Court Opinion

ID: 9392128
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-05-04 14:07:43.379182+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:17.650279
License: Public Domain

[Cite as Smith & Condeni, L.L.P. v. Condeni, 2023-Ohio-1480.]

                              COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

                             EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

SMITH AND CONDENI, LLP, ET AL,                        :

                Plaintiffs-Appellants,                :
                                                                No. 111903
                v.                                    :

JOSEPH A. CONDENI, ET AL.,                            :

                Defendants-Appellees.                 :

                               JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

                JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED AND REMANDED
                RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: May 4, 2023

            Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
                                Case No. CV-17-889339

                                           Appearances:

                Cavitch, Familio & Durkin Co., LPA, Max E. Dehn, and
                Madelyn M. Maruna, for appellants.

                Dunson Law, LLC, and Joseph P. Dunson, for appellees.

SEAN C. GALLAGHER, J.:

                  N. Lindsey Smith, and Smith and Condeni, LLP (“S&C”), appeal the

trial court’s interlocutory decision declaring Smith to have been dissociated from

S&C as late as December 29, 2014, before their claims for relief against Joseph
Condeni are alleged to have arisen. For the following reasons, the decision of the

trial court is affirmed.

               In light of the interlocutory nature of this appeal, the recitation of the

facts is limited to those necessary to resolving the limited issue presented for review.

Although the amended complaint and counterclaim contain several allegations

pertaining to damages caused by the other’s alleged misconduct, the trial court

bifurcated the trial proceeding. The first part involved a hearing on the dissociation

claims advanced by Smith and Condeni that would determine which of the two was

authorized to act on behalf of S&C, potentially impacting Smith’s ability to include

S&C as a co-plaintiff. That is to be followed by the resolution of the claims stemming

from the various tort and contract claims advanced by Smith and Condeni, some of

which were claims on behalf of S&C. Neither of the parties challenge the trial court’s

decision to bifurcate the proceeding in this manner.

               Smith and Condeni each owned a 50 percent share of S&C until a

dispute arose in 2014 regarding Smith’s desire to withdraw from the partnership

and move his part of the practice to another law firm. During the harmonious years

of S&C’s operations, Smith focused his practice of law on estate planning, while

Condeni focused on personal injury litigation. S&C employed several associates and

support staff and leased the building within which it operated from a separate entity

owned and managed, in pertinent part, by Smith and Condeni. As part of Smith’s

estate planning practice, S&C registered a trade name, Trustee Administration
Services (“TAS”), with the Ohio Secretary of State. TAS was established by S&C to

handle insurance trust matters for Smith’s estate-planning clients.

              In 2014 the partners started discussing Smith’s desired departure

from S&C. On December 29, 2014, Smith provided Condeni a memorandum

detailing the proposed move and, shortly thereafter, began transitioning clients and

some of S&C’s staff to Cavitch, Familo & Durkin Co., L.P.A. (“Cavitch”).

Unbeknownst to Condeni, Smith had already shared S&C’s privileged and

confidential information with Cavitch as early as October 29, 2014, providing

Cavitch with personal information of S&C employees, including salary information

for S&C employees Cavitch anticipated hiring and projected and past revenues for

the entire S&C estate planning practice. Smith provided that information from a

personal email account not associated with S&C and in purported violation of Article

18 of the S&C Partnership Agreement. Under Section 18.2(iii), a duty of loyalty to

S&C is created requiring the partners to “refrain from competing with the

Partnership in the conduct of Partnership business before the dissolution of the

Partnership” and under Section 18.8, all partners must maintain “all business

information” in confidence, which survives any partner’s dissociation. (Emphasis

added.) At the time Smith began providing confidential and privileged information

to S&C’s competitor, Cavitch, there were no attempts to dissolve S&C to permit the

disclosure.

              In early 2015, Smith departed S&C, taking its various partnership

assets and some of its staff with him. This included Smith’s unilaterally transferring
the TAS trade name from S&C to himself in August 2016, well over a year after Smith

moved his practice from S&C to Cavitch. Smith used S&C employees to facilitate the

migration while those employees worked for and were paid by S&C.

