Boice v. Emshoff, Unpublished Decision (12-3-1998)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1998
DocketCase No. 13-98-23.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Boice v. Emshoff, Unpublished Decision (12-3-1998) (Boice v. Emshoff, Unpublished Decision (12-3-1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Boice v. Emshoff, Unpublished Decision (12-3-1998), (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

OPINION
Trina Emshoff ("Appellant") appeals the judgment of the Fostoria Municipal Court awarding damages in the amount of $1,673.17 to Sara and William Boice ("Appellees").

In March 1997, the Appellees purchased a house located at 124 North Grant Street, Fostoria, Ohio. Prior to renting the house, the Appellees cleaned the carpet because the carpet had a heavy pet odor.

In April 1997, Appellant contacted the Appellees regarding the rental of this house. The Appellant and the Appellees entered into a one-year written lease for the property for four hundred dollars a month beginning on May 1, 1997. Appellant gave the Appellees a four hundred dollar security deposit.

Appellant moved into the premises but the house required several repairs. For instance, on May 25, 1997, the lights in the living room, dining room, and bathroom went out because of an electrical problem. The Appellees investigated the problem on May 28, 1997. While fixing the problem, the Appellees left the fuse box open, the insulation off and the wires exposed on the back porch for four or five days. The Appellees instructed Appellant not to let her six-year old son or anybody else on the back porch. In addition, after Appellant took occupancy, the carpet still had an odor to it. The Appellees removed the carpet from the house on June 2, 1997. The carpet was not replaced prior to Appellant moving out on August 25, 1997. Other problems existed with the house throughout Appellant's tenancy, including a roof leak.

For May and June 1997, Appellant paid the monthly rent of four hundred dollars. Appellant paid the rent for July 1997, but she stopped payment on the rent check. Appellant did not pay rent for August 1997.

On July 22, 1997, Appellees initiated a forcible entry and detainer action with claims for damages against Appellant. On August 7, 1997, the Appellees and the Appellant entered into a consent entry on the issue of possession. The issue of damages was continued. Appellant answered the complaint and amended complaint and filed counterclaims for violations of R.C. 5321.04, for a breach of implied warranty of habitability and for the failure of the Appellees to return her security deposit.

The Appellees testified that the house was infested with fleas after Appellant moved out and that it could not be leased without extermination of the fleas. The house was exterminated on the eighth, thirteenth, and twenty-fourth of September 1997 at a cost of $132.50.

On February 11, 1998, a hearing was held in the Fostoria Municipal Court and the Appellant's counterclaims were dismissed. The trial court awarded the Appellees $1,673.17 on their claims. Of this judgment award, the Appellees were awarded $1,200 for rent for July, August, and September 1997; $15 for late charge for rent for July; $15 for late charge for rent for August; $81 for late fees for rent for July; $72 for late fees for rent for August; $25 for stop payment of July's rent check; $10.59 for a door lock and $2.08 for keys; $75 for cleaning the premises; $132.50 for exterminating the premises; and $45 for trash removal from the garage.

On March 25, 1998, the Appellant moved the trial court for a new trial which was denied. Appellant now asserts six assignments of error.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. I
The court erred in dismissing Appellant's claim for breach of landlord's duties under Ohio Revised Code Section 5321.04.

Under this assignment of error, Appellant contends that the trial court erred as a matter of law in refusing to admit her testimony as to the rental value of the rental premises in its defective condition. Appellant also contends that the trial court's decision to dismiss Appellant's contract claim for breach of landlord's duties under R.C. 5321.04 was against the manifest weight of the evidence.

First, Appellant claims she should have been able to testify as to the rental value of the house. Appellant was asked to give her opinion in regards to the rental value of the house by her attorney, Mr. Patel. Mr. Marley objected on behalf of the Appellees and the trial court sustained the objection.

Q: In your opinion, what is the, what would you say would be the rental value of the premises in the condition it was in?

MR. MARLEY: Object, unless she's qualified.

THE COURT: You gotta be qualified.

MR. MARLEY: He's asking her to give an opinion as to what the rental should be and —.

THE COURT: Yeah.

MR. MARLEY: — of the condition and I don't think she is an expert.

THE COURT: I don't see any testimony that she is a real estate agent or in the business.

MR. PATEL: Your Honor —

MS. EMSHOFF: I —

MR. PATEL: — there is case law that will allow tenants to —

THE COURT: What?

MR. PATEL: There is case law that allows [a] tenant to testify as to the rental value of the premises in the defective condition.

THE COURT: We've established the value of the premises because she paid it. That ended that. I know what you're talking about. We're not talking about a place where that, where we're quarreling over the rent. We're talking about a situation where she has paid the rent.

MR. PATEL: Your Honor, that the con — that would be the value of the premises in inhabitable condition. We're alleging the condition of the premises was not habitable. In her opinion what is — what is —

THE COURT: I haven't heard any testimony to the effect that it is [un]inhabitable yet by anybody who is an expert in this area.

MR. PATEL: But there's case law that allows tenants to —

THE COURT: I understand that. I, I've been down this road, oh, about 25 years of being down this road. At least that. March on. Objection sustained.

Case law does not, however, support the trial court's decision to sustain the objection by Appellees. "A lessee of real property is competent to give opinion testimony as to the rental value of the leased premises." Smith v. Padgett (1987), 32 Ohio St.3d 344, paragraph two of the syllabus. "Clearly, thecompetence of a lessee to give an opinion as to the reasonable rental value of the leased premises is meaningless unless such opinion is relevant to the determination of damages." (Emphasissic.) Id. at 346. The issue of damages was disputed by Appellant in this case. As the measure of damages is the difference between the rental value of the property in its defective condition and what the rental value would have been had the property been maintained, Appellant's testimony was relevant on the issue of damages. Id. at paragraph one of the syllabus.

Appellant later was asked why she stopped payment on the July rent check and why she did not pay the rent for August; she testified as follows:

A. The house was not the house that I had rented. It was not what I was promised.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Boice v. Emshoff, Unpublished Decision (12-3-1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boice-v-emshoff-unpublished-decision-12-3-1998-ohioctapp-1998.