Accelerated Moving & Storage v. Herc Rentals, Inc.

2022 Ohio 3016
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 30, 2022
Docket21AP-523
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 Ohio 3016 (Accelerated Moving & Storage v. Herc Rentals, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Accelerated Moving & Storage v. Herc Rentals, Inc., 2022 Ohio 3016 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as Accelerated Moving & Storage v. Herc Rentals, Inc., 2022-Ohio-3016.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Accelerated Moving and Storage, :

Plaintiff-Appellant, : No. 21AP-523 v. : (C.P.C. No. 20CV-6122)

Herc Rentals, Inc., et al. : (REGULAR CALENDAR)

Defendants-Appellees. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on August 30, 2022

On brief: Percy Squire Co., LLC, and Percy Squire, for appellant. Argued: Percy Squire.

On brief: Vorys, Sater, Seymour, and Pease, LLP, Rodney A. Holaday, and Danielle S. Rice, for appellees. Argued: Danielle S. Rice.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

BEATTY BLUNT, J. {¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Accelerated Moving and Storage ("Accelerated"), appeals the decision of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas granting the motion filed by defendants-appellees, Herc Rentals, Inc. ("Herc Rentals"), Lawrence Silber (President and CEO of Herc Rentals, Inc.), and John Ehret (Attorney and Risk Manager for Herc Rentals, Inc.), and dismissing Accelerated's complaint based on Civ.R. 12(B)(6). The complaint purported to assert claims for commercial disparagement and trade libel against appellees, and those claims arose exclusively from a work order invoice in the amount of $13,623.96 issued by Herc Rentals to Accelerated. {¶ 2} Herc Rentals is a national company incorporated in Delaware that rents out equipment that is used for construction, excavating, and other heavy labor. Accelerated is an Ohio corporation. The invoice in question arose from damage to a rented piece of No. 21AP-523 2

equipment, a "compact track loader," which had been rented at and returned to a Herc Rentals office in Bonita Springs, Florida. Accelerated had an account with Herc Rentals, and had previously rented equipment at the Bonita Springs office. The track loader was apparently rented using Accelerated's account but Accelerated professed no knowledge of the rental and no responsibility for the damage to it. After receiving email correspondence from Herc Rentals about the damage to the track loader, Accelerated investigated the situation and allegedly discovered that the rental had actually been made by a third party, Daniel Patricio, who had previously done contract work for Accelerated's CEO on a property in Florida and was on a previous occasion authorized to rent equipment for Accelerated. (See Todd G. Wilson, Aff. attached as Ex. C to Pl's Resp. & Memo. in Opp.) ("I learned the credit card [used to pay for the rental] belonged to Daniel Patricio, a person who had done work for me personally in the past and in a very specific [sic] single instance was authorized to rent equipment for Accelerated."). Accelerated's CEO indicated that Patricio was not an employee of Accelerated and had not been authorized to make the rental at issue, but Herc Rentals maintained that Accelerated was at least in part responsible for the damage to the track loader. According to an email Accelerated's CEO sent to Herc Rentals: Daniel Patricio is a contractor who has done work for us in Florida. Daniel "is not" an employee for Accelerated, nor does he perform work on behalf of Accelerated, which is an Ohio based corporation. In October of 2019 he did landscaping work for us, as a vendor, to cut trees at a location in Apopka. Living in Ohio, I was the POC for the rental and payment of that equipment. At all times I was in dialogue with your salesperson regarding the rental of equipment through the payment, which I made in person.

Acting on his own, on January 5, 2020, Daniel went back to Herc and was able to rent, under our name and customer number, a Track Loader which was involved in an accident. At no time did I, or anyone at Accelerated, know about, or authorize this rental.

***

Accelerated is not responsible for the rental or the damage that occurred. I want you to immediately remove these charges from my account and provide a letter absolving us from this claim. No. 21AP-523 3

If you persist on continuing this course of action, I will retain legal counsel, sue you for making an unauthorized rental to our account, knowingly making a false damage claim to our account, for punitive damages, and legal fees.

I am giving you 72 hours to respond before taking legal action. We are not going to be your scapegoat.

(Aug. 30, 2020 Email from Pl., attached as Ex. 6 to Resp. & Memo. in Opp.) Accelerated's attorney was copied on this email, and subsequent discussions between the attorney and Herc Rentals' in-house counsel (appellee Ehret) were perfunctory and unsuccessful. The case was referred by Herc Rentals to outside collections counsel two weeks later, and Accelerated's complaint was filed that same day. {¶ 3} Appellees filed a joint motion to dismiss on November 19, 2020, arguing that neither appellee Silber nor appellee Ehret were subject to the personal jurisdiction of the court and therefore the claims against them should fail pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(2), and also that Accelerated had failed to state valid claims against any of the appellees and therefore the case should be dismissed pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6). On October 13, 2021, the trial court granted the motion to dismiss based on Civ.R. 12(B)(6), holding that the complaint did not allege sufficient facts to establish that the defendants had made any false representations in the invoice, and that Accelerated's claims for commercial disparagement and trade libel could not prevail, and also that as to the trade libel claim that Accelerated did not allege "that the invoice was made and sent with the necessary degree of fault and that it reflected injuriously on Plaintiff's business." (Oct. 13, 2021 Decision & Entry on Defs'. Mot. to Dismiss at 5.) {¶ 4} This appeal followed and Accelerated now asserts assignments of error with the trial court's judgment. 1. The trial court erred when it granted Defendants' motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.

2. The trial court should have granted Appellant leave to file an amended complaint.

{¶ 5} Accelerated's first assignment of error asserts that the trial court erred in holding that it failed to state claims for commercial disparagement or trade libel. Pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6), "[w]hen reviewing a judgment on a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss for No. 21AP-523 4

failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, an appellate court's standard of review is de novo." Matthews v. D'Amore, 10th Dist. No. 05AP-1318, 2006-Ohio-5745, ¶ 51. In its review, "[t]he court must presume all factual allegations contained in the complaint to be true and must make all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff," but it "need not [] accept as true any unsupported and conclusory legal propositions advanced in the complaint." Bullard v. McDonald's, 10th Dist. No. 20AP-374, 2021-Ohio-1505, ¶ 11. {¶ 6} Initially, we must clear up some confusion about the claims that Accelerated purports to assert. Accelerated's complaint denominates its first cause of action as "commercial disparagement" and its second cause of action as "trade libel," but on review it is apparent that both claims are misnamed. {¶ 7} In Ohio, commercial disparagement is a statutory deceptive trade practice claim under R.C. 4165.02(A)(10) and accrues when a person "disparages the goods, services, or business of another by false representation of fact." (Emphasis added.) But Ohio courts have determined that the statute applies only "when [the] quality of a business's goods or services has been demeaned a [statutory] commercial disparagement claim may be asserted," and that "if allegations relate to integrity, defamation is [the] proper claim." Toledo Heart Surgeons, Inc. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 Ohio 3016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/accelerated-moving-storage-v-herc-rentals-inc-ohioctapp-2022.