LaConte Enterprises v. Cuyahoga County

764 N.E.2d 1051, 145 Ohio App. 3d 806
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 10, 2001
DocketNo. 78357.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 764 N.E.2d 1051 (LaConte Enterprises v. Cuyahoga County) 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
LaConte Enterprises v. Cuyahoga County, 764 N.E.2d 1051, 145 Ohio App. 3d 806 (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinions

Anne L. Kilbane, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of Judge Janet Burnside in a declaratory judgment action that found appellant Cuyahoga County (“county”) in breach of its lease agreement with appellee LaConte Enterprises, d.b.a. Airport Greens Golf Course (“LaConte”), and that required it to reimburse LaConte for admission taxes it paid to Willoughby Hills and Highland Heights. The county claims that its lease does not mandate and it has no authority to pay or reimburse, such taxes. We affirm.

In 1987, the county, pursuant to R.C. 307.02, received bids for the construction and lease of a golf course on property it owned contiguous to the Cuyahoga County Airport. The proposed lease and bid specifications were developed by the county in close conjunction with Richard LaConte, a golf course designer, builder, and operator. The bid of LaConte’s Frenchmen’s Landings North, Inc. was accepted, and the parties entered into an agreement under which that entity would construct and operate a golf course on the property for twenty years with an option for an additional twenty-year period, after which the property and all improvements would revert to the county. Article 6(C) of the lease stated the . following, in part:

“The premises under this Lease are owned by the COUNTY, have been removed from the tax rolls and are not subject to real estate or amusement taxation. However, it is contemplated that LESSEE shall be subject to Ad Valorem taxation upon all personal property owned by LESSEE and used on or in connection with the leased Premises. LESSEE covenants to pay such taxes as may be lawfully assessed against such personal property.”

*809 The lease provided for unspecified 1 obligations to maintain the golf course and make capital improvements to it during the term of the lease. Rent was based upon a graduated percentage of golf-related fees and charges with yearly mínimums and a percentage of the food and refreshment sales.

A subsequent assignment and consent transferred Frenchmen’s Landings’ interest in the lease to LaConte Enterprises and the lease was later amended to specify, inter alia, that the initial twenty-year lease term would run from July 1, 1988 through June 30, 2008, with an option period to end on June 30, 2028. LaConte spent approximately $2 million building Airport Greens Golf Course.

In 1991, the cities of Willoughby Hills and Highland Heights, in which the golf course was located, notified LaConte that it was liable for admission taxes imposed upon the users of golf courses in those cities. Patrick J. Murphy of the county prosecutor’s office responded by letter to Willoughby Hills, on LaConte’s behalf, stating it was the county’s position that the golf course should not be subject to admission taxes because it was publicly owned and, because a Metro-Parks golf course located in the same city was apparently exempt from such taxes, Airport Greens should also be exempt.

In 1994, LaConte submitted a proposed lease amendment to the county to extend the original lease term to forty years and to compromise the payment of rent during the period before the golf course was fully operational, and stated its position that Article 6(C) required the county to defend it and hold it harmless for the payment of any admission taxes imposed by Willoughby Hills or Highland Heights. Although witnesses for both parties testified that they believed that the lease had been extended, the record does not indicate that the amendment was ever executed, and there is no record of a written response concerning any of the issues raised in the letter. Murphy testified that he told LaConte that the county would not pay the municipal admission taxes or undertake LaConte’s defense should the cities attempt to collect it.

LaConte entered into a settlement agreement with the two cities, agreeing to pay a five percent combined tax beginning January 1, 1998, in exchange for a waiver of the cities’ claims to back taxes and penalties. Although the county was not a party to this agreement and did not participate in its negotiation, LaConte notified it of the negotiations and the settlement reached. When LaConte began paying the admission taxes to the municipalities in 1998, it withheld rent payments to the county.

On February 23, 1999, LaConte filed a complaint for declaratory judgment, alleging that the lease obligated the county to indemnify it for the admission *810 taxes paid, and requesting that the county be prohibited from invoking the forfeiture provisions of the lease in response to the withholding of rent. During the bench trial, Richard LaConte testified that, while working with the county to develop the bid specifications, he requested the tax exemption clause in the lease specifically because Frenchmen’s Landings did not want to be subject to municipal admission taxes. He stated that a five percent increase in fees at Airport Greens would harm its ability to compete with neighboring courses, so he did not raise the existing fees but paid the taxes, which essentially lowered the income generated by the golf course. The evidence also showed that the county began paying real estate taxes on that portion of the course property located in Lake County because the land was no longer exempt by virtue of its use for a private, for-profit enterprise.

Murphy reviewed the lease document negotiated between Frenchmen’s Landings and the county’s Robert Shea prior to the county’s approval of the lease. Although he did not recall finding Article 6(C) significant at the time, he testified that it was the county’s position that the clause referred only to the period when the lease was executed because no golf course existed and, therefore, no admission taxes applied to the undeveloped property. He stated that he believed that the golf course would not be subject to municipal admission tax ordinances because the land was owned by the county and the admission tax clause was never intended to be a promise that those municipalities would never impose such taxes, or that the county would defend or reimburse the operator for any such taxes imposed.

Despite a stipulation that the two cities passed admission tax ordinances after the lease was executed, the evidence revealed otherwise. After requesting and receiving post-trial briefs on mistake issues, the judge ruled in LaConte’s favor, finding that the county’s representation that the premises had been “removed from the tax rolls” and the express request and reliance upon that representation constituted a county promise that the golf course would enjoy a tax-free status, thereby imposing an obligation upon the county to reimburse LaConte for the municipal admission taxes. The judge granted the limited relief requested by LaConte: that the county was in breach of its lease and obligated to reimburse LaConte for taxes already paid, but did not enter an order concerning future tax payments.

The county’s first assignment of error states:

“I. The trial court erred by its determination that the county breached the lease agreement, and was liable for indemnification to its lessee in the amount of admission taxes paid.”

*811 The interpretation of the terms in a written contract is a question of law that we review

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Bluebook (online)
764 N.E.2d 1051, 145 Ohio App. 3d 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laconte-enterprises-v-cuyahoga-county-ohioctapp-2001.