G.A.I. Capital Group v. Lisowski

2023 Ohio 4802
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 28, 2023
Docket23 MA 0052
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2023 Ohio 4802 (G.A.I. Capital Group v. Lisowski) 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
G.A.I. Capital Group v. Lisowski, 2023 Ohio 4802 (Ohio Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

[Cite as G.A.I. Capital Group v. Lisowski, 2023-Ohio-4802.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT MAHONING COUNTY

G.A.I. CAPITAL GROUP LLC,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

EDWARD LISOWSKI et al.,

Defendants-Appellants.

OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY Case No. 23 MA 0052

Civil Appeal from the Mahoning County Court No. 5 of Mahoning County, Ohio Case No. 2022 CV F 00010

BEFORE: Carol Ann Robb, Cheryl L. Waite, Mark A. Hanni, Judges.

JUDGMENT: Affirmed in part, Reversed in part, Remanded.

Atty. Brian A. Coulter, Brouse McDowell LPA, for Plaintiff-Appellee and

Atty. Jeffrey A. Kurz, for Defendants-Appellants.

Dated: December 28, 2023 –2–

Robb, J.

{¶1} Appellants, Edward Lisowski, and Kimberly Lisowski and Concepts & Creativity, LLC, appeal the judgment granting Appellee, G.A.I. Capital Group, LLC, judgment and damages in the amount of $7,253.50 plus interest following a bench trial. Appellants raise nine assignments of error. {¶2} For the following reasons, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings. Statement of the Facts and Case {¶3} Appellee filed suit in January of 2022 against Appellants Edward and Kimberly Lisowski individually and their limited liability company, Concepts & Creativity, LLC (hereafter C&C). Appellee purchased the building and acquired two leases listing Appellants as lessors. Appellants owned and operated a dance studio from the building until sometime in 2020. {¶4} Appellee listed three causes of action: breach of contract, breach of guaranty, and unjust enrichment. Appellee claimed that after it purchased the building, Appellants failed to pay their monthly lease total of $2,100 for July through October of 2020. And after Appellants vacated the building, Appellee claims to have incurred damages to repair the interior and for trash removal. Attached to the complaint are Appellants’ leases, marked as exhibits A and B. {¶5} Appellants Edward Lisowski and Kimberly Lisowski filed separate answers, and Edward filed a cross-claim against Kimberly, his ex-wife. Appellants also filed separate summary judgment motions, which the trial court summarily overruled. {¶6} The case was heard at a bench trial in February of 2023. Three witnesses testified at trial. {¶7} Appellee’s first witness was Attorney John McNally, counsel for Canfield Properties, LLC, the company that leased the premises to Appellants and sold the real property to Appellee. McNally did not draft the lease agreements, but authenticated the two leases at trial. The 2009 lease required a monthly payment of $607 and the 2008 lease required a monthly payment of $862.50.

Case No. 23 MA 0052 –3–

{¶8} McNally likewise authenticated a ledger of amounts Appellants paid to Canfield Properties in 2020. The ledger reflects payments in the amount of $2,100 for January, February, March, April, and May. For the month of June 2020, the ledger indicates “free rent.” And for July, the ledger reflects payments in the amount of $1,050. (Trial Tr. 14-19; Exhibit C.) {¶9} The president of G.A.I. Capital Group, Terrill Vidale, also testified. He explained how his company, G.A.I., acquired the building and Appellants’ leases from Canfield Properties. It consisted of nine rental units. He testified twice that Appellants occupied five units, units B,C, D, I, and O, with a collective total monthly rent of $2,100. {¶10} G.A.I. was to first collect lease payments from Appellants beginning in July of 2020. Vidale dealt with both Edward and Kimberly regarding the property. Vidale said he never agreed to give Appellants free rent. {¶11} Vidale testified that when he encountered Appellants, they kept promising to pay him but never did. Finally, he gave them a three-day notice to vacate, and they moved out. (Trial Tr. 79-80, 96.) {¶12} He said Appellants were not prevented from cleaning out their rented units when they left. Vidale said he changed the locks at the end of October of 2020, but did not deny Appellants access to clean out their spaces. Vidale took photographs of the condition of the property when Appellants left. Appellee introduced his photographs of the damaged floor, walls, and discarded items left in the spaces. Because he is a commercial landlord, he usually takes photographs when a tenant leaves a property. Vidale paid $1,800 to have the units cleaned and repaired. (Trial Tr. 63-67.) On cross- examination, he said he did not remember whether the mirrors were still on the walls when Appellants vacated the units. He did not remove the mirrors, but he paid another individual to do it. The walls were damaged from where the mirrors were hung requiring resurfacing of drywall. (85-87.) {¶13} Janice Semple was the sole defense witness to testify. She was C&C’s office manager and is Kimberly’s mother. Semple was not present when any of the leases were agreed upon or executed. She described Edward as not being active in the day-to- day business operations. She explained how he mostly helped Kimberly when something needed repaired or for maintenance. (Trial Tr. 103-105; 119.)

Case No. 23 MA 0052 –4–

{¶14} Semple was present during an August 2020 meeting between Kimberly, Edward, and Vidale. During this meeting, Vidale expressed concerns that Appellants had not yet re-signed their lease. She recalls he was also asking for rent payments at this meeting. {¶15} According to Semple, Kimberly refused to sign a new lease because her number of students had significantly reduced due to Covid-19. Semple stated Kimberly volunteered to leave the space, but Vidale indicated he did not want an empty building. Semple stated: “[Vidale] did not want the building empty. He was afraid the banks were going to come back on him because he - - he said he had a million dollar loan with the bank * * *.” When Semple was asked about whether he told Appellants not to pay rent, she said, “He said not to worry about it.” (Trial Tr. 103.) {¶16} Semple explained on cross-examination that the dance company was not actually using the space during these last few months because of Covid-19, but they did keep their dance studio property there. The dance classes were being held outside and at another location because of the pandemic. They had very low enrollment numbers. (Trial Tr. 128-129.) {¶17} C&C vacated the premises on October 30, 2020. Semple agreed the photos of the units accurately depicted the condition of the premises when they left. They intended to return to remove trash, but according to Kimberly, Vidale had changed the locks. They left mirrors hanging on the walls and a pile of trash. Semple said that they did not contact Vidale in order to gain access and finish their clean up. She stated, “[w]hen you’re told you have to stay away that’s what you do.” (Trial Tr. 110-117.) {¶18} No party or individual who was present when either lease agreement was negotiated or executed testified at trial. {¶19} The parties submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the trial court issued judgment in Appellee’s favor on March 17, 2023. The court rejected Appellants’ statute of conveyances and statute of frauds arguments. It explained the leases were for a term of less than three years, and the leases were validated via the parties’ partial performance since Appellants had occupied the space and paid rent for more than a decade.

Case No. 23 MA 0052 –5–

{¶20} The trial court found there was no ambiguity in either lease agreement and that the “Tenant” as defined in both included the limited liability company and its members. The court stated in part: “the Court holds that all Defendants are parties to both Lease Agreements and that they are jointly and severally liable for Plaintiff’s damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 Ohio 4802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gai-capital-group-v-lisowski-ohioctapp-2023.