Modic v. Modic

633 N.E.2d 1151, 91 Ohio App. 3d 775, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 5179
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1993
DocketNo. 63657.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 633 N.E.2d 1151 (Modic v. Modic) 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
Modic v. Modic, 633 N.E.2d 1151, 91 Ohio App. 3d 775, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 5179 (Ohio Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Porter, Judge.

Defendant-appellant Robert Modic appeals from a jury verdict of $100,000 in favor of plaintiff-appellee William Modic, his father, arising out of their common ownership of certain business and property. Defendant claims the court erred in dismissing his counterclaim; in not allowing an offset of the father’s damages; in failing to dismiss plaintiffs damage claims for lack of proof; and in failing to join a proper party. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we modify and affirm on condition.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

The father and son each owned a fifty-percent interest in a business known as “AAA Cleveland Transmission Service, Inc.,” which started in 1959 and was engaged in rebuilding auto transmissions. The parties also jointly owned as *777 tenants in common two parcels of Cleveland real estate which are at issue in this case: one located at 7017 St. Clair Avenue at which the Cleveland Transmission business was carried on (“the transmission property”), and one located several blocks away at 6623 St. Clair Avenue, which originally was a gas station site, later converted to a car wash facility (“the car wash property”).

The father ran the car wash business from 1973 to approximately 1977; during this same period and until 1981, the son ran the transmission business. The parties stipulated and the court instructed the jury that “each of the parties were [sic ] entitled to receive one-half of the net profits from the Cleveland Transmission business.” When the car wash business closed in 1977, the parties’ relationship fell apart and they talked about dividing things up in 1978. They were not able to agree on the division.

On July 25, 1980, the father filed suit in common pleas court for an accounting of the profits from the son’s operation of the transmission business. Soon thereafter, the father took over the operation of the transmission business on October 1, 1981. This suit was eventually dismissed without prejudice early in 1988 and refiled on August 24, 1988. The father’s complaint alleged that he and his son were co-owners of the transmission business with an equal sharing of profits. The father also alleged that the son had run the transmission business from 1973 to 1981 and deprived the father of his share of profits therein for the years in question through fraud, deceit and concealment.

The answer to the complaint admitted co-ownership of the business but denied the substantive allegations. A defense of failure to join an indispensable party (Cleveland Transmission) was not asserted. The son’s counterclaim alleged (1) contributions due from the father for car wash business obligations; (2) breach of contracts and sums owing from the father’s operation of the transmission business since September 1981 to trial; (3) contribution for taxes of the transmission business prior to October 1981; and (4) an accounting as to income and expense of the transmission business since October 1981.

This case was tried to a jury commencing January 13, 1992. The transcript of the trial presents a contentious and sometimes confusing array of charges and countercharges as the parties disputed the way the businesses were handled and their respective roles therein. The trial was plagued by missing or incomplete documentation for which the parties tended to blame each other.

The father presented evidence that the son, in operating the transmission business, paid himself salaries and gave himself loans never repaid that were allegedly used to make home improvements. He introduced corporate tax returns from 1975 to 1979 to show his son’s compensation and the loans. He maintained that other substantial receipts of the business were not reported on the company books and that the corporate tax returns did not report one half of *778 the income of the business. In final argument, the son’s counsel “concede[d] that these figures show there has been an underreporting of income * * *. I’m not saying [the son] reported everything. He obviously very clearly has not.”

The son, for his part, offered evidence that the father failed to account to him for rents or profits of the car wash business and later the reasonable rentals that the two properties would have returned after the father took over the operation of the transmission business in 1981.

It is fair to say that at the trial the son’s strategy was to offset the father’s claims rather than to obtain an affirmative recovery for himself. To that end, the son claimed he was entitled to one half of the reasonable rental value of the two real properties from 1981 onward. This strategy is admitted by the son on appeal: “In essence, appellant contended that if he owed his father anything arising out of the manner in which he operated Cleveland Transmission from 1973 through 1981, his debt was more than offset by what his father owed him for his exclusive use of the jointly owned properties.” He claimed the father owed him one half of the fair rental value of the jointly owned properties.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, the trial court dismissed the son’s counterclaim for fair rental value and the case went to the jury on the father’s claims. The jury returned a unanimous verdict of $100,000 in favor of the father. The son’s motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and a new trial were denied.

We will address the assignments of error in the order asserted.

“I. The court erred in dismissing appellant’s counterclaim for rents and in denying appellants [sic] motion for new trial filed on the same grounds.”

The son argues that the court erred in dismissing the counterclaim for his share of rental value because of its failure to give effect to R.C. 5307.21. The father points out that this statute was never raised at trial or argued to the trial court. The statute states as follows:

“One tenant in common, or coparcener, may recover from another tenant in common, or coparcener[,] his share of rents and profits received by such tenant in common or coparcener from the estate, according to the justice and equity of the case. One coparcener may maintain an action of waste against the coparcener. No coparcener shall have any privileges over another coparcener, in any election, division, partition, or matter to be made or done, concerning lands which have descended.”

The statute is contained in that section of the Revised Code dealing with equitable actions in partition. (R.C. Chapter 5307.)

*779 Nevertheless, there is respectable authority to support the son’s claim that a co-tenant out of possession is entitled to his share of the reasonable rental value of the property exclusively used by the other co-tenant. In construing Section 12046 of the General Code, the precursor to R.C. 5307.21, the Ohio Supreme Court so held in Cohen v. Cohen (1952), 157 Ohio St. 503, 47 O.O. 363, 106 N.E.2d 77.

In Cohen, the widower, as part of an antenuptial agreement, was required to build a home for him and his wife and convey an undivided one-half interest to the wife. The husband died and left his interest in the property to his children by his first marriage. The wife continued to occupy the premises for a period of time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
633 N.E.2d 1151, 91 Ohio App. 3d 775, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 5179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/modic-v-modic-ohioctapp-1993.