Eye v. Sal's Heating & Cooling, Inc.

2020 Ohio 6737
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 2020
Docket109212
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2020 Ohio 6737 (Eye v. Sal's Heating & Cooling, 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
Eye v. Sal's Heating & Cooling, Inc., 2020 Ohio 6737 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as Eye v. Sal's Heating & Cooling, Inc., 2020-Ohio-6737.]

COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

KEVIN EYE, :

Plaintiff-Appellant, : No. 109212 v. :

SAL’S HEATING & COOLING, INC., ET AL., :

Defendants-Appellees. :

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: December 17, 2020

Civil Appeal from the Parma Municipal Court Small Claims Division Case No. 18CVI05187

Appearances:

J. Brian Kennedy, L.P.A., and J. Brian Kennedy, for appellant.

Dan Morell & Associates, L.L.C., Daniel A. Morell, Jr., Rebecca M. Black, and Richard S. Haseltine, III, for appellee Sal’s Heating & Cooling, Inc.

Baker & Hostetler, L.L.P., and Jeremiah J. Wood, for appellee Trane U.S., Inc. LARRY A. JONES, SR., J.:

Plaintiff-appellant Kevin Eye (“Eye”) appeals from the October 16,

2019 judgment of the Parma Municipal Court in favor of defendant-appellee Sal’s

Heating & Cooling and defendant-appellee Trane, U.S., Inc. (“Trane”). For the

reasons that follow, we affirm.

Procedural and Factual Background

On December 14, 2018, Eye filed this complaint in the Parma

Municipal Court, seeking damages based on alleged violations of the Ohio

Consumer Sales Practices Act (“OCSPA”) and breach of warranty. The case

proceeded to a hearing before a magistrate on March 21, 2019. The following facts

were adduced at the hearing.

In December 2013, Eye purchased a furnace manufactured by Trane

from Sal’s Heating & Cooling for his suburban Cleveland home; he received a

limited warranty on the furnace from Trane. Sal’s Heating & Cooling installed the

furnace in May 2014, and Eye registered the limited warranty with Trane in the

summer of 2014. From the time the furnace was installed in May 2014, until the

time in question, which was March 2018, Eye performed all the maintenance on

the furnace himself; he testified that he read the alerts and messages on the unit

and changed the filters. Eye admitted that he did not have any background in

heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (“HVAC”), and that his furnace was an

“incredibly uniquely fancy system.” In early March 2018, the furnace stopped functioning and Eye

contacted Sal’s Heating & Cooling. By all accounts, at the relevant time, Cleveland

was experiencing particularly cold temperatures and there had been storms in the

area that resulted in “blackouts” or “brownouts” of power.1

On Saturday, March 3, 2018, outside of regular business hours

(which the company considered Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. through 4:00

p.m.), an HVAC technician from Sal’s Heating & Cooling, Zachary Rigney

(“Rigney”), went to Eye’s home at Eye’s request. Rigney examined Eye’s

thermostat and determined that the “thermostat [was] calling for heat, but it [was]

not heating the home.” Thus, Rigney obtained Eye’s permission to look at the

furnace to diagnose the problem. Rigney informed Eye that there would a $99

plus tax service call.2 Eye agreed; he did not contest that charge at trial, nor does

he contest it now. By Eye’s own admission, prior to Rigney starting any diagnostic

work, he (Eye) signed a service order that contained the following provision:

IT HAS BEEN EXPLAINED TO ME THAT THE SERVICE CALL RATES WILL APPLY IF THE SERVICE TECHNICIAN DETERMINES THAT REPAIRS MADE TODAY ARE UNRELATED TO WARRANTY AGREEMENT OR REPAIRS ARE MADE UNDER WARRANTY OUTSIDE OF NORMAL BUSINESS HOURS OF 8:00 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY.

(Capitalization sic.)

1Oneof the witnesses explained that a blackout is a complete loss of power, while a brownout is intermittent loss of power that results in the “flickering” of electricity.

2The testimony revealed that the $99 fee is the standard service charge, regardless of whether the service trip is made during normal business operating hours or after hours. Rigney determined that the furnace needed a new circuit board and

contacted Sal Sidoti (“Sidoti”), the president and CEO of Sal’s Heating & Cooling.

Sidoti suggested that Rigney try installing a universal circuit board that they had at

the shop; Sidoti suggested this in an attempt to save Eye money and get his furnace

functioning quickly.

Rigney traveled from Eye’s home to Sal’s Heating & Cooling shop,

both of which are located in North Royalton, Ohio. He retrieved a universal circuit

board and returned to Eye’s home. Eye contends that Rigney brought back the

“wrong part.” Rigney testified, however, that he got the universal circuit board

Sidoti suggested but, unfortunately, the circuit board was not compatible with

Eye’s furnace. Rigney testified that he spent two hours at Eye’s house and Eye was

not charged for the trip to the shop for the circuit board and back to Eye’s house

that Saturday. Eye was charged a one-time flat fee of $99 for the service call and

diagnosis.

Rigney testified that after the universal circuit board did not work,

he and Eye talked about Rigney obtaining the compatible circuit board the next

day, Sunday, from Wolff Brothers Supply. Rigney testified that he told Eye that

Wolff Brothers Supply was not open on Sundays, so the business would have to

open its shop for Rigney to get the part and that would cost Eye an additional

$300.

Rigney testified that he went over the pricing, and the fact that,

because it was a weekend, the repairs would be out of warranty “multiple times” with Eye. He testified that “everything I had to do that night was a headache,” but

Eye wanted his heat restored over the weekend rather than wait until Monday and

he worked as hard as he could to make that happen. Rigney was adamant that he

explained all the charges to Eye, testifying that he told Eye,

so if you want to proceed with opening up the wholesale house which is $300.00 and you want to proceed in getting a circuit board then I have to make sure that you’re okay with that before I run and go ─ I’m not going to just walk out the house blind and say hey maybe this guy is going to pay $1,100.00.

According to Rigney, Eye agreed to the charges.

Thus, the following day, Sunday, March 4, 2018, Rigney traveled

from Sal’s Heating & Cooling in North Royalton to Wolff Brothers Supply in

Bedford Heights to obtain the proper circuit board. Rigney then went to Eye’s

home that Sunday to install the circuit board. Prior to the installation, Rigney

presented Eye with another service order detailing the fixed-rate cost of $810 for

the circuit board and the $300 warehouse opening charge. Eye signed the service

order, which contained the same previously mentioned language that service rates

applied to repairs made outside of the warranty or repairs made under warranty

but outside of normal business hours. Rigney also testified that Eye did not ask

him to leave the old circuit board, so he took it with him and threw it away, as he

customarily would do.

According to Eye’s testimony, he did not contest the charges at the

time the service was being rendered. He also did not inquire as to whether the

parts or service would be covered by the warranty at the time the service was being rendered. Eye testified that he asked Rigney “how much this was going to cost and

he said $810.00.” Eye admitted that Rigney presented him with a service order

that listed the $810 circuit board charge and $300 warehouse opening fee, but

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2020 Ohio 6737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eye-v-sals-heating-cooling-inc-ohioctapp-2020.