Herris v. Estate of Michel

2025 Ohio 5447
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 2025
DocketL-24-1298
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 5447 (Herris v. Estate of Michel) 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
Herris v. Estate of Michel, 2025 Ohio 5447 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as Herris v. Estate of Michel, 2025-Ohio-5447.]

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

RODNEY HERRIS COURT OF APPEALS NO. {48}L-24-1298

APPELLANT TRIAL COURT NO. CI0202303001

V.

ESTATE OF RENEE MICHEL

APPELLEE

DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Decided: December 5, 2025

***** Anthony J. Richardson, for appellant.

Joseph B. Clark, for appellee. *****

OSOWIK, J.

{¶ 1} This is an appeal from the judgment of the Lucas County Court of Common

Pleas which granted the motion for summary judgment by defendant-appellee Estate of

Renee Michel1 against plaintiff-appellant Rodney G. Herris, Jr. For the reasons set forth

below, this court affirms the trial court’s judgment.

1 Defendant Renee Michel passed away on August 27, 2023, and a Suggestion of Death notice was filed in the record on September 12. On December 4, the trial court granted appellant’s motion to substitute Ms. Michel’s estate as the defendant. {¶ 2} Appellant presented one assignment of error: “The trial court committed

reversible error by granting summary judgment against appellant.”

I. Background

{¶ 3} This matter began on July 10, 2023, when appellant filed a complaint against

appellee alleging claims of breach of contract, promissory estoppel, quantum meruit,

unjust enrichment, and fraud. Appellant alleged that he paid $494,000.002 for appellee’s

benefit on the expectation that he would “inherit their home and certain assets they

shared,” upon her passing “in recognition of her terminal brain cancer and the creation of

mirrored wills.” Without referencing a date or attaching a writing, they “entered into an

agreement relating to their personal finances, private property, and the real property

located at 604 River Road, Maumee, Ohio 43567.” He explained, “Under this agreement,

[appellee] was to purchase the property while [appellant] would assist with other

payments for her benefit, including credit card debt and purchasing assets for both their

use, totaling $494,000.00.” Further, he alleged that upon appellee’s death, appellant

“would inherit the house and all their combined assets . . . valued at a total of

approximately $800,000.00.”

2 Comprised of $150,000 in credit card payments plus $70,000 for the purchase of motor vehicles plus $80,000 for expenses related to “MD Anderson” and the brain cancer treatment plus $194,000 for unknown/unidentified items. In contrast, appellant averred in his “Affidavit of Facts” opposing summary judgment that, “To my knowledge, I contributed about $400,000.00, worth of payments.”

2. {¶ 4} Appellant was deposed on June 5, 2024, and testified that the parties met

around the year 2004. By November of 2014, they began a personal relationship while

they both resided in the state of New York, and they began cohabitating in New York in

the spring of 2016.3

{¶ 5} Using the proceeds from her prior marriage, appellee, individually,

purchased the residential property at 604 River Road, Maumee, Lucas County, Ohio on

November 20, 2017.4 Appellee’s purchase of this Maumee home is a key moment in

appellant’s unilateral description of his agreement with appellee because appellant alleges

he paid $150,000 towards its purchase:

Q: [W]hen is it that you believe that you entered into an agreement with Renee Michel as it relates to your personal finances? A: Um, spring of 2017. Q. Spring of 2017. Okay. And was that before or after she acquired River Road? A: Before. Q: Okay. And . . . was this agreement reduced to writing? A: No. Q: Okay. Was anybody present while the agreement was reached between you and Renee other than you and Renee? A: No. Q: Were there any subsequent agreements that you reached with Renee after the spring of 2017 regarding your personal finances? A: Yes. . . our personal finances were intertwined from the time that we were together in spring of 2016 and every day that we did something together and we used each other’s money, that, that’s another agreement as part of the agreement. . . . [I]t was an ongoing agreement. Q: Okay. And what evidence, what written evidence do you have as it relates to the existence of this ongoing agreement?

3 Inconsistently, appellant averred in his “Affidavit of Facts” opposing summary judgment that “we had previously resided together since 2015.” 4 Although Exhibit K from appellant’s deposition is not with the deposition transcript, another copy was provided confirming the property transfer but not the purchase price.

3. A: Um, I was put on the deed of the house, um, in September of 2019. Q: Okay. All right. So how is it that your being put on the deed of the house in your opinion evidences an agreement that the two of you reached, some form of agreement regarding your real estate? A: She wouldn’t have put my, um, name on the deed as per our agreement until I had contributed my share towards the house, and it was pertinent that we did the deed before her brain surgery because she was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. So she felt at that time that I had contributed over $300,000. ... Q: How much are you claiming that you paid towards the purchase price of 604 River Road in Maumee? A: [$]150,000. Q: Okay. And . . . where are you deriving that number? A: From the payments I made to her credit card debt. . . . I paid off $150,000 worth of her credit card debt [contributed after the 2017 purchase of the Maumee property]. ... Q: But was there a contract wherein she acknowledged that you had paid her . . . $150,000 and that’s why she was transferring the deed from her name only into both of your names jointly? A: No, there was nothing written. ... Q: Is there anyone that ever witnessed you and Renee entering into an agreement that you outlined in your Complaint filed with the court? A: No.

{¶ 6} The Maumee home was apparently mostly unoccupied between 2017 and

March of 2019, when appellee and appellant moved from New York to Ohio.

{¶ 7} The following information is from appellant’s “Affidavit of Facts” opposing

summary judgment. In January 2019, while living in New York, appellee was diagnosed

with terminal brain cancer. Contrary to his deposition testimony of a concrete agreement

with appellee in the spring of 2017 before appellee purchased the Maumee home,

appellant averred the agreement was formed two years later:

4. In January of 2019, Renee and I offered to make an agreement with each other regarding our personal finances and property. Per our agreement, I agreed to pay off all of Renee’s credit card and medical debts and bills, purchase assets and everyday necessities for her, contribute funds for our household and its necessities, and deposit money into Renee’s accounts for her benefit and usage, and in exchange she agreed that she would purchase real property for both of us to jointly own and in which to reside. ... Renee and I fully understood our promises to each other whereby I was to financially support her and she was to purchase our home for us, give me ownership in the home, and make me the sole owner of her property if she predeceased me.

Appellant and appellee moved into the Maumee home in March 2019.

{¶ 8} At his deposition, appellant testified that on August 28, 2019, appellee had

surgery for her brain cancer. The night before appellant unsuccessfully attempted to have

appellee sign a quitclaim deed granting appellant one-half interest in the Maumee home

and to sign a new will. Then, one week after the brain surgery, on September 4, 2019,

appellant brought appellee to an attorney’s office to sign a survivorship deed, which is in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 5447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herris-v-estate-of-michel-ohioctapp-2025.