scheduled in September 2017 in the Willis case. At the hearing,
Willis raised the issue of whether What A Lovely Home was a legal entity that could hold title to
real property and sue and be sued. Willis asserted that she had wanted to file a counterclaim but
could not do so because What A Lovely Home was a fictitious name. The magistrate continued
the hearing and ordered the parties to brief the issue.
{¶4} On September 22, 2017, Willis filed a motion to dismiss Woods’ damages claim on
the ground that What a Lovely Home was not a legal entity. Willis asserted that because What A
Lovely Home was a fictitious entity, the deed granting title to the Brunswick Avenue property to
What A Lovely Home was void.1 She further asserted that because Woods was not the “owner”
of the property and was “only the registrant of the name” What A Lovely Home, he lacked
standing to pursue a claim for damages.2
{¶5} Woods opposed the motion to dismiss. He argued that “a fictitious name is a legal
entity” that can hold title to real property and has standing to sue or be sued “as long as it is
registered properly with the Ohio Secretary of State.” He further asserted that he and What A
Lovely Home were one and the same, that he had properly reported his use of the fictitious name
What A Lovely Home to the Ohio Secretary of State, and that, both at the time the subject lease
was executed and the complaint was filed, the property was properly titled in the name of What A
Lovely Home as his “d.b.a.”3
{¶6} On September 25, 2017, hearings were held in the Willis and Kellom cases regarding
Woods’ damages claims and Willis’ motion to dismiss.
{¶7} On October 13, 2017, Woods filed a forcible entry and detainer action (Garfield
Heights M.C. No. CVG1703011) to evict Marcano from the Brunswick Avenue property and
recover damages for “unpaid rent plus any lease violations or damages” (the “Marcano case”).
As in the other cases, the parties reached an agreement regarding restitution of the premises and
the case was set for a hearing on Woods’ damages claim.
1
At that time, both the Brunswick Avenue property and the Theodore Street property were titled in the name of “What
A Lovely Home, a fictitious filing name registered in the state of Ohio by Doug Woods (single).”
2
In support of her motion, Willis attached copies of Doug Woods’ March 17, 2014 fictitious name filing for What A
Lovely Home, a quit claim deed dated February 24, 2016 from What A Lovely Home, L.L.C. to “What A Lovely
Home, a fictitious filing name registered in the state of Ohio by Doug Woods (single)” for the Brunswick Avenue
property and a printout of search results, property data and tax information relating to the Brunswick Avenue property
from the Cuyahoga County Auditor’s website.
3
In support of his opposition, Woods attached copies of the lease executed by Willis, his fictitious name filing for
What A Lovely Home, the quit claim deed from What A Lovely Home, L.L.C. to “What A Lovely Home, a fictitious
filing name registered in the state of Ohio by Doug Woods (single)” for the Brunswick Avenue property and search
{¶8} On October 31, 2017, the magistrate issued the following ruling in the Kellom case:
Issue: Can a registered fictitious name hold title to real estate the same being a non
entity? This magistrate rules that this is not an entity and as same has no corpus
or body. The name alone is not an entity as set forth by any statute creating a
corporation, LLC or partnership. Logically, if it does not exist it has no standing
to file suit using a dba. There being no entity as recognized by the statute or the
court it would require an attorney at law to bring an action on its behalf if one
would legally exist. Following this reasoning until further order of this court
“What a lovely home” is an improper party to bring an action and therefore the
second cause of action is dismissed in this case and others pending at plaintiff’s
cost.
{¶9} That same day, the magistrate issued an order in the Willis case stating that “[u]nder
the reasoning as set forth in CVG 17023470 [sic][,] plaintiff has no standing to sue and therefore
second cause of action is dismissed.” In the Willis and Kellom cases, Woods thereafter filed a
request for findings of fact and conclusions of law, a motion for a determination as to whether the
magistrate’s October 31, 2017 rulings should be considered findings of fact and conclusions of
law and objections to the magistrate’s October 31, 2017 rulings. He also filed a request to
supplement the record in each case with select documents from other case, “transcripts” from
4
hearings in the Willis and Kellom cases and a third case that is not part of this appeal and other
“evidence that may not have been available or allowed to be presented at the time of the subject
hearings.”5
results from the Cuyahoga County Auditor’s website listing What A Lovely Home as the “owner” of the property.