               After Smith transitioned to Cavitch, S&C remained liable for the rent

and office expense obligations based on the inability to sell the building or relet the

office space. Both partners used the office space in some capacity following Smith’s

departure with Cavitch paying for half the space for a 12-month period. After several

years, the dispute between the former partners boiled over and Smith and S&C

initiated the underlying action claiming that Condeni secretly retained S&C fees to

fund Condeni’s new law firm after Smith left S&C. According to Smith, this formed

the basis for him to seek to expel Condeni from S&C, a claim that was included in

the amended complaint along with a request for an accounting from S&C.

               Condeni answered, asserting claims that Smith withdrew from S&C

according to the provision of the S&C Partnership Agreement and Ohio law no later

than March 2015 when Smith joined Cavitch, meaning Smith lacked standing to

prosecute claims on behalf of S&C.

               A large part of their dispute arises from a fundamental

misunderstanding of partnership law that infected the partners’ divorce.

               In forming their partnership, Smith and Condeni availed themselves

of the benefits of operating under a limited liability partnership, thereby creating

S&C through execution of the S&C Partnership Agreement. As a result, that

agreement and the Revised Uniform Partnership Act (“RUPA”), the statutory
section controlling the formation, management, and dissolution of partnerships,

provides the framework to effectuate a partner’s decision to leave the partnership.

Thus, in taking advantage of the limited liability partnership protections, Smith and

Condeni ceded their ability to unilaterally act outside of the terms of the partnership

agreement and Ohio law. If either desired to leave the partnership, more was

necessary than simply taking each partner’s clients and divvying up the

partnership’s property or assets. Despite the limitations placed on limited liability

partnerships, Smith left S&C in 2015, taking business and unilaterally taking assets

from the partnership without any attempt to formally dissolve the separate entity,

which is a prerequisite to what Smith desired to accomplish — a divorce from S&C

and a winding up of its affairs.

               Along those lines, the trial court aptly observed that although the law

with respect to RUPA is not well developed in Ohio, especially in terms of lawyers

forming partnerships in the practice of law, the current case stands as the

“cautionary tale of what not to do” when the partners’ relationship has run its course.

               Important to this discussion is the fact that the Uniform Partnership

Act (“UPA”) was replaced and dramatically altered in 2008.1 By adopting RUPA,

the legislature changed the law governing partnership breakups and dissolution.

“An entirely new concept, ‘dissociation,’ is used in lieu of the [UPA] term

‘dissolution’ to denote the change in the relationship caused by a partner’s ceasing

      1 Although the S&C Partnership Agreement was executed in May 2007, R.C.
Chapter 1776 applies to all partnerships after January 1, 2010. R.C. 1776.95(B).
to be associated in the carrying on of the business.” Official Commentary R.C.

1776.51. Although the term “dissolution” was retained, it took on a different

meaning, which was that of acts necessary to the termination of the separate entity

consisting of the partnership. Id.

              “Dissociation,” on the other hand, contemplates the withdrawal or

expulsion of a partner from the partnership, which leaves the partnership itself

intact.   Under RUPA, even if a partner withdraws or is expelled from the

partnership, the entity survives that partner’s departure. The partnership is an

entity separate and apart from the partners’ individual interests under R.C.

1776.21(A).   RUPA, thus, formally adopted the “entity theory of partnership,”

providing “a conceptual basis for continuing the firm itself despite a partner’s

withdrawal from the firm.” Id. Before RUPA, Ohio followed the “aggregate theory

of partnership,” in which the partnership was deemed to be an association of the

individual partners; the withdrawal of any one partner impacted the entity’s very

existence. Arpadi v. First MSP Corp., 68 Ohio St.3d 453, 628 N.E.2d 1335 (1994),

paragraph one of the syllabus (“[a] partnership is an aggregate of individuals and

does not constitute a separate legal entity,” construing former R.C. 1775.05(A));

