[Cite as McCormick v. Lu, 2019-Ohio-1074.]


                            IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

                                 TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT



Moses McCormick et al.,                         :

                Plaintiffs-Appellants,         :
                                                                No. 18AP-650
v.                                              :          (C.P.C. No. 17CV-3086)

Hsiu Chen Lu et al.,                            :     (ACCELERATED CALENDAR)

                Defendants-Appellees.          :



                                       D E C I S I O N

                                   Rendered on March 26, 2019


                On brief: Moses McCormick and Mark McCormick, pro se.

                On brief: Reminger Co., L.P.A., Patrick Kasson, and
                Jackie M. Jewell, for appellee Catherine White.

                  APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas
SADLER, J.
        {¶ 1} Plaintiffs-appellants, Moses McCormick ("Moses") and Mark McCormick,
appeal from the July 31, 2018 judgment entry of the Franklin County Court of Common
Pleas granting the motion for summary judgment filed by defendant-appellee Catherine
White. For the following reasons, we sua sponte dismiss this appeal.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
        {¶ 2} This appeal arises from divorce and custody proceedings between Moses and
defendant Hsiu Chen Lu. On June 16, 2017, appellants filed an amended complaint
asserting claims of abuse of process, intimidation, intentional infliction of emotional
distress, malicious prosecution, fraud and forgery, defamation, slander, negligence,
tampering with records, coercion, willful misconduct, obstructing justice, engaging in a
No. 18AP-650                                                                                                2


pattern of corrupt activity, civil conspiracy, fraud on the court, and obstructing official
business against 14 defendants including appellee and seeking in excess of $75 million in
compensatory damages and $25 million in punitive damages.
           {¶ 3} Appellee, who had been Moses's attorney in the underlying domestic case for
approximately eight days, filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings seeking dismissal
of all claims against her. On April 10, 2018, the trial court granted appellee's motion in part
and dismissed all claims against appellee except a legal malpractice claim. In doing so, the
trial court found, in pertinent part, appellants’ complaint did not contain sufficient factual
allegations of a predicate crime committed by appellee to support the obstructing official
business claim and that "[t]here are no allegations that [appellee] set in motion a legal
proceeding against [appellants]," a requirement of an abuse of process claim.1 (Apr. 10,
2018 Decision at 4.) Therefore, the trial court found those claims failed as a matter of law.
           {¶ 4} The trial court dismissed all defendants in the case except appellee, and, on
April 19, 2018, appellants filed an appeal of seven judgment entries or orders pertaining to
the other defendants. That appeal, which is separate from the appeal at hand, was assigned
case No. 18AP-284.
           {¶ 5} On June 6, 2016, appellee filed a motion for summary judgment on the
remaining legal malpractice claim, which the trial court granted on July 31, 2018.
Appellants filed a timely appeal of the July 31, 2018 judgment and waived oral argument.
           {¶ 6} On February 21, 2019, this court in McCormick v. Hsiu Chen Lu, 10th Dist.
No. 18AP-284, 2019-Ohio-624 ("McCormick I"), considered appellants' appeal involving
the other defendants. Reviewing appellants' brief, this court in McCormick I stated:
                   This Court has carefully reviewed the record of this matter and
                   the briefs submitted by the parties. The document that
                   purports to be the McCormicks' brief contains assignments of
                   error, but it does not contain any intelligible arguments
                   explaining or even pointing to how the trial court may have
                   erred. App.R. 16(A)(7). In short, the McCormicks' brief
                   consists of incoherent ramblings which this Court with
                   determination has tried to make sense of by combing
                   extensively through the record.             Additionally, the
                   McCormicks' filing is not formatted as required. App.R. 19(A);
                   Loc.R. 2(D) and 8(A)(1) of the Tenth District Court of Appeals.
                   The McCormicks' filing is not a brief in any operative sense of

