Wells Fargo Bank, Natl. Assn. v. Doberdruk
CourtOhio Supreme Court
Date FiledJuly 15, 2026
Docket2024-1669 and 2025-0071
JudgeHawkins, J.
StatusPublished
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Full Opinion
[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as
Wells Fargo Bank, Natl. Assn. v. Doberdruk, Slip Opinion No. 2026-Ohio-2674.]
NOTICE
This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
the opinion is published.
SLIP OPINION NO. 2026-OHIO-2674
WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, APPELLEE, v. DOBERDRUK,
APPELLANT, ET AL.
[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
may be cited as Wells Fargo Bank, Natl. Assn. v. Doberdruk, Slip Opinion No.
2026-Ohio-2674.]
Civil law—Foreclosure sales—After the proceeds of a foreclosure sale are
distributed, a common pleas court may grant relief to a party appealing the
judgment of foreclosure by ordering restitution under R.C. 2329.45—
Because restitution under R.C. 2329.45 remains a controversy redressable
through appeal, a foreclosure appeal is not moot when the foreclosed party
fails to obtain a stay of judgment—Court of appeals’ judgment reversed and
cause remanded.
(Nos. 2024-1669 and 2025-0071—Submitted December 9, 2025—Decided July
15, 2026.)
APPEAL from and CERTIFIED by the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County,
No. 113637, 2024-Ohio-5007.
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
__________________
HAWKINS, J., authored the opinion of the court, which KENNEDY, C.J., and
FISCHER, DEWINE, BRUNNER, DETERS, and SHANAHAN, JJ., joined.
HAWKINS, J.
{¶ 1} This consolidated jurisdictional appeal and certified-conflict case asks
this court to determine whether an appellant’s pending appeal of a judgment of
foreclosure is moot when a stay of the foreclosure proceedings is not obtained and
the proceeds of the sale of the foreclosed property have been distributed. We
conclude that after the proceeds of a foreclosure sale are distributed, a common
pleas court may grant relief to a party appealing the judgment of foreclosure by
ordering restitution under R.C. 2329.45. Because restitution under R.C. 2329.45
remains a controversy redressable through appeal, we reverse the Eighth District
Court of Appeals’ judgment dismissing the appeal at issue in this case and remand
this matter to that court for it to address the merits of the appeal.
I. BACKGROUND
{¶ 2} Appellee, Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, filed a complaint
for foreclosure in December 2022 alleging that appellant, Grace Doberdruk, was in
default on a promissory note secured by a mortgage for the purchase of real
property in the principal amount of $449,905 plus interest and associated costs and
expenses. Doberdruk filed an answer and asserted counterclaims against Wells
Fargo, and the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. On January 11,
2024, the trial court denied Doberdruk’s motion for summary judgment, granted
Wells Fargo’s motion for summary judgment, and entered a judgment of
foreclosure. A praecipe for order of sale was entered later that month, and the order
of sale with appraisal was issued to the Cuyahoga County sheriff on February 7,
2024. On February 12, Doberdruk appealed the judgment of foreclosure to the
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Eighth District. The trial court denied Doberdruk’s motion to stay the sheriff’s sale
pending appeal.
{¶ 3} The sheriff’s sale moved forward, and while Doberdruk’s appeal was
pending, the property was sold to a third party at a public auction on May 6, 2024.
Doberdruk moved the trial court to stay the confirmation of sale, distribution of sale
proceeds, and recording of the deed. The trial court determined it would grant a
stay of the foreclosure proceedings if Doberdruk posted a supersedeas bond of
$472,905 within 21 days.
