Jenkins v. Roger C. Perry & Co.

614 N.E.2d 850, 83 Ohio App. 3d 234, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 6739
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1992
DocketNos. 92AP-634 and 92AP-635.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 614 N.E.2d 850 (Jenkins v. Roger C. Perry & Co.) 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
Jenkins v. Roger C. Perry & Co., 614 N.E.2d 850, 83 Ohio App. 3d 234, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 6739 (Ohio Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

*235 Deshler, Judge.

The appellants, Dixon F. Jenkins, Jamie Jenkins, Ambrose Moses and Tammy Moses, appeal a judgment of the Franklin County Municipal Court releasing escrowed rents after appellants had claimed the appellee (“landlord”) had failed to fulfill obligations pursuant to R.C. 5321.04.

The appellants are tenants at an apartment complex owned by appellee, Roger C. Perry & Co. Each appellant signed a lease which included subsection 17 regarding payment of utility charges. Subsection 17 reads as follows:

“UTILITIES. Tenant agrees to pay all charges and bills incurred for water, gas, electricity, and telephone, which may be assessed or charged against the Tenant or Owner for the premises during the term of this Rental Agreement or any continuation thereof.”

The appellants are not supplied running water through a direct connection with the city’s division of water and the city’s division of water does not bill appellants for water service to their respective dwelling units. Appellants are billed for water usage on a monthly basis by a privately owned company, Watermaster of Columbus, Inc. (“Watermaster”), which has installed a sub-metering system on the premises. The appellee requires the tenants to pay Watermaster for water and sewage charges with their rent. The city’s division of water has informed appellants that it does not directly bill the appellants because their dwelling units are not directly connected to the public water utility. There is a main feeder line which is billed to the property owner on a quarterly basis. The appellants do not claim they are being overcharged for water by either appellee or Watermaster.

The appellants have asserted the following four assignments of error on appeal:

“I. The trial court erred by failing to interpret and find that the term ‘supply’ as it is used in R.C. 5321.04(A)(6), means to bear the economic burden of providing running water service to a dwelling unit.

“II. Trial Court erred in releasing rent from escrow where the landlord has failed to meet the obligations imposed upon it by R.C. sec. 5321.04(A)(6).

“HI. The trial court erred by allowing the landlord to modify its legal obligations through lease provisions in violation of R.C. sec. 5321.13.

“IV. The trial court erred by failing to provide a definition of the term ‘supply’ as it is used in R.C. sec. 5321.04(A)(6).”

Since all of the assignments of error center on the interpretation of R.C. 5321.04(A)(6), the assignments of error will be considered together. Appellants concede in their brief that the interpretation of R.C. 5321.04(A)(6) resolves the question before the court. R.C. 5321.04(A)(6) states:

*236 “(A) A landlord who is a party to a rental agreement shall do all of the following:

“ * 4- 4

“(6) Supply running water, reasonable amounts of hot water and reasonable heat at all times, except where the building that includes the dwelling unit is not required by law to be equipped for that purpose, or the dwelling unit is so constructed that heat or hot water is generated by an installation within the exclusive control of the tenant and supplied by a direct public utility conneetion[.]”

The appellants contend this provision of statutory law imposes upon a landlord not only the duty of supplying water to the premises, but the obligation to pay the costs of such service for the benefit of a tenant. Appellants rely principally on Griffin v. Holston (Dec. 16, 1983), Lucas App. No. L-83-261, unreported, 1983 WL 2328, in support of their position. While the court in Griffin, by way of dicta, did find that the term “supply” meant to pay for utility charges, the facts in Griffin involved an uninhabitable dwelling, thus distinguishing it from the facts in this case. Appellee relies on Hodgson v. Hodgson (Sept. 7, 1990), Lake App. No. 89-L-14-074, unreported, 1990 WL 128267, where the court was confronted with a factual circumstance similar to the case sub judice. In Hodgson, the court stated in reference to R.C. 5321.04(A)(4) and (A)(6):

“ * * * Subsection (A)(4) sets forth the mechanics of a rental unit which a landlord must provide, and subsection (A)(6) states the resultant service which must be provided by the landlord. Subsection (A)(6) does not require payment for the water by the landlord.”

And more significantly as it relates to the instant case, where the parties had agreed, by lease provision, that tenants would pay for water, the court in Hodgson stated: “A rental agreement requiring a tenant to pay for running water is, therefore, not barred by R.C. 5321.13.” The appellants complain that the court in Hodgson failed to realize how the obligations imposed by R.C. 5321.04 fit into the “big picture” of Ohio landlord-tenant law. While the appellants do not provide any specific insight as to the “big picture,” it is clear that statutory landlord-tenant law in this state does not preclude historic notions of basic contract law wherein parties are free to bargain concerning rights and duties relating to payment of utility costs, including water.

While the legislature has imposed a specific statutory duty on landlords who have entered into lease agreements, e.g. R.C. 5321.04(A)(6), there is no resultant abrogation of rights of parties to leasehold agreements regarding the obligations for payment for water to be used on the premises. Thus, we conclude that the word “supply” in R.C. 5321.04(A)(6) means to provide water or make it available in the physical sense and without the added burden of paying for such service. *237 The question of who pays for water used at a leasehold premise is a matter of contract between the landlord and the tenant.

Appellants claim that the obligation of the landlord to supply water cannot be modified by contract. The appellants call our attention to R.C. 5321.13, wherein it is stated:

“(A) No provision of this Chapter may be modified or waived by any oral or written agreement except as provided in division (F) of this section.

it * * *

“(D) No agreement by a tenant to the exculpation or limitation of any liability of the landlord arising under law or to indemnify the landlord for that liability or its related costs shall be recognized in any rental agreement or in any other agreement between a landlord and tenant.”

Appellants additionally argue that permitting contract law and lease agreements to burden the tenant with paying for the water results in a shifting of the economic burden from the landlord to the tenant. The appellants are correct that a landlord cannot shift the basic burdens enumerated in the statute by contract. However, the obligation the appellants speak of, the payment or cost for water, is not something that is forbidden from being placed upon the tenant by agreement.

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614 N.E.2d 850, 83 Ohio App. 3d 234, 1992 Ohio App. LEXIS 6739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-roger-c-perry-co-ohioctapp-1992.