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1. Traffic or Criminal
Cases
To file a traffic or criminal case in the
Maumee Municipal Court, the offense must have taken place
within the Court's territorial jurisdiction.
2. Procedures for
Filing Small Claim Complaints
The following procedures are to help guide you through
the process of filing a Small Claim Complaint in the Maumee
Municipal Court. You may file a Small Claim Complaint in
this Court under the following circumstances:
- Your claim must be for $3,000.00 or less.
- Your claim must be for money only. Small claims court
does not have jurisdiction to hear actions for libel,
slander, replevin, malicious prosecution, abuse of
process, punitive or exemplary damages, or those brought
by an assignee or agent.
- Maumee Municipal Court's jurisdiction is all of Lucas
County lying south of the northern boundary of the Ohio
Turnpike. Therefore, one of the following must apply as
to venue:
1)
The Defendant (the person you
are suing) must reside in or have his/her principal
place of business in this Court's jurisdiction.
2) The
action must have arisen in this Court's jurisdiction.
FILING PROCESS
The first step in filing a Small Claim Complaint is
to fill out an Interview Form setting forth the names,
addresses and telephone numbers of the parties, explaining
your complaint, filling in the amount for which you are
asking, and signing the form.
The Interview Form will be
used to enter information in the computer at which time a
case number will be assigned, and a Small Claim Complaint
and Summons will be printed. After looking over the
complaint, you will be asked to sign it in front of a Deputy
Clerk. You will also be asked to submit any documents you
have which support your claim so that a copy can be attached
to the Small Claim Complaint.
If you live out of the area or
out of state, a Small Claim Complaint can be mailed to you,
but you will have to fill it out and sign it in front of a
notary public. The Interview Form can be downloaded from the
Civil Forms portion of our website (www.maumee.org) or it
can be mailed to you along with a complaint form.
FILING FEE
There is a filing fee which must be paid at the time of
filing a Small Claim Complaint. At the present time, the
cost to file against one Defendant is $60.00 plus $10.00 for
each additional Defendant. If you win your case, you will be
entitled to be reimbursed for the court costs provided you
are able to collect on your judgment.
SERVICE ON DEFENDANT(S)
At the time of filing a Small Claim Complaint, you will
be given an initial court date and time. Normally, a copy of
the Small Claim Complaint and Summons and any exhibits is
sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to each
Defendant. In certain situations, a Defendant can be served
by a bailiff or special process server (personal or
residence service), but it costs slightly more. In the event
that the certified mail comes back from the U.S. Postal
Service marked either "unclaimed" or
"refused", it will be sent out again by ordinary
mail. It will be your responsibility to provide the correct
address for each Defendant. If the certified mail comes
back, for example, marked, "forwarding order
expired," the trial date will be cancelled until such
time as you provide another address at which certified mail
service can be attempted and for which an additional fee of
$10.00 will be charged. The case can remain open for a
maximum of six months. If we are unable to obtain service on
the Defendant within that time period, the case will be
dismissed without prejudice which means that you will have
the right to refile if you obtain a new address in the
future.
MEDIATION
After the Court has obtained service on the Defendant(s),
the case will be scheduled for Mediation. The parties will
be notified of the Mediation date and time by mail, and the
parties must call and confirm that they will be present for
the Mediation (or will be available by telephone if out of
the area). Our volunteer mediators are attorneys who have
been trained to mediate cases. At mediation, the parties and
the mediator sit in a room and discuss how the case can be
resolved without going to trial in front of a judge at a
later date. Approximately 75% of our cases settle as a
result of mediation. If the case is settled during
mediation, one-half of the initial filing fee will be
reimbursed to the Plaintiff by the Court as an incentive to
settle.
COUNTERCLAIMS
If you are the Defendant in a Small Claims case and you
believe that the Plaintiff owes you money as a result of the
same occurrence, you may file a counterclaim against the
Plaintiff. If the counter- claim is for $3,000.00 or less,
the case will remain in the Small Claims Division. However,
if it is for more than $3,000.00, the case will be
transferred to the regular civil docket of the court and
will no longer be a small claim. A counterclaim must be
filed at least seven days prior to the trial date. In order
to file a counterclaim, you will follow a very similar
procedure as the Plaintiff did in filing the complaint.
TRANSFERS OF SMALL CLAIMS CASES TO THE REGULAR DOCKETOccasionally, a Defendant will file a motion to transfer
a case from the small claims division to the regular civil
docket of the Court because he/she feels that a good defense
exists and that it will be necessary to do some discovery
which is beyond what can be done in small claims court. If
that happens, the case will most likely be transferred to
the regular civil docket, and it will be recommended that
you obtain an attorney.
