DeCastro v. Wellston City School District Board of Education

94 Ohio St. 3d 197
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 2002
DocketNos. 00-1853 and 00-2187
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 94 Ohio St. 3d 197 (DeCastro v. Wellston City School District Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeCastro v. Wellston City School District Board of Education, 94 Ohio St. 3d 197 (Ohio 2002).

Opinions

Moyer, C J.

Appellee Mark DeCastro filed this action asserting two causes of action in tort and one cause of action for breach of contract. He named as defendants the Wellston City School District Board of Education, the Superintendent of the Wellston City Schools, and the Principal of Wellston High School during the 1997-1998 academic year. That year was DeCastro’s senior year at the high school.

The board and the Wellston Teachers Association (“WTA”) were involved in a labor dispute and work stoppage on March 17, 1998. On that afternoon, a replacement teacher, while being escorted after school from the high school building to a van, was hit by a thrown egg. DeCastro, who denied having thrown the egg, asserted that the teacher then looked directly at him, gestured to [198]*198challenge him, and verbally threatened him before getting into the van. DeCastro further asserted that the replacement teacher continued gesturing from the van and that DeCastro responded by pounding his hands on the side of the van and pointing his index finger at the teacher from outside the van window.

The board thereafter imposed a four-day in-school suspension upon him, which he served in May 1998 and which coincided with his last four days of high school. He asserted that the suspension caused him to miss out on “activities that are unique to the final days of a high school senior.”

In support of his claim of breach of contract, DeCastro asserted that in settling the labor dispute, the board and the WTA entered into a written agreement that included a nonreprisal clause that provided as follows: “There shall be no reprisals of any kind against the Association, its officers, members, agents or against any employees, parents, or students for any action or activity by or failure to act occurring during the March, 1998 Wellston School strike or related in any way to said strike by the Board of Education as individuals or in a collective body or by any administrator, other person employed by the Board of Education or any agent of the Board of Education.”

DeCastro claimed that his actions on March 17, 1998, were “related * * * to said strike” within the contemplation of the contractual agreement, that he was a third-party beneficiary of the agreement, and that the defendants violated the agreement in imposing disciplinary action against him.

DeCastro prayed for relief in the form of “appropriate compensatory damages,” reasonable attorney fees and costs, and such further relief as the court deemed just and proper.

Following discovery, the appellants moved for summary judgment, asserting, inter alia, that DeCastro had failed to “allege any economic losses that can be compensable under a breach of contract action” and had, in fact, suffered no economic loss.

In response, DeCastro acknowledged that the facts before the court did not support his tort claims, leaving only his contract claim as a third-party beneficiary. He denied that he was required to allege economic loss to state a cause of action for breach of contract, arguing that he had been “damaged by the discipline imposed upon him which should not have been issued under the nonreprisal clause” and that a jury could “adequately and fairly assess the value of such a failure to abide by the agreement.”

The trial court entered summary judgment in favor of the appellants based upon DeCastro’s acknowledgement that his tort claims lacked merit and upon its finding that DeCastro failed to establish any measurable item of damage that would be compensable under a contract claim.

[199]*199The court of appeals, in a split decision, deemed itself bound to follow the first paragraph of the syllabus of First Natl. Bank of Barnesville v. W. Union Tel. Co. (1876), 30 Ohio St. 555, 1876 WL 210, which provides, “In case of a breach of contract, actual damages not being proved, nominal damages may be recovered.” It reversed and remanded the cause for further proceedings.

The court of appeals certified a conflict to this court, finding that its decision conflicted with those of the Sixth District in Munoz v. Flower Hosp. (1985), 30 Ohio App.3d 162, 30 OBR 303, 507 N.E.2d 360, and the Ninth District in Textron Fin. Corp. v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. (1996), 115 Ohio App.3d 137, 684 N.E.2d 1261, and Hackathorn v. Springfield Local School Dist. Bd. of Edn. (1994), 94 Ohio App.3d 319, 640 N.E.2d 882.

The case is now before this court upon our determination that a conflict exists (case No. 00-2187) and upon the allowance of a discretionary appeal (case No. 00-1853).

The question certified by the court of appeals asks “whether nominal damages can be recovered where actual monetary damages cannot be proven in a breach of contract claim.” It is established, both by our controlling precedent in First Natl. Bank of Barnesville and multiple legal treatises, that the answer to this question, strictly speaking, is in the affirmative. See 11 Williston on Contracts (3 Ed.1968), Section 1339A (“An unexcused failure to perform a contract is a legal wrong. Action will lie for the breach although it causes no injury. Nominal damages are then awarded.”); see, also, 3 Restatement of the Law 2d, Contracts (1981), Section 346 (“[1] The injured party has a right to damages for any breach by a party against whom the contract is enforceable unless the claim for damages has been suspended or discharged. [2] If the breach caused no loss or if the amount of the loss is not proved under the rules stated in this Chapter, a small sum fixed without regard to the amount of loss will be awarded as nominal damages.”).

We affirm the first paragraph of the syllabus of First Natl. Bank of Barnesville only to the extent that we hold that in a case where a plaintiff proves breach of contract at trial but fails to prove actual damages resulting from that breach, the trial court may enter judgment for the plaintiff and award nominal damages.

However, an affirmative answer to the question certified to us is not dispositive of the case at bar, as we are left with the question whether nominal damages must always be awarded upon the breach of a contractual duty. Specifically, we are called upon to resolve a case in which the plaintiff not only failed to provide evidence of actual damages in response to a motion for summary judgment but could not even theorize the existence of economic damages.

Although the law cited above establishes that nominal damages are recoverable upon proof of a breach of contract, courts have expressed “puzzlement” with the [200]*200rule, Scallon v. U.S. Ag. Ctr., Inc. (N.D.Iowa 1999), 42 F.Supp.2d 867, 871, citing Chronister Oil Co. v. Unocal Refining & Marketing (C.A.7, 1994), 34 F.3d 462. The court in Chronister reversed a case and remanded it for entry of nominal damages, acknowledging, however, that “for reasons we do not understand every victim of a breach of contract, unlike a tort victim, is entitled” to nominal damages. Id. at 466.

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Bluebook (online)
94 Ohio St. 3d 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decastro-v-wellston-city-school-district-board-of-education-ohio-2002.