Amherst Village Management v. Vestal, Unpublished Decision (10-27-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 2000
DocketTrial Court No. 99-CVG-00936
StatusUnpublished

This text of Amherst Village Management v. Vestal, Unpublished Decision (10-27-2000) (Amherst Village Management v. Vestal, Unpublished Decision (10-27-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Amherst Village Management v. Vestal, Unpublished Decision (10-27-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Bowling Green Municipal Court rendered in favor of appellee Amherst Village Management in a forcible entry and detainer action.

Initially, we note that appellee has not filed a brief in this appeal. Accordingly, pursuant to App.R. 18(C) we accept appellant's statement of the facts as correct. We have summarized those facts as follows.

Appellee operates the Amherst Village Apartments, a federally subsidized apartment complex in Bowling Green, Ohio. On November 20, 1998, appellant Sara Vestal and her then boyfriend, Josh Myers, entered into a rental agreement with appellee for the lease of unit 148 at Amherst Village Apartments. Under the terms of the rental agreement, Vestal and Myers' rent was subsidized under the "Section 8" program of the Department of Housing and Urban Development ("HUD"). Pursuant to a certification review of Vestal and Myers, they were responsible for rental payments of $136 per month and HUD paid the remaining portion of $502 per month. The tenants' portion of the rent was calculated solely on the basis of Josh Myers' income as Vestal was pregnant and caring for her and Myers' toddler. Vestal and Myers paid their rent through May 1999.

The rental agreement signed by the parties provides that rent was due on the first day of the month. Paragraph 5 of the agreement then states in relevant part:

"If the tenant does not pay the full amount of the rent shown in paragraph #3 by the end of the 5th business day of the month, the landlord may collect a fee of $5.00 on the 6th day of the month, thereafter, the Landlord may collect $1.00 for each additional day the rent remains unpaid during the month it is due. The landlord may not terminate this agreement for failure to pay late charges, but may terminate this agreement for non-payment of rent, as explained in paragraph #23."

Paragraph 23 sets forth the conditions for terminating the tenancy and reads in part:

"B. Any termination of this agreement by the landlord must be carried out in accordance with HUD regulations, State and Local Law and the terms of this agreement. The landlord may terminate this agreement for only:

"1. The tenant's material non-compliance with the terms of this agreement.

"* * *

"4. * * * The term Material Non-Compliance with the lease includes,

"4. Non-payment of rent or any other financial obligation due under the lease beyond any grace period permitted under State Law. The payment of rent or any other financial obligation due under the lease after the due date but within the grace period permitted under State Law constitutes a minor violation."

In addition to these obligations, the lease provides in Paragraph 4 that the amount of rent the tenant pays may be changed during the term of the lease if: "The income, the number of persons in the tenant's household or other factors considered in calculating the tenant's rent change and HUD procedures provided that the tenant's rent or assistance payment be adjusted to reflect the changes." Paragraph 4 further provides that "The landlord agrees to implement changes in the Tenant's rent or tenant's assistance payment only in accordance with the time frames and administrative procedures set forth in HUD's handbooks, instructions and regulations related to administration of multifamily subsidy programs." Finally, Paragraph 16 of the lease agreement obligates the tenant to notify the landlord immediately if any household member moves out of the rental unit.

In late May 1999, Vestal went to Michelle Hitt and notified her that Myers was moving out of the apartment. Vestal told Hitt that Myers was leaving that day and that she wanted him off of the lease. Vestal testified that Hitt told her to come back after she had discussed the issue with Myers. Hitt, however, denied that Vestal had told her in May that Myers was leaving. Hitt further testified at the hearing below that on June 1, 1999, she posted on Vestal's door a note that read "I want to meet with you to go a [sic] few very important matters. Please do this within ten (10) days." The notice did not indicate what matters Hitt wanted to discuss, but in the hearing below, Hitt stated that the notice dealt with Myers' leaving. Neither Vestal nor Myers paid rent for the month of June 1999. Rather, on June 7, 1999, Myers went to Hitt and signed a statement in her presence which reads: "I am leaving Amherst and I am signing off the lease. I live at 228 S. College Dr. Apt. H."

Hitt testified that on June 14, 1999, she both mailed and delivered to Vestal's premises a notice to leave the premises. That notice requested that Vestal and Myers vacate the apartment by June 25, 1999 and listed the reason as non-payment of rent. The notice further warned Vestal and Myers that if they did not leave the premises an eviction action would be initiated against them. Vestal testified that she never received either the mailed or delivered notice to vacate.

On July 12, 1999, appellee filed a complaint in forcible entry and detainer against Vestal and Myers. Appellee also asserted a claim for the June and July rent, totaling $272, and for rent of $136 for the month of August and for each month thereafter that Vestal unlawfully detains appellee's property. The record reveals that the Bowling Green Municipal Court served the summons and complaint by ordinary mail on both Vestal and Myers on July 21, 1999. The bailiff also apparently served the defendants by posting copies of the summons and complaint at the residence. The process mailed to Myers, however, was returned with a notation "No forward order on file."1 Vestal testified at the hearing below that while she received the summons and complaint through the mail she did not receive the one that was allegedly posted on her apartment door.

Vestal answered the complaint with a general denial and further asserted an affirmative defense that appellee had breached the contract first by failing to perform the required rent recertification when she informed Hitt of a change in household income and composition in May 1999. Vestal asserted that if appellee had completed the recertification as required under the lease, she would have been current with her rental payments.

The matter came before the court for a hearing on September 2, 1999. Initially, Vestal, through counsel, informed the court that she was there on a special appearance and moved to dismiss the complaint for insufficiency of process. Vestal argued that service on her was insufficient in that it did not comply with Civ.Rs. 4.1(1) and 4.6. She further asserted that insofar as service on her complied with R.C. 1923.06, that statute is invalid and unconstitutional in that it contradicts the Civil Rules. The court took the matter under advisement and proceeded to take testimony on the pending action, noting that Vestal was not waiving her special appearance by presenting a defense. Michelle Hitt, the manager of the Amherst Village Apartments, testified that although Myers signed a statement on June 7, 1999 that he was living elsewhere, she believed he was still living in the apartment with Vestal. Hitt also admitted that she did not recertify Vestal when Myers signed the statement regarding his moving and that if Vestal had no income and Myers had moved out, a recertification would have reduced Vestal's share of the rent to zero. Finally, Hitt admitted that once she decides to evict a tenant, she has a policy of withholding recertification.

Vestal also testified at the hearing below.

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Related

Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority v. Jackson
423 N.E.2d 177 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1981)
State ex rel. GMS Management Co. v. Callahan
543 N.E.2d 483 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1989)
Colonial American Development Co. v. Griffith
549 N.E.2d 513 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1990)

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Amherst Village Management v. Vestal, Unpublished Decision (10-27-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amherst-village-management-v-vestal-unpublished-decision-10-27-2000-ohioctapp-2000.