CONTINUANCES
If any party is unable to come to the Small Claims Trial
when scheduled, he/she must file a motion for continuance in
writing at least seven days prior to the trial date except
in circumstances in which something occurred which
necessitates a continuance in less than seven days prior to
the trial date. In your request for a continuance, please
include the caption of the case and the case number. Sign
your request. You must also send a copy to the opposing
party and state in your request that you are doing so and on
what date you are mailing it to him/her. Sign your name
again under that portion of your request. Mail the original
request to the Court.
ATTORNEYS
If you feel you need an attorney, you are welcome to have
him/her present. However, it is not necessary.
CORPORATIONS
A corporation may file a case in Small Claims Court and
participate in the Mediation process through an officer or
an employee of the corporation. However, if the case
is not settled at Mediation and the case proceeds to small
claims trial, it will be necessary for an attorney for the
corporation to be present at the trial.
WITNESSES
If you feel you need to have a witness come to trial to
testify on your behalf and he/she is unwilling to
voluntarily come, you may request a Deputy Clerk to issue a
subpoena to either come and testify or to bring certain
documents or items and testify. Requests for subpoenas need
to be made at least ten days prior to the trial date. There
is a fee involved for having the subpoena issued and served
and also a fee for the witness.
TRIAL PROCEDURE
A small claims trial is more informal than a trial in the
civil division of the Court. The Plaintiff presents his/her
case by testifying on his/her own behalf. Any witnesses for
the Plaintiff (including the Defendant) may also testify.
After each person testifies, the Defendant may cross-examine
him/her by asking questions. Any exhibits will be presented
to support the Plaintiff's claim. When the Plaintiff is
finished with his/her case, the Defendant will testify as
well as any witnesses, and the Plaintiff may cross-examine
when each is finished testifying. The Defendant will present
any exhibits. After the Defendant's case is finished, the
Plaintiff may present more evidence rebutting the evidence
of the Defendant. The Judge may ask questions of the parties
or their witnesses during the trial. Each party may make a
final statement summing up their positions.
PROVING YOUR CASE
In order to prove your case, you should know as much
about your case as you can so that you can inform the Court
of the facts. Be familiar with dates, parties involved,
actions taken (or not taken), and damages which have
occurred. If you are the party trying to recover damages
(either the Plaintiff on a claim or the Defendant on a
counterclaim), you have the burden of proving your case by a
preponderance of the evidence which means that it is more
likely that you are entitled to win than not. You must prove
to the Court by your evidence that the party you are suing
has done something which makes him/her legally responsible
to you for damages. Then you must also prove the amount of
the damages. If you can only prove a portion of the damages,
that is all the judge will be able to award to you. If you
do not know how to prove your damages, it is recommended
that you seek legal advice.
DECISIONS BY THE COURT
Default Judgment: If the Plaintiff appears for trial, but
the Defendant fails to appear, the Plaintiff can ask for
judgment by default against the Defendant for the amount
stated in the Small Claim Complaint. The Court will verify
that the Defendant was served with a copy of the Small Claim
Complaint and that the Plaintiff has a valid complaint for
which he/she should obtain a judgment against the Defendant.
Dismissal Without Prejudice: If the Plaintiff fails to
appear, but the Defendant does appear for small claims
trial, the case will be dismissed without prejudice which
means that the Plaintiff has the right to refile his/her
complaint. If neither the Plaintiff nor the Defendant
appears for small claims trial, the case will also be
dismissed without prejudice. In either event, the Plaintiff
will have to pay the court costs involved in refiling the
case.
Dismissal With Prejudice: If both parties appear, the
case is settled, and the Defendant pays the amount agreed
upon, the case will be dismissed with prejudice which means
that the Plaintiff cannot refile the case.
Agreed Judgment
Entry: If both parties appear, the case is settled, but no
money exchanges hands at that time, the Court will enter an
agreed judgment (or consent judgment) reflecting the
settlement agreement.
Judgment: When the Small Claims Trial
is concluded, the Court will either give the decision from
the bench or reserve decision (take the matter under
advisement). After a written decision is prepared, signed by
the Judge and journalized, a copy will be sent to each
party.