4
Doug Woods dba What a Lovely Home v. Broadway Care Center, et al. , Garfield Heights M.C. No. CVF 1701906
(the “Broadway Care Center case”).
5
This “evidence” included: (1) documentation related to the damages he sought to recover from Kellom; (2) an
affidavit from Jacqueline Whitmore, the statutory agent for and sole member of What A Lovely Home, L.L.C.,
regarding the distinction between What A Lovely Home, L.L.C. and the business operated by Doug Woods under the
fictitious name What A Lovely Home; (3) the leases executed by Willis and Kellom; (4) a magistrate’s decision and
judgment entry dated May 5, 2016 in the case Doug Woods dba What A Lovely Home v. Tawonia Hudson, Garfield
Heights M.C. No. CVG1600431, in which a money judgment was entered in favor of Woods; (5) a motion to
disqualify the magistrate filed in the Marcano case; (6) printouts of “frequently asked questions” and a list “filings in
progress” for Doug Woods from the Ohio Secretary of State’s website; (6) a “transcript” of a conversation between
Doug Woods and a representative of the Ohio Secretary of State’s office; (7) December 2015 correspondence from
{¶10} On November 29, 2017, the magistrate issued findings of fact and conclusions of
law in the Willis case. The magistrate found that What A Lovcly Home is a fictitious name Doug
Woods “registered” in the state of Ohio and that the Brunswick Avenue property was deeded to
“What A Lovely Home, a fictitious filing name registered in the state of Ohio by Doug Woods” in
February 2016. Based on these facts, the magistrate issued the following conclusions:
1. Plaintiff lacks standing to bring the current cause of action as Doug Woods is
not the owner of the premises in question. The premises are owned by “What a
Lovely Home.” While Plaintiff Doug Woods registered the fictitious name with
the state of Ohio, the deed is not made out to “Doug Woods, doing business as
What a Lovely Home,” but rather to “What a Lovely Home.”
2. What a Lovely Home lacks standing in this case as a fictitious entity cannot
hold title to real property in the state of Ohio. “A deed to a person not in being or
to a fictitious person is void.” Ohio Jur. 3d § 33, citing Transcontinental Ins. Co.
of New York v. Mining, 135 F.2d 479 (C.C.A. 6th Cir. 1943): Thomas v. City of
Columbus, 39 Ohio App. 3d 53, 528 N.E.2d 1274 (10th Dist.1987).
3. As Plaintiff — both as Doug Woods and as What a Lovely Home — lacks
standing in this case, Plaintiff’s second cause of action is dismissed. There is no
just reason for delay.
{¶11} At the December 5, 2017 hearing in the Willis case, the trial court agreed that
Woods lacked standing to bring to the action because title to the Brunswick Avenue property was
held in a fictitious name. The trial court then issued judgment entries overruling Woods’
objections in the Willis case and dismissing Woods’ damages claims in all three cases, concluding
that “Defendant [sic] is not the owner of the subject property” and that “[t]he property is titled in a
fictitious name.”
{¶12} Woods appealed, raising the following four assignments of error for review:
Woods to Whitmore regarding correction of the quit-claim deeds to reflect that the fictitious name is registered by
Doug Woods; (8) an affidavit by Doug Woods in which he attests that he is the owner and lessor of the properties at
issue and the registrant and user of the fictitious name “What A Lovely Home” and (9) a filing by Doug Woods, dated
November 9, 2017, reporting his use of the fictitious name “Doug Woods dba What A Lovely Home” with the Ohio
Secretary of State.
First Assignment of Error: The trial court’s ruling that appellant did not have
standing because he was not the owner of the subject property since the property
was titled to a fictitious name was erroneous, contrary to law, an abuse of
discretion and against the sufficiency and manifest weight of the evidence.
Second Assignment of Error: The trial court erred and abused its discretion by
failing to allow appellant to have standing upon both his registration with the state
and transfer of property ownership to “Doug Woods dba What a Lovely Home.”
Third Assignment of Error: The trial court erred and abused its discretion by failing
to allow appellant to have standing as the real party in interest.
Fourth Assignment of Error: The trial court erred by allowing appellees to use the
issue of standing as an affirmative defense since it was not previously raised in any
pleading.
