Glyco v. Schultz

289 N.E.2d 919, 35 Ohio Misc. 25, 62 Ohio Op. 2d 459, 1972 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 144
CourtSylvania Municipal Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1972
DocketNo. 3851
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 289 N.E.2d 919 (Glyco v. Schultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Sylvania Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glyco v. Schultz, 289 N.E.2d 919, 35 Ohio Misc. 25, 62 Ohio Op. 2d 459, 1972 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 144 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

LachiN, J.

Plaintiff commenced this action in. forcible entry and detainer on May 25, 1972, seeking possession of certain premises described as 203 North King Road, Holland, Ohio, and praying for rent allegedly due.

Upon defendants’ motion the first cause of action of the complaint was dismissed for failure to serve a three-day notice as required by R. C. 1923.04.

Thereafter defendants answered denying that rent was legally owed and raised affirmative defenses alleging that plaintiff had breached the lease contract, had breached the implied warranty of habitability and had breached the implied covenant of quiet enjoyment. Defendants counterclaimed for damages as the result of the breaches noted above.

There is no substantial dispute about the facts in this case. In September of 1970, plaintiff, Mrs. Jane Grlyco, rented a house and thirty acres located at 203 North King Road to defendants. Under the oral month-to-month lease contract the stipulated rent was to be two hundred dollars ($200.00) per month.

The defendants introduced evdence to show that, when they moved into the house in September of 1970, there existed serious and substantial violations of the Lucas County Housing Code. The electrical system was in a state of disrepair and woefully underservieed, the furnace was faulty, the steps were deteriorating, and the upstairs floor was weak. These conditions continued throughout the tenancy and resulted in great inconvenience to defendants, loss of personal property and expenditures for repairs. This evidence was not contradicted by plaintiff.

[27]*27The testimony indicated a constant and continual need to purchase and replace burned out light bulbs and fuses. Two television sets and an electric clock burnt up and were lost, and an electrical fire started due to the condition of the electrical system. The furnace was not properly maintained and on a number of occasions refused to work or emitted smoke and fumes soiling the walls and furniture. Repairs to the furnace were contracted and paid for by defendants. The unmaintained steps collapsed when defendant’s mother stepped upon them, necessitating their repair. The weak floors rendered it unsafe for the father to go into the children’s rooms.

Defendants further stated, and were not contradicted, that the plaintiff landlord was notified by letter on at least three occasions about the condition of the house. Plaintiff refused to repair the defects or to reimburse defendants for their losses or expenses of repair. In fact, plaintiff never inspected or repaired the property during the defendants’ tenure, or during the tenure of the former tenants. Instead, plaintiff spent the majority of each year in Florida, leaving no manager or caretaker to maintain the property in her absence.

Defendants testified that damages due to the above conditions amounted to one hundred forty six dollars ($146.00) in repairs and the loss of a one year old color television set purchased for six hundred fifty dollars ($650.-00). These loses do not include the second television set which was borrowed from defendants’ brother, the clock for which no value was given, and is exclusive of the money spent for replacement of light bulbs and fuses.

In August 1971, less than a year after defendants moved in, a third person, a farmer, entered upon the rented property and began plowing. Defendants had the sheriff eject him. Plaintiff then notified defendants that she had rented the land to the third party. Plaintiff denied defendants’ request for an adjustment in rent due to these changed circumstances. The portions of the property where defendants had formerly planted their garden, pastured their pony and tended a strawberry patch, were [28]*28thereafter plowed and planted by the new tenant.. The defendants were forced to give away the pony which they had purchased for forty dollars. For the remainder of the tenancy, the defendants did not have the use of this part of the property.

Throughout these events, even in the face of the conditions of the house and plaintiff’s refusals to repair, defendants continued to pay the full rent. In November 1971, defendants began to pay one-half of the rent each month in an effort to secure the necessary repairs. These payments continued through March 1972. The evidence further showed that the former tenants, university students who had rented only the house, paid one hundred twenty dollars ($120.00) per month rent throughout their tenancy.

The uncontroverted testimony of Mr. Donald Brown, Housing Sanitarian, Lucas County District Board of Health and Mr. Donald Werr, Jr., Electrical Inspector, Lucas County Department of Inspection established that the following violations of the Minimum Housing Code and the standards thereunder existed on the property: electrical service substandard (60 amps), insufficient electrical circuits, insufficient electrical outlets, surface wiring of lamp cord (18 guage), use of surface outlets (“fire hazard” outlets), use of oversized fuses, bathroom outlets not grounded, use of brass light sockets, inoperative porch light socket, failure to maintain furnace, failure to maintain steps, weak floors upstairs, leak in kitchen ceiling, sewage empties on ground, broken floor tile in bathroom, and insufficient ceiling height in upstairs bedrooms.

Both inspectors stated that the condition of the house, especially the substantial electrical violations constituted a serious danger to the health and safety of the occupants. As a result of these conditions, the house was subsequently condemned as unfit for human habitation.

In brief, the court holds that under Ohio law a lease is a contract and should be interpreted and construed like any other contract. The law of the place of making of a contract enters into and becomes a part- of the contract, [29]*29and where a lessor breaches a material duty imposed by such law the contract is breached. Standards established by any local building, housing, or health codes, in existence at the time and place of the making of a lease contract enter into and become a part of the contract, and where a lessor fails to abide by the provisions of snch codes he is liable to the lessee in a snit sounding in contract. Such breach gives rise to the ordinary contract remedies.

In addition where a lease contract is made in violation of a statutory prohibition designed for the protection of health and welfare, such as a housing code, the contract is illegal and void. An illegal contract confers no rights on the wrongdoer.

In Ohio a lease is a contract as well as conveyance and is to be interpreted with reference to contract principles. Sigler-Bach Co. v. Wurlitzer Co. (1929), 8 Ohio Law Abs. 267, 268; Cook v. Village of Paulding (1965), 33 O. O. 2d 165, 167, 207 N. E. 2d 405; Shinkle, Wilson & Kreis Co. v. Birney and Seymour (1903), 68 Ohio St. 328, 333; Lauch v. Monning (1968), 15 Ohio App. 2d 112; See also: Javins v. First National Realty Corp. (1970), 428 F. 2d 1071, 1075 (D. C. Cir.) cert. denied 400 U. S. 925; Lemle v. Breeden (1969), 51 Hawaii 426, 462 P. 2d 470; Medico-Dental Bldg. Co. v. Horton & Converse (1942), 21 Cal. 2d 411, 132 P. 2d 457; Ingram v. Fred (Tex. Civ. App., 1918), 210 S. W. 298.

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Bluebook (online)
289 N.E.2d 919, 35 Ohio Misc. 25, 62 Ohio Op. 2d 459, 1972 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glyco-v-schultz-ohmunictsylvani-1972.