{¶ 4} Doberdruk did not post the supersedeas bond. On July 2, 2024, the
trial court confirmed the sale of the property and ordered the sheriff to execute and
deliver a deed to the third-party purchaser. The trial court denied Doberdruk’s
motion to set aside the sale and objection to confirmation of sale, motion to vacate
the sale under Civ.R. 60(B), and emergency motion to stay the distribution of sale
proceeds. Doberdruk filed a notice of appeal from the trial court’s judgment
confirming the sale and the judgment that denied her motion to set aside sale and
objection to the confirmation of sale. She moved the Eighth District to stay the
distribution of sale proceeds and recording of the deed pending appeal, but that
motion was denied. She also filed an emergency motion for stay and motion to
remand, but that motion was also denied by the Eighth District.
{¶ 5} Because Doberdruk had failed to obtain a stay of the foreclosure
proceedings, the property had been sold, and the proceeds from that sale were set
to be distributed, the Eighth District sua sponte ordered the parties to brief the issue
whether Doberdruk’s appeal was moot. Wells Fargo argued that the appeal was
moot under Eighth District precedent because the restitution remedy provided in
R.C. 2329.45 applies only when the appealing party obtains a stay. Doberdruk
contended that her appeal was not moot, arguing that she had pursued a stay, no
voluntary satisfaction of the judgment had occurred, and restitution still would be
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available as a remedy under R.C. 2329.45 should she prevail in her challenge to the
judgment of foreclosure.
{¶ 6} The Eighth District agreed with Wells Fargo. See 2024-Ohio-5007,
¶ 15 (8th Dist.). The court acknowledged that other courts of appeals had
determined that R.C. 2329.45 preserved an appeal in similar circumstances to
Doberdruk’s, but it followed its own precedent to conclude that Doberdruk’s appeal
was moot. Id. at ¶ 14-15. The Eighth District noted its precedent holding that R.C.
2329.45 applies to appeals taken from the judgment confirming the sale, not from
the judgment of foreclosure. Id. at ¶ 12, citing Blisswood Village Home Owners
Assn. v. Euclid Community Reinvestment, L.L.C., 2018-Ohio-1091, ¶ 17 (8th Dist.).
Even if R.C. 2329.45 applied to an appeal from a judgment of foreclosure, the
Eighth District previously held that the statute would apply only when the appealing
party obtained a stay of the distribution of sale proceeds. Id. at ¶ 13, citing
Provident Funding Assns., L.P. v. Turner, 2014-Ohio-2529, ¶ 6 (8th Dist.). The
Eighth District concluded that Doberdruk’s appeal was moot because she failed to
post the supersedeas bond and obtain a stay, the sale of the property was confirmed,
and the proceeds of the sale were distributed. Id. at ¶ 15. The Eighth District
therefore dismissed the appeal. Id.
{¶ 7} On Doberdruk’s motion, the Eighth District certified a conflict
between its judgment and the judgments in Chase Manhattan Mtge. Corp. v.
Locker, 2003-Ohio-6665 (2d Dist.), MIF Realty, L.P. v. K.E.J. Corp., 1995 WL
311365 (6th Dist. May 19, 1995), and U.S. Bank Natl. Assn. v. Mobile Assocs. Natl.
Network Sys., Inc., 2011-Ohio-5284 (10th Dist.). Doberdruk notified this court of
the certified conflict, and we agreed that a conflict exists, 2025-Ohio-598. We
ordered the parties to brief the following certified-conflict question: “Is an appeal
of the judgment of foreclosure moot after the distribution of sale proceeds when an
appellant filed a motion requesting a stay but could not post the bond or is the appeal
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not moot because R.C. 2329.45 provides the appellant with the remedy of
restitution?” Id.
{¶ 8} Doberdruk also sought a discretionary appeal, and we accepted
jurisdiction over two propositions of law:
Proposition of Law No. 1: An appeal from the judgment of
foreclosure is not moot when the proceeds of sale have been
distributed because R.C. 2329.45 provides the remedy of restitution.
Proposition of Law No. 2: If a homeowner files a motion to
stay the distribution of proceeds then there is no voluntary
satisfaction of the judgment and the appeal is not moot.