Law and Analysis
{¶13} In his first assignment of error, Woods challenges the trial court’s dismissal of his
damages claims for lack of standing based on its determination that he was not the owner of the
properties and that the properties were improperly titled in a fictitious name. Whether a party has
standing to bring an action before the court presents a question of law, which we review de novo.
Moore v. Middletown, 133 Ohio St.3d 55, 2012-Ohio-3897, 975 N.E.2d 977, ¶ 20.
{¶14} Under R.C. 1329.01(A)(2), a “fictitious name“ is “a name used in business or trade
that is fictitious and that the user has not registered or is not entitled to register as a trade name.”
R.C. 1329.01(D) provides, in relevant part:
Any person who does business under a fictitious name and who has not registered
and does not wish to register the fictitious name as a trade name or who cannot do
so because the name is not available for registration shall report the use of the
fictitious name to the secretary of state, on a form prescribed by the secretary of
state, setting forth all of the following:
(1) The name and business address of the user * * *:
(2) The fictitious name being used;
(3) The general nature of the business conducted by the user.
R.C. 1329.10(B) further provides, in relevant part:
No person doing business under a trade name or fictitious name shall commence or
maintain an action in the trade name or fictitious name in any court in this state or
on account of any contracts made or transactions had in the trade name or fictitious
name until it has first complied with section 1329.01 of the Revised Code * * *,
but upon compliance, such an action may be commenced or maintained on any
contracts and transactions entered into prior to compliance.
See also Oldendick v. Crocker, 2016-Ohio-5621, 70 N.E.3d 1033, ¶ 64-67 (trial court did not err
in entering a judgment in favor of the landlords on their counterclaim and allowing them to set off
damages against the tenant’s security deposit where although landlord’s use of fictitious name had
not been reported to the secretary of state at the time they filed their counterclaim, the name was
registered prior to final judgment); Ebner v. Caudill, 93 Ohio App.3d 785, 639 N.E.2d 1231 (10th
Dist.1994) (where landlord entered into a lease using a fictitious name, landlord was prohibited
from bringing an action based on the lease until he reported use of the name under R.C. 1329.01).
{¶15} The relevant facts are not in dispute. The record reflects that “What A Lovely
Home” is a fictitious name used by Doug Woods and that Doug Woods reported his use of that
fictitious name to the Ohio Secretary of State in March 2014. The record further reflects that
“Doug Woods dba What A Lovely Home” was the “lessor” under the leases executed by Willis
and Kellom and that the Brunswick Avenue and Theodore Street properties were titled in the
name of “What A Lovely Home, a fictitious filing name registered in the state of Ohio by Doug
Woods (single)” at the time the eviction actions were filed by “Doug Woods dba What A Lovely
Home.”
{¶16} In this case, the trial court dismissed Woods’ claims for money damages because it
believed that title to real property could not be held in a fictitious name. However, as the Tenth
District explained in Thomas v. Columbus, 39 Ohio App.3d 53, 528 N.E.2d 1274 (10th
Dist.1987), there is a difference between a conveyance to a nonexistent or wholly fictitious
grantee and a conveyance to a person using or operating under an assumed or fictitious name:
[T]he sometimes stated “general rule” that a deed which names a fictitious person
as grantee is void is based on the physical nonexistence of any grantee. However,
care must always be taken to distinguish between a deed to a nonexistent being and
a deed to a person in existence who is described by an assumed, fictitious, trade, or
inaccurate name.
Id. at 1276-1277, citing 23 American Jurisprudence 2d, Deeds, Sections 28 and 38, at 95, 101
(1983). In Thomas, the plaintiff sued the city of Columbus, alleging that the city had improperly
demolished a building on a piece of real estate he owned. Thomas at 1275. After the plaintiff
purchased the property, title to the property was placed in the name “Kim-Lynn-Shawn, Inc.”
The articles of incorporation necessary to form a corporation named “Kim-Lynn-Shawn” were
prepared but never filed. Id. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the city,
concluding the plaintiff was not the owner of the property and that the corporation did not have
capacity to sue because its articles of incorporation were never filed. Id. On appeal, the Tenth
District held that it could not be ascertained from the record if Kim-Lynn-Shawn, Inc. was a
fictitious name or a trade name and that, if the plaintiff was the owner of the property under an
assumed name, he would have standing to sue. Id. at 1277. Because reasonable minds could
come to different conclusions regarding the issue, the court held that the trial court had erred in
granting summary judgment. Id.; see also 1 Ohio Real Property Law and Practice, Section
6.09[7] (2017) (“A deed is valid between the parties when from or to a person acting under an
assumed or fictitious name, but not to a completely fictitious person. * * * A conveyance to a
fictitious person is void. * * * There is a distinction, however, between conveying a deed to a
fictitious, nonexistent being and a person in existence who is described by a fictitious name.
