Oldendick v. Crocker

2016 Ohio 5621
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 1, 2016
Docket103384
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 5621 (Oldendick v. Crocker) 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
Oldendick v. Crocker, 2016 Ohio 5621 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as Oldendick v. Crocker, 2016-Ohio-5621.]

Court of Appeals of Ohio EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION No. 103384

ELISABETH L. OLDENDICK PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT

vs.

WINSLOW CROCKER, ET AL. DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES

JUDGMENT: REVERSED; REMANDED

Civil Appeal from the Cleveland Heights Municipal Court Case No. CVF-1301348

BEFORE: E.A. Gallagher, P.J., Kilbane, J., and Stewart, J.

RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: September 1, 2016 ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT

Helen M. Kendrick 5658 McCarthy Court West Chester, Ohio 45069

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES

Lewis A. Zipkin In Son J. Loving Zipkin Whiting Co., L.P.A. The Zipkin Whiting Building 3637 South Green Road Beachwood, Ohio 44122 EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, P.J.:

{¶1} Appellant Elisabeth Oldendick appeals from a judgment of the Cleveland

Heights Municipal Court in favor appellees Winslow Crocker and Anna Crocker

(collectively, “appellees”) on Oldendick’s amended complaint and appellees’

counterclaim. Oldendick contends that the trial court erred in permitting appellees to

retain $1,720 that she had paid for the first month’s rent and security deposit following

her anticipatory breach of an apartment lease. She further contends that she was entitled

to recover double the amount of her security deposit as damages under R.C. 5321.16(C).

For the reasons that follow, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the matter

for further proceedings.

Factual Background and Procedural History

{¶2} In September 2013, Oldendick and her then-boyfriend Forrest Ostrander

(collectively, the “lessees”) were looking for an apartment to rent in the Cleveland area.

After seeing an advertisement on Craigslist, Oldendick and Ostrander met with Luibov

Rudyvk, appellees’ rental agent, who showed them various properties available for rent.

One of the properties was an apartment located at 1642 Belmar Road, #2, in Cleveland

Heights (the “Belmar apartment” or the “property”). Oldendick and Ostrander told

Rudyvk that they were interested in renting the Belmar apartment and Rudyvk gave them

rental applications to complete. On September 10, 2013, Oldendick and Forrester

returned their rental applications and met with Rudyvk to sign a one-year lease for the Belmar apartment commencing October 1, 2013 and ending September 30, 2014 (the

“lease” or the “lease agreement”).

{¶3} Anna Crocker owned the property and her son, Winslow Crocker

(“Crocker”), was responsible for renting and managing the property. Crocker’s

company, Urban Restoration Project, was identified as the “lessor” in the lease and his

contact information appeared at the top of the lease. At the time the lease agreement was

signed, Urban Restoration Project was not registered with the Ohio Secretary of State.

Crocker registered “Urban Restoration Project LLC” with the Ohio Secretary of State in

March 2015.

{¶4} Under the lease, a monthly payment of $860 was due on the first day of the

month and an $860 security deposit was also required. Although the lease indicates that

$860 is the “monthly rent” for the Belmar apartment, the parties stipulated that “[t]he rent

amount under the lease was $800/month, with an additional $60/month fee for

[Oldendick’s] dog.”1 Crocker testified that, when a tenant has a pet, he adds a pet fee to

the monthly rent payment for “a number of reasons,” including because “[t]hey may cause

extra noise, or extra problems, and possibly damage.” All payments due under the lease

were to be made in cash or by check or money order payable to Crocker. Oldendick

We note that the parties’ stipulation is contrary to the lease’s internally inconsistent pet 1

clause. The lease’s pet clause states:

PETS. NO PETS ARE PERMITTED. IF THERE ARE PETS, LESSEE(S) AGREES TO PAY AN ADDITIONAL $10 PER MONTH PER CAT OR DOG UNDER 40 POUNDS AND $20 PER MONTH PER DOG OVER 40 POUNDS. ONE DOG PERMITTED, NO ADDITIONAL FEE. testified that she understood that Crocker was the landlord for the apartment at the time

she signed the lease.

{¶5} The lease included an “early termination” provision, which provides:

LESSEE(S) MUST NOTIFY LESSOR SIXTY (60) DAYS PRIOR TO EARLY TERMINATION OF THIS AGREEMENT. IF LESSOR SO CHOOSES TO AGREE TO AN EARLY TERMINATION OF THIS AGREEMENT, LESSEE(S) AGREES TO PAY A FEE OF ONE MONTH’S RENT IN ADDITION TO THE REGULAR RENT UNTIL A TENANT SUITABLE TO LESSOR EXECUTES A NEW LEASE TERM.

{¶6} Prior to signing the lease, Oldendick read through the entire document. She

testified that she reviewed and understood each provision including the early termination

provision. After she signed the lease, Oldendick gave Rudyvk a check payable to

Crocker in the amount of $1,720 for the first month’s payment and the security deposit.

Rudyvk told Oldendick that she would give her the keys for the Belmar apartment and a

signed copy of the lease by her move-in date, October 1, 2013. Rudyvk then returned the

lease to Crocker who signed the lease in his own name as, and for, Urban Restoration

Project and negotiated the check from Oldendick. Oldendick never received the keys to

the Belmar apartment and did not receive a copy of the executed lease until sometime in

early November 2013.

{¶7} On September 13, 2013, three days after Oldendick and Ostrander signed the

lease, Oldendick called Rudyvk and told her that she and Ostrander had changed their

minds, i.e., that they would not be moving to Cleveland Heights and, therefore, no longer needed to rent the apartment. Rudyvk responded that she would speak with Crocker

about the matter.2

{¶8} Oldendick called Rudyvk again the following day and asked if she had

spoken with Crocker. Rudyvk replied that she had not yet contacted him but that she

would do so the following Monday. A day or two later, Oldendick again called Rudyvk.

She informed Rudyvk that she wanted Crocker to return her $1,720 and requested

Crocker’s telephone number. Rudyvk texted Crocker’s telephone number to Oldendick

and Oldendick forwarded the number to her mother, attorney Helen Kendrick. Neither

Oldendick nor Ostrander ever took possession of the apartment.

{¶9} Attorney Kendrick thereafter called Crocker and demanded the return of the

$1,720 Oldendick had paid when she and Ostrander signed the lease. Crocker said that

he would talk with his attorney about the situation. On September 28, 2013, Attorney

Kendrick emailed a letter to Crocker, confirming their conversation. In her letter,

Attorney Kendrick indicated that Oldendick had “repudiated” the lease on September 13,

2013, and demanded the return of the $1,720 Oldendick had paid for the October 2013

It is unclear from the record whether this conversation between Oldendick 2

and Rudyvk occurred before or after Crocker signed the lease. There was no testimony indicating when Crocker signed the lease and the lease does not reflect the date on which he signed it. Similarly, there is no evidence in the record as to when Crocker negotiated the check he received from Oldendick. Oldendick, however, does not argue on appeal that the parties did not enter into a lease agreement before she notified Rudyvk that she no longer wanted the apartment.

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2016 Ohio 5621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oldendick-v-crocker-ohioctapp-2016.