See id. We consolidated the discretionary appeal with the certified-conflict case.
Id.
II. LAW AND ANALYSIS
{¶ 9} A court is limited to deciding “actual controversies by a judgment
which can be carried into effect” in the case before it. Mills v. Green, 159 U.S. 651,
653 (1895). When the issues presented in a case are no longer in controversy or
“the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome,” a case becomes moot
and the court should no longer proceed to judgment. Powell v. McCormack, 395
U.S. 486, 496 (1969); see also State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Baker Ross,
2026-Ohio-510, ¶ 18.
{¶ 10} Following this general rule, when an appeal is pending and “‘an
event occurs which renders it impossible’” for the appellate court to grant
“‘effectual relief’” to a prevailing party, the litigation is moot and the court must
dismiss the appeal. Miner v. Witt, 82 Ohio St. 237, 239 (1910), quoting Mills at
653; see also Maurent v. Spatny, 2025-Ohio-5002, ¶ 2 (“An appeal is moot when a
favorable judgment will not secure effective relief for the prevailing party.”).
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{¶ 11} In this case, we are asked to determine whether an appellant’s appeal
of a judgment of foreclosure is rendered moot when the appellant fails to obtain a
stay of the foreclosure proceedings and the proceeds of the sale of the foreclosed
property have been distributed or whether the potential for restitution under R.C.
2329.45 retains a live issue that is subject to appellate review.
A. Appeals in foreclosure actions
{¶ 12} Two final judgments are appealable in a foreclosure action: the
judgment of foreclosure and the confirmation of sale. Farmers State Bank v.
Sponaugle, 2019-Ohio-2518, ¶ 18, citing CitiMortgage, Inc. v. Roznowski, 2014-
Ohio-1984, ¶ 39. A party may appeal the judgment of foreclosure, which is a
judgment that determines “the extent of each lienholder’s interest, sets out the
priority of the liens, determines the other rights and responsibilities of each party,
and orders the property to be sold by sheriff’s sale.” Id., citing Roznowski at ¶ 39
and R.C. 2323.07. A party who appeals the judgment of foreclosure may challenge
the merits of the trial court’s decision to grant the foreclosure. Id. at ¶ 18, citing
Roznowski at ¶ 39.
{¶ 13} A party may also appeal the confirmation of sale. Id. at ¶ 18-19; see
also R.C. 2329.31 (setting forth requirements for confirmation of sale). An appeal
of the confirmation of sale “is limited to challenging the confirmation order itself
and to issues related to confirmation proceedings—for example, computation of the
final total amount owed by the mortgagor, accrued interest, and amounts advanced
by the mortgagee for inspections, appraisals, property protection, and
maintenance.” Sponaugle at ¶ 19, citing Roznowski at ¶ 40.
{¶ 14} An appeal in a foreclosure action does not automatically operate as
a stay of execution, R.C. 2505.09, and an appellant may attempt to halt the
foreclosure process by obtaining a stay while the appellant pursues an appeal, see
Civ.R. 62(B) through (E); App.R. 7(A). Typically, an appellant may obtain a stay
of the foreclosure proceedings by executing a supersedeas bond to the appellee with
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sufficient sureties in a sum directed by the court that issued the judgment appealed
and with the conditions of bond set forth in R.C. 2505.14. R.C. 2505.09; see also
Civ.R. 62(B) (“When an appeal is taken the appellant may obtain a stay of
execution of a judgment or any proceedings to enforce a judgment by giving an
adequate supersedeas bond.”). As substitutes for executing a supersedeas bond, a
court may order the conveyance of property or the appellant may deposit an amount
of money equal to that specified for the bond with the clerk of the appropriate court.
R.C. 2505.11.
{¶ 15} A stay ordinarily must be first pursued in the trial court. App.R.