Fairway Dev. Co. v. Title Ins. Co., 621 F.Supp. 120, 122 (N.D.Ohio 1985), citing

Commr. v. Shapiro, 125 F.2d 532, 535 (6th Cir. 1942) (“It is a fundamental principle

of law that any change in the personnel of a partnership will result in its

dissolution.”); but see R.C. 1775.05(A) repealed effective January 1, 2010 (amended

to define “partnership” as an “entity” of two or more persons in response to Arpadi).
               Thus, Smith’s actions in leaving the partnership through providing

notice to Condeni are best described as a withdrawal or dissociation from S&C, a

move that limits Smith’s ability to direct the affairs of S&C, including the dissolution

of the partnership or the handling of the entity’s assets. Dissociation of a partner

does not dissolve the partnership or its ownership of the partnership assets.

               Generally speaking, partnerships are governed according to the

partnership agreements under which the entity is formed. Thus, it has been

recognized under Ohio law that the default statutory rules governing partnerships

may be amended through the partnership agreements to a certain extent. Under

R.C. 1776.03(B)(7), for example, the partners may not “[v]ary the right of a tribunal

to expel a partner following any events specified in” R.C. 1776.51(E). “Tribunal” is a

statutorily defined term of art. “Tribunal” is a court, or if expressly provided in the

partnership agreement or otherwise agreed, an arbitrator, arbitration panel, or

other tribunal. R.C. 1776.01(W).2

               This background formed the foundation of the trial court’s findings of

fact and conclusions of law. According to the trial court, the S&C Partnership

Agreement and RUPA exclusively controlled the dissociation of either partner or the

dissolution of the partnership. Neither party disputes this, but the implications of

      2  Interestingly enough, the S&C Partnership Agreement, Section 23.11, includes a
mandatory arbitration provision to settle any dispute arising as between partners that
neither Smith nor Condeni invoked during any of the disputes that arose following
Smith’s notice of intent to withdraw from S&C.
the S&C Partnership Agreement impact the allegations within the amended

complaint.

               The S&C Partnership Agreement defines “Dissociated Partner” to

mean “the partner whose withdrawal, expulsion or other event (other than death or

permanent disability resulting in the appointment of a legal representative) causes

his or her Dissociation.” “Withdrawal,” as the procedure is outlined within the

agreement, is established under Section 15.2. Under that section, a partner may

withdraw from the partnership upon written notice being delivered to the remaining

managing partners. The withdrawing partner “shall cease to be a partner and shall

be dissociated from [S&C] upon delivery of the notice of withdrawal.” Consistent

with that provision, the “Dissociation Date” is defined to “mean, in the case of any

dissociated Partner, the date of the event resulting in the Partner’s Dissociation.”

(Emphasis added.) The trial court found it important that the “Dissociation Date”

was exclusively defined as the “date of the event” rather than the date on which the

tribunal resolves the issue. Smith does not dispute that his memorandum delivered

to Condeni in December 2014 constituted a notice of withdrawal.

               Under Section 15.1, the dissociation of a partner “shall neither result

in the dissolution of the Partnership nor require the winding up of the Partnership

business, and the rights of the Dissociated partner and remaining Partners shall be

determined under this Partnership Agreement.” (Emphasis added.) Id. Those

rights are limited, however, to receiving an amount to be periodically paid over a six-

month period, starting on the first anniversary of the dissociation. Under Sections
16.2 and 16.3, dissociated partners, other than those who became permanently

disabled, retired, or have died, are entitled to 70 percent of the dissociation amount,

less any other amounts owed to the partnership. According to the express terms of

their agreement, Sections 16.5 and 16.6, no dissociated partner has any interest in

the accounts receivable, rights to any collection of cash amounts, or any other asset

of S&C, and the dissociated partner ceases to have any rights and duties under the

S&C Partnership Agreement as of their dissociation date.