APPEALING A DECISION
The small claims cases which are not settled prior to or
as a result of mediation are heard by the Judge (or by an
Acting Judge or Visiting Judge) rather than a Magistrate. If
you object to the Judge's decision, you will have a thirty
day period (which begins on the date that a filed and
journalized copy of the Judgment Entry is sent to you)
within which to file a Notice of Appeal to the Lucas County
Court of Appeals. The Notice of Appeal is filed at the trial
court. The proceedings in the court room are tape recorded,
and you will have to hire a court reporter to transcribe the
tape of your trial. Several documents must be filed besides
the Notice of Appeal, and additional court costs must be
paid to both the trial court and to the Court of Appeals. It
is a very complicated process, and it is highly recommended
that you obtain legal counsel if you wish to appeal the
Judge's decision.
(Revised 2-1-2013)
3. Collecting on
Your Judgment
If you won in small claims court, you become the judgment
creditor and have the authority to ask the court to attach
any nonexempt property or income of the judgment debtor, and
dispose of that property to satisfy the judgment. The court
will not automatically obtain the money for you. You must
initiate the procedures to attempt to collect on your
judgment.
If you do not know where the judgment debtor works or
banks or if he/she owns real estate, it may be difficult to
collect on your judgment. Your judgment will remain active
for at least five years. Even if it is not possible to
collect at the present time, it may be possible in the
future.
If you know where the judgment debtor works or banks or
if he/she owns his/her own home, there is an excellent
chance that you will recover the entire amount of your
judgment.
You may first want to write a letter to the judgment
debtor asking for payment in full or the possibility of
setting up a payment plan. Be sure to remind him/her of the
amount owed including court costs. Request that he/she
respond within a reasonable amount of time, such as two
weeks. If the judgment debtor sends you a personal check for
a partial payment, be sure to make a note of the bank and
the account number to use if the need to file a bank
garnishment arises in the future.
JUDGMENT DEBTOR FORM
If you do not know where the judgment debtor works, where
he/she banks, if he/she owns his/her own home, or any other
information which would be helpful in collecting on a
judgment, you can request the clerk to order the judgment
debtor to fill out a form disclosing such information
regarding his/her assets, liabilities, earnings, and
finances. There is a fee involved which must be paid up
front but which is recoverable from the judgment debtor. The
form will be sent to the judgment debtor by certified mail,
and he/she will have seven days to respond.
DEBTOR'S EXAMINATION
If the judgment debtor form is not appropriate or has
failed, the judgment creditor may request to have a debtor's
examination in which the court orders the judgment debtor to
appear at a certain date and time and answer under oath
questions similar to those on the judgment debtor form.
EXECUTION
If the judgment debtor is a business, the judgment
creditor can request that the bailiff go to the place of
business and take money from a cash drawer, tag items of
inventory, and equipment belonging to the judgment debtor.
Normally, to avoid embarrassment, the judgment debtor will
simply write a check payable to the court for the amount
owed or make satisfactory arrangements for payment with the
judgment creditor. However, if the judgment debtor is not in
a position to write a check, it is possible that a bailiff's
sale will have to be held in order for the tagged items to
be sold and the proceeds applied toward the satisfaction of
the judgment.
GARNISHMENT OF WAGES
Prior to filing a garnishment of personal earnings, the
judgment creditor must mail to the judgment debtor at
his/her last known address a Notice of Court Proceeding to
Collect Debt. It must be sent either by certified mail or by
ordinary mail using a certificate of mailing as proof that
it was sent to him/her. You must keep a copy of the notice.
After fifteen days have passed since the notice was mailed
(if the judgment debtor has not done any of the three items
listed on the notice to prevent the garnishment), the
judgment creditor will have a thirty day period within which
to file the garnishment. Bring to the clerk your copy of the
Notice and the stamped certificate of mailing or certified
mail receipt. There is a filing fee involved which is
included in the total amount due on the garnishment. The
employer (garnishee) must respond to the garnishment, and if
the judgment debtor is employed by the garnishee, the court
should receive checks from the employer each time the
judgment debtor is paid (or once a month if the employer
chooses to do so). The garnishment will continue until the
amount owed is paid in full, for six months if another
garnishment on that judgment debtor is filed by a different
judgment creditor, the judgment debtor no longer is employed
by the garnishee, or he/she files a trusteeship or
bankruptcy.