7(A). If “application to the trial court for the relief sought is not practicable” or the
trial court denies an application for a stay or otherwise fails to afford the requested
relief, the appellant may move the appropriate court of appeals for a stay of the
judgment or order pending appeal. Id. An appellant may also pursue an injunction
pending appeal. Id.; Civ.R. 62(D).
{¶ 16} When a stay of the foreclosure proceedings is not obtained and the
confirmation of sale and the distribution of sale proceeds come to pass, appellate
courts are confronted with the question whether a pending appeal of the foreclosure
action is moot and, as demonstrated in this case, have arrived at different
conclusions.
B. Applicability of R.C. 2329.45 after the distribution of sale proceeds of a
foreclosure sale
{¶ 17} Doberdruk contends that her failure to obtain a stay in the underlying
foreclosure proceedings, which led to the sale of the foreclosed property to a third
party and to the distribution of sale proceeds to judgment creditors, does not moot
her appeal of the judgment of foreclosure, because she retains a claim for
restitution. To determine the merits of her argument, we first look to the plain
language of R.C. 2329.45. See Beachwood City School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v.
Warrensville Hts. City School Dist. Bd. of Edn., 2022-Ohio-3071, ¶ 22.
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{¶ 18} When construing a statute, the relevant question is not “what did the
general assembly intend to enact” but, rather, “what is the meaning of that which it
did enact.” Slingluff v. Weaver, 66 Ohio St. 621 (1902), paragraph two of the
syllabus; see also R.C. 1.42. When the language of a statute is plain and
unambiguous, “we must rely on what the General Assembly has said,” Jones v.
Action Coupling & Equip., Inc., 2003-Ohio-1099, ¶ 12, and apply it as written,
Summerville v. Forest Park, 2010-Ohio-6280, ¶ 18.
{¶ 19} Drawing on these principles, R.C. 2329.45 plainly offers restitution
as a potential remedy for an appellant who successfully appeals a judgment of
foreclosure, even after the confirmation of sale and the distribution of sale proceeds.
R.C. 2329.45, titled “Reversal of judgment” by the Legislative Service
Commission, states:
If a judgment in satisfaction of which lands or tenements are
sold is reversed on appeal, such reversal shall not defeat or affect the
title of the purchaser. In such case restitution in an amount equal to
the money for which such lands or tenements were sold, with
interest from the day of sale, must be made by the judgment creditor.
In ordering restitution, the court shall take into consideration all
persons who lost an interest in the property by reason of the
judgment and sale and the order of the priority of those interests.
A judgment of foreclosure constitutes “a judgment in satisfaction of which lands or
tenements are sold,” id.; see also R.C. 2323.07 (a court shall order sale of property
when a mortgage is foreclosed or a specific lien enforced); Sponaugle, 2019-Ohio-
2518, at ¶ 18.
{¶ 20} Nothing in the text of R.C. 2329.45 expressly precludes a court from
ordering restitution after the proceeds of a foreclosure sale have been distributed,
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and the plain language of the text instead supports the opposite view. R.C. 2329.45
applies when (1) lands or tenements are sold to satisfy a judgment, (2) the purchaser
holds title to the property, which occurs after the confirmation of sale, see R.C.
2329.31, 2329.36, and 2329.37, and (3) a person who lost an interest in the property
successfully appeals the judgment that prompted the sale. R.C. 2923.45 limits the
remedy for a successful appeal to restitution of the monetary value of the property.
{¶ 21} By indicating that restitution is an available remedy after a property
is sold “in satisfaction of” a judgment and that restitution “must be made by the
judgment creditor,” R.C. 2329.45 plainly indicates that it may apply after the
distribution of proceeds of a foreclosure sale.
{¶ 22} Wells Fargo, though, contends that statutory text aside, distribution
of proceeds of a foreclosure sale essentially terminates every issue raised in a
pending appeal because the trial court is no longer in control of the sale proceeds.