               Based on the S&C Partnership Agreement, Condeni claims that Smith

dissociated from S&C between October 29, 2014, and February 28, 2015, with those

dates reflecting the bookends of when Smith first violated the terms of the S&C

Partnership Agreement by divulging S&C’s privileged and confidential information

to Cavitch from a private email address and the date in which Smith physically

migrated to Cavitch. Any dissociation impacts Smith’s ability to act on behalf of

S&C, seek an accounting from S&C, or claim damages from alleged breaches of the

S&C Partnership Agreement. Smith, however, claims that Condeni’s conduct and

actions following Smith’s departure formed the bases for Smith to seek to expel

Condeni from S&C and seek damages based on Condeni’s conduct with respect to

S&C receivables.

               It is important to distinguish “withdrawal” from “expulsion.” Under

the terms of the S&C Partnership Agreement, Condeni did not invoke Section 15.2,

setting forth the terms for the withdrawal of a partner, to withdraw from S&C in

December 2015. Thus, Smith’s claims as to Condeni’s alleged dissociation stem
from the expulsion clause of the agreement. Under Section 15.3, S&C may expel a

partner upon consent of two-thirds of the partners. As the trial court observed, if

Smith dissociated from S&C before seeking to expel Condeni from S&C, Smith would

lack authority to advance the statutory cause of action under R.C. 1776.51(E).

               It is that issue the trial court resolved, concluding that Smith

dissociated from S&C on two different dates, effective either as of the date he sent

the memorandum to Condeni outlining his plans to leave the partnership in

December 2014 or upon Condeni’s claim to expel Smith effective when he violated

the confidentiality of S&C by providing the Cavitch partnership information from

Smith’s private email account in October 2014. Regardless of which date controlled,

both predated Smith’s advancing a claim under R.C. 1776.51(E) to expel Condeni

based on conduct occurring after Smith departed S&C.

               According to the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law,

neither party has ever sought dissolution of S&C under RUPA or the S&C

Partnership Agreement.3 This impacts much of this case since under RUPA and the

express terms of the S&C Partnership Agreement, the partnership exists as an entity

separate and independent of the individual partners themselves. That is the price

to be had for forming a limited liability partnership.

       3  Section 22.1 of “the S&C Partnership Agreement provides for dissolution upon
‘(a) [t]he written consent of All of the Partners; (b) [t]he sale, transfer or assignment of
all or substantially all of the assets of the Partnership; (c) the adjudication of the
Partnership as insolvent * * *; or (d) [a]s otherwise required by the Act.’” The Agreement
further provides that “[i]n the event of dissolution of the Partnership for any reason, the
Managing Partners shall proceed promptly to wind up the affairs of and liquidate the
assets of the Partnership and shall without delay file a statement of dissolution.”
                As a result of the foregoing, the question of when or if Smith withdrew

or otherwise dissociated from S&C is the preliminary question that must be

answered before any of the remaining claims between Smith, Condeni, and S&C can

be addressed.      The amended complaint includes S&C as a named plaintiff,

represented by Smith and his counsel of record, which also precluded Condeni from

naming S&C as a third party on the counterclaims. However, if Smith effectively

dissociated from S&C prior to the filing of the underlying action, he lacked authority

to act on behalf of S&C, placing him in an adversarial position to the partnership

itself. The trial court agreed with Condeni in that Smith dissociated from S&C

effective as early as October 29, 2014, but definitively when Smith sent his December

2014 memorandum to Condeni, which contained the notice of his intent to withdraw

from S&C to join Cavitch.

                Accordingly, the trial court concluded that

       Smith used S&C resources and confidential information to facilitate
       and finance his move to Cavitch, and took substantial physical and
       intangible assets out of the Partnership after he withdrew from S&C.
       Further, Mr. Smith did this without the permission or agreement of,
       or compensation to, his partner or the Partnership.

And finally, the court found that Condeni has never withdrawn from S&C, making

him the only partner with authority to bind the partnership.

                It is this conclusion that Smith and S&C challenge in this appeal.4

       4 Smith and S&C filed this interlocutory appeal from an order certified under Civ.R.

54(B), claiming that the trial court’s decision “affects a substantial right of S&C and Smith,
determines the action, prevents a judgment in Plaintiffs’ favor, and was made in a special
proceeding created by statute.” Condeni does not oppose this conclusion. The trial court’s
               In the first assignment of error, Smith, who also presents the same

arguments on behalf of S&C, claims the trial court erred by determining the

dissociation date upon a hearing conducted before the trial court without a jury.

