Snyder v. Old World Classics, L.L.C.

2025 Ohio 3188
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 8, 2025
Docket23CA0019-M
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 3188 (Snyder v. Old World Classics, L.L.C.) 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
Snyder v. Old World Classics, L.L.C., 2025 Ohio 3188 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as Snyder v. Old World Classics, L.L.C., 2025-Ohio-3188.]

STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF MEDINA )

MATTHEW SNYDER, et al. C.A. No. 23CA0019-M

Appellants

v. APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE OLD WORLD CLASSICS, LLC COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF MEDINA, OHIO Appellee CASE No. 23-CIV-0055

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: September 8, 2025

FLAGG LANZINGER, Judge.

{¶1} This matter is before this Court pursuant to the Ohio Supreme Court’s remand.

Snyder v. Old World Classics, L.L.C., 2025-Ohio-1875 (“Snyder II”). The Ohio Supreme Court

vacated this Court’s judgment in Snyder v. Old World Classics, LLC, 2023-Ohio-4019 (9th Dist.)

(“Snyder I”) and remanded the matter for this Court “to consider whether the arbitration clause is

void due to fraudulent inducement.” Snyder II at ¶ 5. For the following reasons, this Court reverses

the decision of the trial court.

I.

{¶2} According to their complaint, Matthew and Katherine Snyder contracted with Old

World Classics, LLC (“Old World”), a home construction business, in October 2020 to construct

a new, custom home. The Snyders alleged that they worked with Old World’s “project visionary”

Jim Yezbak during this process. The Snyders alleged that Yezbak represented that he had an

ownership interest in Old World and that he was a member of its leadership team. 2

{¶3} Relevant to this appeal, the parties’ construction contract contained a dispute-

resolution clause, which required the parties to attempt to resolve any dispute through private

mediation. If the dispute remained unresolved after private mediation, the contract required the

parties to submit the dispute to binding arbitration.

{¶4} The Snyders alleged that Old World started construction on their home in March

2021. Old World informed the Snyders in February 2022 that the home was completed and ready

for occupancy. According to the Snyders, the home remains uncompleted and in an

unworkmanlike state. The Snyders alleged that they informed Old World of certain issues at their

home, and that the cost of completion would exceed $32,990.00. Old World, in turn, filed a lien

against the home in the amount of $32,990.00. The Snyders then filed the underlying lawsuit

against Old World. Specifically, the Snyders sued Old World in January 2023, asserting claims

for fraud, violation of the home construction service suppliers act, promissory estoppel, slander of

title, lien release, and breach of contract.

{¶5} The Snyders did not engage in mediation or arbitration with Old World prior to

filing their complaint. Instead, they alleged in their complaint that “the mediation and arbitration

clause contained in Section 30 of the Construction Contract is inapplicable because it is limited to

actions that sound exclusively in contract, because it was agreed to by the Snyders upon the

fraudulent inducement of Old World[,] . . . and/or because it is revocable due to Old World’s

violations of Revised Code 4722.03(A).”

{¶6} Regarding fraudulent inducement, the Snyders alleged that they were initially

reluctant to sign the construction contract because it included an arbitration clause. The Snyders

alleged that Yezbak allayed their concerns by representing that Old World had only one legal

dispute in the past, which was involved in mediation. Specifically, the Snyders alleged: 3

On or about October 28, 2020, Jim Yezbak represented that Old World and its two co-owners, who included Andrew Eggeman, only had had one legal dispute in the past, and on October 29, 2020, he clarified that it had been a mediation, doing so with the knowledge that the Snyders were reluctant to enter into a contract that included an arbitration clause . . . .

According to the Snyders, this—as well as other representations—proved to be a

misrepresentation. In support of their allegation that Old World misrepresented its history of legal

disputes, the Snyders cited six construction-related lawsuits that were filed against Andrew

Eggeman (the owner of Old World), Old World, and/or Old World Classics by Phil Eggeman, Inc.

between 2009-2017.

{¶7} Old World responded to the Snyders’ complaint by filing a motion to stay and

compel arbitration under R.C. 2711.01 et seq. and the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”). In its

motion, Old World addressed the Snyders’ allegation that the arbitration clause in the parties’

contract was unenforceable because Old World fraudulently induced them into agreeing to it. Old

World argued that the “primary Defendant” in the six cases cited in the Snyders’ complaint was

Old World Classics by Phil Eggeman, Inc., which Old World claimed was an “entity entirely

unrelated to” Old World. Old World also argued that the lawsuits occurred more than ten years

before the Snyders began working with Old World, and that “it would be entirely reasonable for

one of [Old World’s] employees to indicate [Old World] was only involved in one prior dispute.”

Old World then acknowledged a lawsuit filed against it in 2017, but asserted it was a dispute with

a former employee that had nothing to do with construction.

{¶8} In support of its motion, Old World attached red-lined drafts of the construction

contract, copies of emails exchanged between Yezbak and the Snyders, and an affidavit from

Andrew Eggeman. In his affidavit, Andrew averred, in part:

[The Snyders’] Complaint identifies six lawsuits that [Old World] was supposedly party to. Five of those lawsuits were against “Old World Classics by Phil Eggeman, 4

Inc.” That company was my father’s company and those lawsuits dealt with unpaid trades during the 2009 housing crash. If Old World was named as a party to any of those lawsuits it was in error, as Old World . . . was a complete stranger to those disputes. . . . I, along with my partners, are owners of . . . Old World . . . . Phil Eggeman is not an owner and has no affiliation with Old World . . . . The only recent lawsuit [the Snyders] identified . . . was an employment dispute with a former employee, and had nothing to do with construction.

{¶9} After Old World filed its motion to stay and compel arbitration, the trial court set

the matter for a “non-oral hearing” to occur on Monday, March 27, 2023. The trial court also set

a deadline for the parties to submit opposing briefs and memoranda by Friday, March 24, 2023.

{¶10} On Friday, March 24, 2023, the Snyders filed their brief in opposition to Old

World’s motion to stay and compel arbitration. The Snyders argued, in part, that Old World

fraudulently induced them into agreeing to the arbitration clause, rendering it void and

unenforceable. In support of their brief in opposition, the Snyders attached over 350 pages of

documents, including: (1) emails between the Snyders and Yezbak wherein Yezbak represented

that “[w]e have been a party to 1 mediation that we mutually resolved[;]” (2) affidavits from the

Snyders; (3) a red-lined draft of the construction contract reflecting that the Snyders initially

proposed adding “Contractor represents that it has been a party to one arbitration in the last five

years, which it previously disclosed to Owners” to the dispute-resolution clause, which was

ultimately omitted from the construction contract after Yezbak represented that Old World and its

owners had only been involved in a mediation; (4) court filings from other cases involving Old

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2025 Ohio 3188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-old-world-classics-llc-ohioctapp-2025.