GARNISHMENT OF OTHER THAN PERSONAL EARNINGS
There is no prior notice sent to the judgment debtor with
this type of garnishment, and it is used to obtain funds
from a third party-usually a bank or credit union. Forms can
be obtained from the Clerk of Court, Civil Division. There
is a filing fee involved which is included in the total
amount due on the garnishment. If there is enough money in
the judgment debtor's bank account to cover the entire
amount owed, the bank will send a check to the court for the
entire amount. If not, the bank will send the amount that is
the account at the time the garnishment is received. If the
bank indicates that the judgment debtor has no accounts at
that bank, a response will be sent to the court indicating
that there are no accounts in the judgment debtor's name,
and a copy will be sent to the judgment creditor. If the
judgment creditor does not know where the judgment debtor
banks, garnishment can be attempted at various banks,
although it may be a waste of court costs to do so.
LIENS ON PROPERTY
If the judgment debtor owns his/her own property, the
judgment creditor may obtain from this court a Certificate
of Judgment which can then be taken to the Judgment Lien
Department at Common Pleas Court where the lien will be put
on his/her property. There are fees involved at both courts.
If the judgment debtor sells his/her property in the future,
the judgment creditor will receive his/her money.
4. Procedures for
Filing Landlord's Complaints
Landlord's Complaints [or FED (Forcible Entry and
Detainer) Complaints] are filed by landlords to evict
tenants from rental property because tenants have failed to
pay rent, damaged the property, stayed beyond the term of
the lease, etc. FED Complaints can also be used anytime real
property is wrongfully withheld from the rightful owner,
such as default on a land installment contract.
FED Complaints are designed to return the property to the
landlord or rightful owner within a reasonable amount of
time. The landlord can file for restitution of the premises
only (first cause of action) or he/she can also file for
back rent and damages (second cause of action).
Before a tenant can be evicted, Ohio law requires that
the landlord notify the tenant(s) to leave the premises in
writing at least three days prior to the filing of the
Landlord's Complaint. Notices to leave premises must meet
the legal requirements of Ohio law and may be obtained from
the Clerk of Court. The notice can be served in one of three
ways: 1. certified mail, return receipt requested; 2.
handing a written copy of the notice to the tenant
personally; or 3. by leaving the written notice at the
tenant's usual abode or the place from which the tenant is
being evicted.
Notices to leave premises must be in writing and contain
the following language in a conspicuous manner: "You
are being asked to leave the premises. If you do not leave,
an eviction action may be initiated against you. If you are
in doubt regarding your legal rights and obligations as a
tenant, it is recommended that you seek legal
assistance."
As an example of the process, a landlord serves the
tenant with the Notice to Leave Premises by posting the
written notice on the tenant's door on Monday, March 5th.
The Landlord's Complaint cannot be filed with the Court
until Friday, March 9th. The landlord must bring a copy of
the Notice to Leave Premises, a copy of the lease if it is a
written lease, and court costs.
Once the Landlord's Complaint is filed, a hearing is
scheduled usually 10-14 days thereafter. The Bailiff serves
the tenant(s) with a copy of the Landlord's Complaint and
Summons by personally handing it to the tenant(s), leaving
it with someone else who lives in the premises, or by
posting it on the door in a conspicuous place (such as by
hanging it on the door). A copy is also sent to the tenant(s)
by ordinary mail using a Certificate of Mailing as proof of
mailing. The landlord may request that a third copy be sent
to the tenant(s) by certified mail, return receipt
requested, for an additional fee.
At the eviction hearing, the landlord must testify as to
how and when the Notice to Leave Premises was served on the
tenant(s), among other facts. The eviction hearing is only
for the landlord's first cause of action for restitution of
the premises. If the landlord has filed for the second cause
of action for the back rent and damages, the case will be
continued as to that cause of action.
If all essential elements are met to the Judge's
satisfaction, judgment for restitution of the premises will
be granted to the landlord, and the tenant(s) will have ten
days to vacate the premises. If the premises are not vacated
by noon on the tenth day, the Bailiff will schedule a date
and time for the tenant's possessions to be set out to the
curb, but the landlord must provide the manpower, bags and
boxes.
If the landlord has filed for the second cause of action
for back rent and damages, the tenant will have 28 days
(from the date that a copy of the Landlord's Complaint and
Summons was mailed to the tenant) to file an Answer
contesting that the money is owed to the landlord. If 28
days has passed, and the tenant has not filed an Answer, the
landlord may move for default judgment by filing a Motion
for Default Judgment and an Affidavit of Damages. If the
landlord is asking for back rent only, no further hearing
will be required. However, if the landlord is also
requesting to be reimbursed for damages to the property,
unpaid utility bills, etc., the case will be scheduled for a
Damage Assessment Hearing. At that hearing, the landlord
must provide receipts and testimony regarding the damages in
order to have those amounts included in the judgment. |