According to Smith, R.C. 1776.51(E), establishing a court’s authority to determine

whether to expel a partner from a limited liability partnership based on the statutory

criteria, creates a right to a jury trial on the dissociation issue. Absent that right to

a jury trial, as Smith claims, the trial court’s conclusion to resolve the issue upon

conducting     an   evidentiary    hearing    otherwise     rendered    R.C.    1776.51(E)

unconstitutional. Smith does not elaborate on the constitutional question beyond

referencing his stated belief. That unsupported belief is not sufficient to warrant any

further discussion. See App.R. 16(A)(7).

               Under R.C. 1776.51 in general, the legislature has provided a list of

events leading to a partner’s dissociation from the partnership. Two of particular

importance are “[t]he happening of an event agreed to in the partnership agreement

conclusion, that Smith dissociated from S&C no later than December 2014, effectively
disposes of all claims advanced by S&C in the amended complaint and divests Smith of
authority to act on behalf of S&C for the purposes of further litigation or advancing breach
of contract claims based on the S&C Partnership Agreement. The decision, therefore,
affects a substantial right made in a special proceeding under R.C. 2505.02(B)(2). “A
‘special proceeding’ is one ‘that is specially created by statute and that prior to 1853 was
not denoted as an action at law or a suit in equity.’” State ex rel. O’Malley v. Russo, 156
Ohio St.3d 548, 2019-Ohio-1698, 130 N.E.3d 256, ¶ 21, quoting R.C. 2505.02(A)(2). In
this case, Smith sought to expel Condeni under R.C. 1776.51(E); however, the trial court
determined that Smith withdrew or otherwise dissociated from S&C before seeking to
expel Condeni under the statutory proceeding. Further, in light of the fact that neither
party claimed this court lacked jurisdiction over the interlocutory order, the merits of the
arguments presented will be addressed in full.
as causing the partner’s dissociation,” R.C. 1776.51(B), or upon “application by the

partnership or another partner, a tribunal determines any of the following is cause

for expulsion” (Emphasis added.), R.C. 1776.51(E).        For the purposes of the

expulsion provision of R.C. 1776.51(E), so says Smith, “tribunal” can include a jury

based on the common definitions of “tribunal” from various dictionaries.

              “[T]ribunal” is a statutory term of art under Ohio’s version of RUPA.

“Tribunal” is defined as “a court,” or if expressly provided in the partnership

agreement, an “arbitrator, arbitration panel, or other tribunal.” R.C. 1776.01(W). In

this matter, the S&C Partnership Agreement includes an arbitration provision. It is

undisputed that neither party invoked the mandatory arbitration provision to

resolve their disputes. Thus, the sole question is whether “a court’s” authority to

consider and resolve the expulsion issue includes a petitioner’s right to a jury in

prosecuting the statutory proceeding.

              Smith’s reliance on dictionaries to define the statutory term of art is

misplaced. “Where a statute defines terms used therein, such definition controls in

the application of the statute * * *.” Stewart v. Vivian, 151 Ohio St.3d 574, 2017-

Ohio-7526, 91 N.E.3d 716, ¶ 25, quoting Good Samaritan Hosp. of Dayton v.

Porterfield, 29 Ohio St.2d 25, 29, 278 N.E.2d 26 (1972), Terteling Bros., Inc. v.

Glander, 151 Ohio St. 236, 85 N.E.2d 379 (1949), and Woman’s Internatl. Bowling

Congress, Inc. v. Porterfield, 25 Ohio St.2d 271, 267 N.E.2d 781 (1971). Smith claims

that his seeking to expel Condeni from S&C under R.C. 1776.51(E) is nothing more

than a breach of contract claim since the basis of the expulsion would be violations
of the S&C Partnership Agreement. This argument misses the point. Regardless of

how the process is characterized, the legislature has empowered “a court” to expel a

partner under R.C. 1776.51(E). The official commentary for 1776.51(E) refers to this

process as being “judicial expulsion,” a reference to the trial court’s authority to

render a decision without a jury’s findings.