We disagree. Again, R.C. 2329.45 specifies that restitution must be made by the
“judgment creditor,” which undermines Wells Fargo’s argument that the trial court
must control the sale proceeds for restitution under R.C. 2329.45 for that statute to
remain available as a remedy.
{¶ 23} Moreover, courts may generally impose restitution by court order
and routinely do so in situations involving claims of unjust enrichment to recoup a
benefit conferred on a party. See Johnson v. Microsoft Corp., 2005-Ohio-4985,
¶ 20-21 (restitution is the remedy designed to prevent a party from retaining money
or benefits that belong to another party in justice and equity, i.e., the party that is
unjustly enriched). Wells Fargo does not explain as part of its argument why, in a
foreclosure action, a trial court must control the sale proceeds for it to order
restitution under R.C. 2329.45.
{¶ 24} Lastly, Wells Fargo contends that reading R.C. 2329.45 to provide a
post-distribution restitution remedy renders stays of execution under R.C. 2505.09
or other methods “meaningless” because a foreclosure appellant “would never post
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a bond.” But the main purpose behind securing bond—protecting the appellee, see
R.C. 2505.09 and R.C. 2505.14—is less of a concern during an appeal of a
judgment of foreclosure under R.C. 2329.45. After the confirmation of sale and
the distribution of sale proceeds, the appellee already has control of the assets or
proceeds at issue. Moreover, the remedy provided in R.C. 2329.45 is limited:
restitution under R.C. 2329.45 does not provide the title to the subject property to
a prevailing appellant. See R.C. 2329.45; Roznowski, 2014-Ohio-1984, at ¶ 42
(“R.C. 2329.45 does not state that a sale will be invalidated” but instead protects
the title of the purchaser). Obtaining a stay of execution of a judgment of
foreclosure will remain a critical step for an appellant in a foreclosure action to take
in order to stop the title to the subject property from transferring before the appeal
is resolved.
C. The failure to post a supersedeas bond is not a voluntary settlement of a claim
that moots an appeal
{¶ 25} The parties in this case additionally discuss whether Doberdruk’s
failure to post a supersedeas bond led to a voluntary “satisfaction of judgment” that
renders the case moot under the principles established in Blodgett v. Blodgett, 49
Ohio St.3d 243, 245-246 (1990). Whether an appellant in a foreclosure action posts
a supersedeas bond to obtain a stay, however, does not eliminate a court’s ability
to provide the appellant with relief through restitution under R.C. 2329.45.
{¶ 26} The general principle stated in Blodgett—that voluntary satisfaction
of the judgment moots an appeal—derives from an appellate court’s inability to
grant any effectual relief in a pending appeal when the appellant resolves the
controversy independently from the appellate court. See Blodgett at 245. Here,
however, the controversy was not independently resolved. Doberdruk did not enter
into a voluntary settlement with Wells Fargo, and a remedy remains available under
R.C. 2329.45 if the judgment is reversed on appeal.
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{¶ 27} Some appellate courts have equated an appellant’s failure to post a
supersedeas bond and obtain a stay in a foreclosure action to a Blodgett-like
voluntary satisfaction of judgment to moot an appeal. For example, in Bankers
Trust Co. of California, N.A. v. Tutin, the Ninth District Court of Appeals
determined that an appeal in a foreclosure action was moot when, absent a stay, the
foreclosed property had been sold at a sheriff’s sale and the trial court had
confirmed the sale. 2009-Ohio-1333, ¶ 15-16 (9th Dist.).
{¶ 28} In the Ninth District’s view, the controversy in the foreclosure
appeal was extinguished because the distribution of sale proceeds resulted in the
satisfaction of judgment, which removed the subject matter of the case from the
court’s control, and the court could therefore no longer “afford relief to the parties
to the action.” Id. at ¶ 16. The court explained that restitution under R.C. 2329.45
could not be ordered after the distribution of sale proceeds, because “there is no
language in the statute to justify such a construction,” id., and the remedy of
restitution is available only when “the proceeds of the sale are still held under the
jurisdiction and control of the court,” id. at ¶ 15; see also U.S. Bank Trust Natl.