Thus, a conveyance to a person doing business under a fictitious name is valid, but a conveyance
to a person not in being, or a fictitious entity is a nullity.”); 9 Thompson on Real Property, Section
82.08(a)(2), (Thomas Ed. 2018), fn. 221 (“A deed conveying land to a nonexistent or wholly
fictitious grantee is treated differently than a conveyance to a person or business operation or
using an ‘assumed name.’ In the former case, the deed is void * * * ; in the later case the
requirement of a having a ‘grantee’ has been met. * * * [T]he assumed name ‘is sufficient.’”),
quoting Roeckl v. F.D.I.C., 885 P.2d 1067 (Alaska 1994) (“transfers to grantees under assumed
names — as opposed to transfers to wholly fictitious or nonexistent entities — are not generally
barred”).
{¶17} What A Lovely Home is not a nonexistent, fictitious person; it is a properly
reported, fictitious name. As these authorities make clear, a person can enter into a contract, sue
and be sued and hold title to property under a properly reported fictitious name. Doing business
under another name does not create an entity distinct from the person operating the business.
See, e.g., Oldendick, 2016-Ohio-5621, 70 N.E.3d 1033, at ¶ 68, citing Patterson v. V & M Auto
Body, 63 Ohio St.3d 573, 574-575, 589 N.E.2d 1306 (1992); see also Herschell v. Rudolph, 11th
Dist. Lake No. 2001-L-069, 2002-Ohio-1688, ¶ 28 (“When ‘d.b.a.’ (doing business as) is used,
there is no legal distinction between the individual and the business entity since it is merely a
descriptive of the person who does business under some other name.”). The real person that uses
the fictitious name when entering into a contract is the actual party to the contract. Likewise, a
deed to a fictitious name is really a deed to the person operating under the fictitious name.
{¶18} The evidence demonstrates that Doug Woods reported his use of the fictitious name
What A Lovely Home to the Secretary of State before taking title to the properties at issue and
before filing the actions at issue in this case. As such, Doug Woods has the right to operate under
the fictitious name What A Lovely Home, to take title to property in that name and to sue to
enforce contracts entered in that name. See, e.g., Shafron Enterprises Defined Benefit Pension
Plan v. Midland Title Security, Inc., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 60922, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 3301,
3-4 (June 22, 1992) (rejecting claims of defendant title company that plaintiff pension plan lacked
standing to sue because used a fictitious name when it purchased the property at issue).
{¶19} Further, the fact that What A Lovely Home was a fictitious name and that Doug
Woods was the “real person” behind What A Lovely Home (and owner of the properties at issue)
was clear from the face of the deeds themselves. At the time the eviction actions were filed,
“What A Lovely Home, a fictitious filing name registered in the state of Ohio by Doug Woods
(single)” was the grantee on the deeds.6
{¶20} Accordingly, the trial court erred in dismissing Woods’ claims for damages.
Woods’ first assignment of error is sustained. Based on our resolution of Woods’ first
assignment of error, his remaining assignments of error are moot.
{¶21} Judgments reversed; cases remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is ordered that appellant recover from appellees the costs herein taxed.
The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
It is ordered that a special mandate be sent to Garfield Heights Municipal Court to carry
this judgment into execution.
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules
of Appellate Procedure.
6
On November 9, 2017, Doug Woods executed quit claim deeds transferring the subject properties from “What A
Lovely Home, a fictitious filing name registered in the state of Ohio by Doug Woods (single), the Grantor” to “Doug
Woods dba What A Lovely Home (single), the Grantee.” However, it appears that copies of these deeds were not
filed until after the trial court issued the judgment entries dismissing Woods’ damages claims. Therefore, they are
not considered by this court on appeal.
____________________________________________________
EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE
EILEEN T. GALLAGHER, J., and
LARRY A. JONES, SR., J., CONCUR