              The legislature is aware of the difference between empowering “a

court” to decide any given issue and a right to a “jury trial” or the right to a

determination by “the trier of fact,” which could be either the court or the jury. The

Ohio Revised Code is replete with instances demonstrating the difference between

“a court” and “a jury.” For example, R.C. 2311.04 establishes that issues of law are

tried by a “court” while issues of fact must be resolved through a “jury trial.”

Likewise, R.C. 2506.04 empowers “a court” to find that an administrative decision

is unconstitutional, illegal, arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, or unsupported by

the preponderance of the evidence, but nothing thereunder entitles an applicant to

a trial by jury before the court renders that decision. Id. It is axiomatic that R.C.

2506.04 does not create a right to a jury.

              In those instances, the legislature has not intended for references to

“a court” being empowered to decide an issue to include a right to a jury. See, e.g.,

Hoops v. United Tel. Co., 50 Ohio St.3d 97, 99, 553 N.E.2d 252 (1990) (concluding

that the “requirement in R.C. 1701.85 (B) that ‘[t]he court shall thereupon make a

finding as to the fair cash value of a share’ dispenses with the requirement of a jury

trial in such special statutory proceeding” (Emphasis added.)). To generally impute
a jury requirement into a statutory proceeding that unambiguously requires “a

court” to render a decision on an issue would impact other sections of the Revised

Code.

               Based on the arguments presented, it cannot be concluded that R.C.

1776.51(E) establishes or preserves any right to a jury trial in order for a partner or

the partnership to seek the expulsion of a partner.          Under the unambiguous

language of R.C. 1776.51(E), “a court” is empowered to determine whether the

statutory cause for expulsion exists, and as that term is used throughout the Revised

Code, it dispenses with the requirement to empanel a jury. Smith has not presented

any argument to deviate from the standard interpretation of the term “a court” as

used under R.C. 1776.01(W) and throughout the Ohio Revised Code. Standard

dictionary definitions, as exclusively relied on by Smith, cannot supplant statutory

definitions. The first assignment of error is overruled.

               In the remaining assignments of error, Smith challenges several of the

trial court’s findings of fact, only one of which is related to the conclusion that Smith

dissociated from S&C effective as of December 29, 2014, at the latest based on his

notice of intended withdrawal. Smith also claims that the trial court erred by

expelling Smith based on his violations of the S&C Partnership Agreement,

including the disclosure of confidential partnership information or the wrongful

removal of S&C’s assets after dissociating himself from the partnership; that the trial

court erred in declaring him to have dissociated between October and December

2014 because S&C employees participated in the transfer of Smith’s business to
Cavitch; and the trial court erred in overruling his attempt to expel Condeni after

Smith had withdrawn from S&C. Because the date of Smith’s dissociation impacts

the remaining assignments of error, it must be addressed first.

              “Withdrawal” of a partner is established under Section 15.2 of the S&C

Partnership Agreement. Under that section, a partner may withdraw from the

partnership upon written notice being delivered to the remaining managing

partners. The withdrawing partner “shall cease to be a partner and shall be

dissociated from [S&C] upon delivery of the notice of withdrawal.” Consistent with

that provision, the “Dissociation Date” is defined to “mean, in the case of any

dissociated Partner, the date of the event resulting in the Partner’s Dissociation.”

The trial court determined that Smith’s December 29, 2014 memorandum to

Condeni constituted the notice of withdrawal as contemplated under the terms of

the partnership agreement.

              Smith’s argument on this issue is limited to the general notion that

the result of the trial court’s application of the unambiguous contractual language

means that all lawyers are precluded from changing law firms. Importantly, Smith

does not dispute the facts of his divulging S&C’s information to Cavitch before

seeking to dissolve S&C or that his later memorandum noticed his intended

withdrawal from S&C. His only arguments pertain to the application of the law to

those undisputed facts. Smith’s slippery-slope fear is unwarranted.

