Byrneport Apts. II v. Williams

2020 Ohio 3488
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 2020
DocketL-19-1277
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 Ohio 3488 (Byrneport Apts. II v. Williams) 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
Byrneport Apts. II v. Williams, 2020 Ohio 3488 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as Byrneport Apts. II v. Williams, 2020-Ohio-3488.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT LUCAS COUNTY

Byrneport Apartments II, an Court of Appeals No. L-19-1277 Ohio Limited Partnership Trial Court No. CVG-19-13869 Appellee

v.

Kaleigh Williams DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellant Decided: June 26, 2020

*****

Milton E. Pommeranz, for appellee.

Kaser S. Bhatti and Alicia Kingston, for appellant.

ZMUDA, P.J.

I. Introduction

{¶ 1} In her appeal in this forcible entry and detainer action, appellant, Kaleigh

Williams, challenges the judgment of the Toledo Municipal Court, Housing Division,

overruling appellant’s objections to the magistrate’s decision, and entering judgment in

favor of Byrneport Apartments II, an Ohio Limited Partnership (“landlord”). A. Facts and Procedural Background

{¶ 2} Pursuant to a lease agreement executed by the parties in January 2019,

appellant is a tenant at an apartment facility owned by landlord located at 901 Byrneport

Drive in Toledo, Ohio. Under the terms of the lease, appellant’s lease is HUD-

subsidized, and her portion of the monthly rent is $25, due on the first of the month.

{¶ 3} On July 12, 2019, landlord served appellant with a ten-day notice to vacate

the premises due to appellant’s non-payment of rent for the month of July. Subsequently,

on July 30, 2019, landlord filed a complaint in forcible entry and detainer with the trial

court, alleging non-payment of rent, and seeking restitution of the premises and $168.43

in delinquent rent and late charges for the period ending July 31, 2019.

{¶ 4} The matter proceeded to a hearing before a magistrate on August 23, 2019.

At the hearing, appellant argued that the parties’ course of conduct established a pattern

of landlord accepting her rent after the first of the month. Further, appellant contended

that the late fees charged by landlord were unconscionable, and that it would be

inequitable to evict her and her four children from the premises.

{¶ 5} Following the hearing, the magistrate issued a decision on September 5,

2019, which was subsequently amended on September 18, 2019, in which the magistrate

found that landlord proved that appellant did not timely tender her July 2019 rent.

Consequently, the magistrate entered judgment in favor of landlord for possession of the

premises.

2. {¶ 6} On October 2, 2019, appellant filed objections to the magistrate’s decision,

arguing that the magistrate failed to consider the parties’ course of conduct in rendering a

decision. Specifically, appellant asserted that landlord “allowed her to repeatedly pay her

rent late. [Appellant] moved into the premises in January 2018, and only once in

February 2018, was the rent timely paid. The rent ledger clearly shows that [appellant’s]

rent was continually paid late and accepted by [landlord].” After reciting her rent

payment history, appellant went on to contend that landlord previously accepted rent

outside the ten-day notice period in November 2018, and therefore appellant argued that

she should have been permitted to remit her rent payment more than ten days after July 1,

thus rendering landlord’s July 12, 2019 notice premature.

{¶ 7} Next, appellant argued that the late payments assessed to her by landlord

were unconscionable. Under the terms of the lease agreement, landlord was entitled to

assess a late fee of $5 if appellant paid her rent by the sixth day of the month, plus an

additional $1 per day thereafter. Because appellant’s portion of the monthly rent was

only $25, appellant argued that a late fee of $1 per day was unconscionable because it

exceeded appellant’s daily rental rate of between $.81 and $.89. In sum, appellant

asserted that she “should be given credit for each month she was charged late fees in

excess of the one-time fee of $5.00.” According to appellant, her account would actually

have a credit of $13.43 after crediting back the late fee charges.

{¶ 8} On October 15, 2019, landlord filed its memorandum in opposition to

appellant’s objections. In its memorandum, landlord asserted that appellant “has paid her

3. rent late almost every month that she has lived at Byrneport, but July, 2019 was the first

month that she attempted to pay after a 10-day notice had expired. At no point did

[landlord] violate its policy * * * of not accepting rent after the 10 day after [sic] has

expired.” Landlord explained that the lease provides two options when a tenant fails to

timely pay rent: either accept the rent and apply a late fee or terminate the lease.

According to landlord, “once the 10-day notice is served, the tenant must pay within that

10-day timeframe, otherwise a FED Complaint is filed.” In support of its argument,

landlord recited the relevant language in the lease, which provides:

After serv[ice] of the 10-Day Notice tenant’s rent will only be accepted if

tenant schedules a meeting with the apartment manager to pay the

delinquent rent which meeting must take place within 10 days of the date

the 10 Day Notice is served on the tenant. Tenant’s rent will only be

accepted if it is paid in full during this 10 day period.

{¶ 9} Landlord then referenced testimony provided by its compliance manager,

Patricia Kennedy, in which she clarified that landlord previously issued appellant a 10-

day notice on November 7, 2018, which would have expired on Monday, November 19,

2018. Appellant tendered her rent payment on November 19, 2018, and landlord

therefore rejected appellant’s contention that it failed to enforce the above-referenced

lease provision in November 2018.

{¶ 10} Unlike in November 2018, landlord insisted that in this instance appellant

failed to tender her payment within ten days of its service of notice on appellant on

4. July 12, 2019. Rather, according to testimony from landlord’s property manager,

Charissa Hunt, appellant did not initiate contact with landlord until she called Hunt on

July 23, 2019, 11 days after the ten-day notice was served.

{¶ 11} As to appellant’s assertion that landlord’s late fees were unconscionable,

landlord argued that its fees were based upon those set forth in the Department of

Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) handbook with respect to Section 8

apartment complexes, which provides: “Additionally, the owner may charge a fee of $1

per day for each additional day the rent remains unpaid for the month.” Because this

lease was a standard, HUD-preapproved lease, landlord asserted that the late fees were

not unconscionable. Moreover, landlord noted that it was not “seeking to evict

[appellant] for not paying late fees, but for not paying her rent for July, 2019.”

{¶ 12} On October 24, 2019, appellant filed a motion to strike portions of

landlord’s memorandum in opposition to her objections, arguing that landlord improperly

introduced new evidence in its memorandum by attaching an affidavit from Kennedy, in

which Kennedy identified a money order that appellant allegedly used to pay her June

2019 rent, thereby contradicting appellant’s hearing testimony that she did not pay June

or July rent because she was under the impression that those months had already been

prepaid. According to appellant, landlord’s introduction of additional evidence following

the hearing was improper under Civ.R. 53.

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Bluebook (online)
2020 Ohio 3488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrneport-apts-ii-v-williams-ohioctapp-2020.