Assn. v. Janossy, 2018-Ohio-2228, ¶ 7 (8th Dist.) (“the application of the
[foreclosure-sale] proceeds to the debt” was “in satisfaction of the judgment upon
the note” and, in accordance with Blodgett, 49 Ohio St.3d 243, the appellant’s
appeal of a judgment of foreclosure was therefore moot).
{¶ 29} But the Ninth District and others adopting a similar analysis have
misapplied the relevant test of mootness—whether a remedy remains available.
The statutory scheme relevant in this case supplies a limited remedy after “a
judgment in satisfaction of which lands or tenements are sold” (emphasis added),
R.C. 2329.45. R.C. 2329.45 says nothing about an appellant’s ability to secure a
stay, and as we previously determined, a trial court may grant an appellant
restitution under R.C. 2329.45 after the distribution of sale proceeds of a
foreclosure sale to remedy an improper foreclosure. And when a court can provide
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effectual relief by a favorable judgment on appeal, the lack of a stay “has no
bearing” on the question of mootness. Maurent, 2025-Ohio-5002, at ¶ 17.
D. Doberdruk’s appeal
{¶ 30} We answer the two-part certified-conflict question as follows: (1)
no, an appeal of a judgment of foreclosure is not moot after the distribution of sale
proceeds when an appellant filed a motion requesting a stay of the foreclosure
proceedings but could not post the supersedeas bond, and (2) yes, an appeal is not
moot after the distribution of sale proceeds, because R.C. 2329.45 provides the
appellant with the remedy of restitution after such distribution. Doberdruk’s
propositions of law correspond to the certified question and likewise have merit.
{¶ 31} Applied here, Doberdruk’s failure to execute a supersedeas bond and
the subsequent distribution of proceeds of the foreclosure sale did not extinguish
the remedy of restitution under R.C. 2329.45, which, if warranted, may still provide
Doberdruk a favorable judgment. Consequently, Doberdruk’s appeal is not moot.
See Miner, 82 Ohio St. at 238-239; Maurent, 2025-Ohio-5002, at ¶ 2.
III. CONCLUSION
{¶ 32} Because R.C. 2329.45 plainly avails restitution after the distribution
of proceeds of a foreclosure sale to remedy an improper foreclosure, the Eighth
District Court of Appeals erred in concluding Doberdruk’s appeal is moot and
dismissing the appeal. The judgment of the Eighth District dismissing Doberdruk’s
appeal is reversed, and the case is remanded to that court for resolution on the
merits.
Judgment reversed
and cause remanded.
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McGlinchey Stafford and Stefanie L. Deka, for appellee.
DannLaw, Andrew M. Engel, and Marc E. Dann; and Law Office of Grace
M. Doberdruk and Grace Doberdruk, for appellant.
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January Term, 2026
Legal Aid of Southeast and Central Ohio and Patrick W. Skilliter, urging
reversal for amicus curiae Legal Aid of Southeast and Central Ohio.
Legal Aid Society of Southwest Ohio and Matthew T. Fitzsimmons, urging
reversal for amicus curiae Legal Aid Society of Southwest Ohio.
Legal Aid Society of Cleveland and Matthew L. Alden, Barbara R. Barreno-
Paschall, Melissa L. Salamon, and Bilal R. Mozaffer, urging reversal for amicus
curiae Legal Aid Society of Cleveland.
Advocates for Basic Legal Equality and Paul Redrup, urging reversal for
amicus curiae Advocates for Basic Legal Equality.
Legal Aid of Western Ohio and Patricia Y. Hernandez, urging reversal for
amicus curiae Legal Aid of Western Ohio.
Community Legal Aid Services, Inc., and Rachel E. Nader, urging reversal
for amicus curiae Community Legal Aid Services, Inc.
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