              In this case, and under the express terms of the S&C Partnership

Agreement, any partner, including the lawyers, could voluntarily withdraw from the
partnership at any time and for any reason. Nothing impeded Smith’s departure. If

S&C had several partners like larger firms, there is little doubt that Smith’s

departure would not have entitled him to S&C’s assets instead of just permitting his

migration to a new firm with the option for his clients to follow or stay with the

attorney’s former firm. Being allowed to leave does not entitle a lawyer to disregard

the organization’s founding partnership agreement. Thus, Smith’s entire argument

on the December 2014 dissociation date is misplaced.

              Further, the S&C Partnership Agreement expressly provided a

mechanism to seek dissolution of the partnership to enable the partners’ divorce

should a partner’s dissociation be inadequate to effectuate the desired outcome. The

driving factor of this case arose from Smith’s and, for that matter, Condeni’s failure

to adhere to the terms of S&C’s operating agreement. By submitting the withdrawal

notice instead of seeking dissolution, Smith immediately ceased to be a partner at

S&C. Smith does not present any serious argument contesting the trial court’s

determination on that point. According to the express terms of the S&C Partnership

Agreement, he ceased to be a partner and no longer had authority to act on behalf of

S&C on December 29, 2014, at the latest. This conclusion resolves the remainder of

Smith’s assignments of error.

              The remaining assignments of error address Smith’s and Condeni’s

conduct after Smith’s dissociation, such as Smith’s unilaterally removing S&C assets

without any partnership authority or pertaining to Smith’s attempt to expel Condeni

from S&C based on Condeni’s alleged misconduct after Smith’s departure to Cavitch.
However, after December 29, 2014, Smith ceased being a partner at S&C, and

therefore, under the unambiguous terms of R.C. 1776.51(E), he no longer could seek

Condeni’s expulsion or hire legal counsel to pursue a claim on behalf of S&C to those

ends. Under that provision of the Revised Code, only a “partner or the partnership”

may file a petition to have a court expel another partner. Smith was no longer a

partner of S&C, and therefore, he could not file a petition to seek Condeni’s

expulsion or bind S&C by authorizing outside counsel to represent the partnership

itself.

               Further, any alleged error with respect to the trial court’s

characterization of the parties’ conduct following Smith’s dissociation from S&C

effective as late as December 29, 2014, is not ripe for review in this interlocutory

appeal solely focused on the determination of Smith’s dissociation date that

determines who can act on behalf of S&C. The trial court is free to reconsider any

factual conclusions not relevant to that limited determination upon remand since

the final appealable order in this case was limited to the dissociation claim. For this

reason, the remaining assignments of error challenging the findings of facts relevant

to the parties’ conduct are overruled.

               It must be emphasized that the foregoing conclusion does not

preclude or arbitrarily hinder an attorney’s ability to practice law wherever they

desire, regardless of Smith’s attempt to emphatically claim otherwise. If anything,

the facts of this case demonstrate the need to take the appropriate measures to

effectuate any departure from a limited liability partnership, which in this case
would have been to seek the dissolution of S&C so that the partners could wind up

the partnership’s affairs and divide its assets. Neither Smith nor Condeni took any

steps to dissolve S&C, the continued existence of which appears to be based on their

individual shared interest in owning the building leased to S&C. Had Smith taken

steps to dissolve S&C at the time he sought to join Cavitch, the parties’ lengthy

dispute could have largely been avoided.      The judicial system holds nonlegal

businesses to the standard of adhering to the contractual terms of the formation

documents despite their general lack of legal training. That burden cannot be

lessened for lawyers taking advantage of the benefits of a limited liability

partnership lest a double standard be created allowing attorneys to shirk the

obligations of a partnership agreement, the adherence to which would be required

of any other business entity operating in Ohio.

              The interlocutory decision of the trial court is affirmed, and the

matter remanded for further proceedings.

      It is ordered that appellees recover from appellants the costs herein taxed.

      The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.

      It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the

common pleas court to carry this judgment into execution. Case remanded to the

trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
      A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to

Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

                        _
SEAN C. GALLAGHER, JUDGE

EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, P.J., and
MICHAEL JOHN RYAN, J., CONCUR