1   Yaklevich v. Kemp, Schaeffer & Rowe Co., L.P.A., 68 Ohio St.3d 294 (1994), paragraph one of the syllabus.
No. 18AP-650                                                                                3


               the word and fails to comply substantially with the rules of this
               Court or the Ohio Rules of Civil or Appellate Procedure.
Id. at ¶ 19.
        {¶ 7} Therefore, this court in McCormick I sua sponte dismissed the appeal under
App.R. 18(C), since appellants "failed to file a brief even substantially in conformity with
the Ohio Rules of Appellate Procedure, and after a determined effort we cannot divine from
it any intelligible arguments we can address regarding the trial court's various decisions."
Id. at ¶ 20.
II. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
        {¶ 8} Appellants assign the following as trial court error:
               [1.] The trial Court Erred when it failed to take proper inquiry
               into the Abuse of Process Claim Set forth by Appellants in
               their Complaint.

               [2.] The trial Court Erred when it failed to acknowledge this
               cause of action set forth by Appellants in their Complaint.

               [3.] The Trial Court Erred When it failed to provide Appellants
               a Pre-Trial, There are [sic] no Pre-Trial hearing that took place
               on the record and Appellants were not afforded a chance to
               participate in a Pre-Trial hearing.
(Emphasis sic.)
III. DISCUSSION
        {¶ 9} In the instant appeal, appellants filed the same brief, with only the numbering
corrected and the judgment appealed updated, that we determined in McCormick I to be
unintelligible and in violation of multiple rules of procedure to the point sua sponte
dismissal under App.R. 18(C) was justified.
        {¶ 10} The same result is warranted in the present appeal. "[I]t is well-established
that pro se litigants are held to the same rules, procedures, and standards as litigants
represented by counsel." Goodrich v. Ohio Unemp. Comp. Rev. Comm., 10th Dist. No.
11AP-473, 2012-Ohio-467, ¶ 25. Pursuant to App.R. 16(A)(7), "[t]he appellant shall include
in its brief, under the headings and in the order indicated, all the following: * * * (7) [a]n
argument containing the contentions of the appellant with respect to each assignment of
error presented for review and the reasons in support of the contentions, with citations to
the authorities, statutes, and parts of the record on which appellant relies." It is not the
No. 18AP-650                                                                                 4


duty of an appellate court to create an argument on an appellant's behalf. McKahan v. CSX
Transp., Inc., 10th Dist. No. 09AP-376, 2009-Ohio-5359, ¶ 10; Pearn v. Daimler Chrysler
Corp., 148 Ohio App.3d 228, 237-38, 2002-Ohio-3197 (9th Dist.); State v. Smith, 9th Dist.
No. 15AP0001n, 2017-Ohio-359, ¶ 22.
           {¶ 11} Reviewing appellants' brief, we are unable to discern what appellants wish us
to review in relation to appellee and the judgment appealed here. We note the first two
assignments of error concern claims (abuse of process and obstructing official business)
that the trial court clearly did "inquir[e]" into and "acknowledge" by finding essential
elements of those claims wholly lacking in reference to appellee, and appellants give no
indication of what error the trial court may have committed in doing so. (Appellants' Brief
at 13.) The third assignment of error is equally devoid of information which would allow us
to determine what appellants' assignment of error is referring to in relation to the trial
court's judgment in favor of appellee.2 Furthermore, we agree with the assessment in
McCormick I that appellants' brief violates our local rules and rules of appellate procedure.
Therefore, consistent with McCormick I, we sua sponte dismiss this appeal.
IV. CONCLUSION
           {¶ 12} Having determined appellants failed to file a brief in conformity with the
Ohio Rules of Appellate Procedure and failed to present intelligible arguments we can
address regarding the trial court's decision, we sua sponte dismiss this appeal. App.R.
18(C).
                                                                            Appeal dismissed.
                                   BROWN and DORRIAN, JJ., concur.
                                           _____________




2   See also McCormick I at ¶ 19, fn. 2.
