Wengerd v. Martin, Unpublished Decision (4-5-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 2000
DocketNo. 99CA0004.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Wengerd v. Martin, Unpublished Decision (4-5-2000) (Wengerd v. Martin, Unpublished Decision (4-5-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Wengerd v. Martin, Unpublished Decision (4-5-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
This cause was heard upon the record in the trial court. Each error assigned has been reviewed and the following disposition is made: On remand from an earlier appeal, the Common Pleas Court of Wayne County ordered Randy Wengerd to pay rent to Howard Martin and Esther Martin in the amount of $2,040, but denied the Martins' request for attorney fees and costs. The Martins have appealed from this judgment.

The Martins have asserted that the trial court erred by (1) reducing the monthly rent for the period of litigation; (2) denying their request for attorney fees; and (3) refusing to tax the transcript expenses of the prior appeal to Wengerd as costs.

I
A. Procedural Background
Wengerd entered into an agreement to lease farmland owned by the Martins from May 1, 1993, to April 30, 1997. The agreement also contained a provision through which Wengerd could purchase the property from the Martins toward the end of the lease period. Under the terms of the lease, Wengerd was to use the premises exclusively and continuously for the purpose of conducting a general purpose dairy farm. Wengerd failed to do so and the Martins filed a claim for restitution of the premises, back rent, and attorney fees. Their claim was filed as a counterclaim to a complaint by Wengerd seeking specific performance on the purchase option.1

The trial court dismissed the counterclaim for forcible entry and detainer, rent, and attorney fees. On appeal, the Martins "claim[ed] the court erred in dismissing their counterclaim forrestitution and for rent beginning December 1996." (Emphasis added.) Wengerd v. Martin (May 6, 1998), Wayne App. No. 97CA0046, unreported, at 7. In remanding the matter to the trial court, this court noted, "Given our reversal of the trial court's order, we find this error well taken and remand these issues to the trial court for determination." (Emphasis added.) Id.

On remand the Martins dismissed the claim for restitution of the premises, because Wengerd surrendered possession of the premises before the matter came to trial. The counterclaim for rent was tried. In its remand judgment on the counterclaim, the trial court observed that the Martins had refused to accept tendered rent checks for the first two months during which Wengerd had possession of the premises and paid no rent. The court determined that Wengerd was using only the house trailer and the dairy barn, and prorated the rent according to Schedule 1 that was attached to the lease. Of the $625 monthly rent, Schedule 1 assigned $240 of it to the trailer, $100 to the dairy barn, $100 to the old shop, $100 to the machinery shed, and $85 to the pasture. Based on that, the trial court awarded the Martins $340 a month for each of the six months, a total of $2040.2

On remand, the Martins again moved the trial court for attorney fees. The Martins asserted that the mutual indemnity clause in the lease agreement required Wengerd to bear the responsibility for attorney fees the Martins incurred as a result of Wengerd's breach of the lease. The trial court denied attorney fees, stating that, "This is an indemnification clause which has no application here."

Finally, the Martins moved the trial court to tax the expenses they incurred for the preparation of a transcript, for the purposes of appeal, as costs. The trial court did not rule on the motion to tax the costs of the transcript to Wengerd.

Interactions Between the Parties
The essential facts are undisputed. The written lease calls for Wengerd to pay the Martins $625 a month in rent. The lease specifies that "any reference in this lease to the term of the lease shall include not only the primary term, but, where applicable or [sic] any period prior to surrender of the Premises." It also includes a covenant by Wengerd that "during the term of this lease * * * he will promptly pay the [$625] rent when due." In the event of default by Wengerd, Martin had the right to both restitution of the premises and to "any rent unpaid under this lease until the expiration of the term thereof."

The lease agreement consistently describes the property being leased as "the Premises," without reference to smaller portions of the property, with two exceptions. The paragraph labeled, "Description, Construction of Improvements and Use of Premises," describes the various portions of the Martins' property that were part of the lease to Wengerd, and designates those portions collectively "the Premises." Similarly, SCHEDULE 1, allocates a portion of the rental fee to each identifiable portion of the leased property. The lease does not provide for Wengerd to rent any smaller portion of the premises.

Wengerd retained possession of the property from the inception of the lease until the end of June 1998. There was no testimony that Wengerd possessed only a portion of the area described as "the Premises" from December 1996 through June 1997, the period during which he did not pay rent. In the 1997 trial, Wengerd was questioned about his possession of the entire premises, and about his possession of the pasture. Wengerd specifically denied having abandoned the premises or the pasture. In the 1998 trial the Martins asserted, without contradiction, that Wengerd had control of the entire premises through June 1998.

Wengerd paid Martin $625 a month from the inception of the lease through November 1996. In November and early December of 1996 each party made demands on the other, which culminated in the instant litigation.3 November 1, 1996, the Martins notified Wengerd that they were exercising their right under the lease agreement to possession of the premises because Wengerd was in default, and because he had failed to cure the default despite notice to do so. The Martins' notice also informed Wengerd that they intended to hold him "liable for any unpaid rent under the Lease Agreement until the expiration of the term." On December 9, 1996, the Martins served notice on Wengerd, pursuant to R.C.1923.04, to vacate the premises within three days or face eviction proceedings.

Wengerd tendered rent for December 1996 and January 1997, but the Martins refused to accept it. Wengerd did not pay any rent from December 1996 through June 1997. During the 1997 trial, Wengerd agreed that the rent is "Six Hundred and Twenty-Five Dollars a month" and testified that, "I expect to pay [the rent]" for the period during which he lived there rent-free. Following the decision in the 1997 trial, Wengerd resumed paying $625 a month for the premises.4 From December 1996 through Wengerd's surrender of possession of the property to them in July 1998, the Martins continued to seek rent in the amount of $625 a month.

II
A. Rent Reduction
In Ohio, an individual who lawfully enters premises, but remains in occupancy of the premises after his right to do so has terminated is a tenant at sufferance. Palmer v. O'Leary (Dec. 3, 1975) Summit App. No. 7745, unreported, at 5(Cook, J., dissenting). In that event, the landlord may treat the tenant as a trespasser, or may choose to hold the tenant to a new lease term.

In such cases, the conduct of the parties determines whether an implied contract arises.

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Bluebook (online)
Wengerd v. Martin, Unpublished Decision (4-5-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wengerd-v-martin-unpublished-decision-4-5-2000-ohioctapp-2000.