[Cite as Core v. Samurai Corp., 2015-Ohio-5437.]
STATE OF OHIO, HARRISON COUNTY
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
SEVENTH DISTRICT
DOUGLAS L. CORE, et al. ) CASE NO. 13 HA 13
)
PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS )
)
VS. )
)
SAMURAI CORP. ) OPINION
)
DEFENDANT-APPELLANT )
)
AND )
)
WALTER E. MADER, et al. )
)
DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES )
CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS: Civil Appeal from the Court of Common
Pleas of Harrison County, Ohio
Case No. CVH-2010-0152
JUDGMENT: Affirmed in part. Reversed in part.
Remanded.
APPEARANCES:
For Attorneys for Plaintiffs-Appellants Atty. Steven J. Schrock
Douglas & Joyce Core and Atty. Clint M. Leibolt
James Humphrey: Critchfield, Critchfield & Johnston, Ltd.
138 E. Jackson St.
Millersburg, Ohio 44654
For Attorney for Defendant-Appellant Atty. Victor D. Radel
Samurai Corp.: Yarger Radel & Pentz, LLC
1111 Superior Ave., #530
Cleveland, Ohio 44113
For Attorney for Defendants-Appellees Atty. Lawrence T. Piergallini
Walter Mader, Marie E. Mader, 131 Third Street
Paul Mader, and Linda Mader: P.O. Box 7
Tiltonsville, Ohio 43963
JUDGES:
Hon. Cheryl L. Waite
Hon. Gene Donofrio
Hon. Carol Ann Robb Dated: December 18, 2015
[Cite as Core v. Samurai Corp., 2015-Ohio-5437.]
WAITE, J.
{¶1} In this action involving an oil and gas lease, Appellants, Douglas L.
Core, Joyce Core and James Humphrey (collectively, “Core”) and Samurai
Corporation (“Samurai”) appeal the August 20, 2013 Harrison County Common Pleas
Court’s decision granting summary judgment in favor of Appellees Walter Mader,
Marie Mader, Paul Mader and Linda Mader (collectively, “Appellees”). Appellants
also appeal a November 20, 2013 judgment entry which awarded Appellees the
equitable remedy of forfeiture. Appellants argue that the trial court improperly found
that the lease contained an implied covenant of development.
{¶2} Appellants also contend that even if the lease does contain the implied
covenant, Appellees failed to present any evidence to show that this covenant was
breached. Regardless, Appellants argue that forfeiture was improper, as Appellees
failed to produce any evidence to demonstrate that monetary damages are
inadequate. For the following reasons, all of Appellants’ arguments regarding the
implied covenant are without merit and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed as to
those issues. However, we reverse and remand to the trial court for purposes of trial
on the issue of damages.
Factual and Procedural History
{¶3} On May 7, 1979, Appellees entered into an oil and gas lease with
Universal Minerals, Inc. which gave Universal the right to drill on approximately 515
acres of their property. After a series of assignments, Core obtained the right to drill
on Appellees’ land and later assigned that right to Samurai. Within the assignment
from Core to Samurai, Core retained a reversionary right in the lease that would
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revert the lease back to Core if Samurai failed to abide by a set drilling schedule. On
August 21, 1980, a producing well was drilled on Appellees’ property which continues
to produce today. However, no drilling activity has taken place on the remaining 414
acres of Appellees’ property.
{¶4} On June 28, 2010, Appellees mailed Samurai a demand letter stating
that if Samurai did not commit to drilling the remaining property, action would be
taken to proclaim the undrilled property forfeited. Samurai responded to the letter on
July 2, 2010 stating that they considered the land to be held by the existing
production and they would not forfeit their rights. Samurai did not specifically refuse
to drill in their response letter, but failed to drill additional wells after responding to
Appellees’ demand letter.
{¶5} In December of 2010, Core filed a complaint against Samurai and
Appellees. Against Samurai, the complaint alleged: two counts of breach of
contract, unjust enrichment and breach of a fiduciary duty. The complaint sought
declaratory and injunctive relief in relation to the reversionary right within their
contract. Against Appellees, the complaint requested declaratory judgment regarding
the parties’ rights to the leased property. In January of 2011, Samurai filed its own
complaint against Core asserting intentional interference with a prospective business
advantage. However, Samurai dismissed this complaint in May of 2011. In March of
2011, Appellees filed a counterclaim against Core and a cross-claim against Samurai
seeking a declaratory judgment from the trial court that the lease at issue was void
due to a breach of the implied covenant of development.
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{¶6} In January and March of 2011, all parties filed partial motions for
summary judgment as to the declaratory judgment issue. Appellees' motion asserted
that Appellants failed to develop the remaining 415 acres of the property, which
resulted in a breach of the implied covenant of development. Appellees conceded
that the 100 acres of land that was developed could not be forfeited, but argued that
the remaining 415 acres of undeveloped land should be forfeited.
{¶7} In August of 2013, the trial court found the existence of an implied
covenant of development within the lease and granted Appellees' motion for partial
summary judgment. The court concluded that damages could not be determined and
ordered a hearing. Appellants objected to the hearing claiming that Appellees had
failed to present evidence of damages within their summary judgment motion and
should not have the benefit of a second attempt. While a hearing was held, its
objective was not entirely clear. Following hearing, the trial court denied Core and
Samurai's respective motions for summary judgment because their issues were moot
and granted forfeiture to Appellees. This timely appeal followed.
Summary Judgment
{¶8} An appellate court conducts a de novo review of a trial court's summary
judgment decision. Bentley v. Beck Energy, 7th Dist. Nos. 13 BE 33, 13 BE 34,
2015-Ohio-1375, ¶12, citing Campbell Oil Co. v. Shepperson, 7th Dist. No. 05 CA
817, 2006-Ohio-1763, ¶8. Viewing the facts in a light most favorable to the non-
moving party, the trial court must find that: (1) there is no genuine issue of material
fact remaining for litigation, (2) the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
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law, and (3) that reasonable minds can come to only one conclusion, which is
adverse to the non-moving party. Campbell Oil Co. at ¶8, citing Temple v. Wean
United, Inc., 50 Ohio St.2d 317, 327, 364 N.E.2d 267 (1977).
{¶9} The moving party bears the initial burden “of showing that no genuine
issue exists as to any material fact falls upon the moving party in requesting a
summary judgment.” Dresher v. Burt, 75 Ohio St.3d 280, 294, 662 N.E.2d 264
(1996), citing Harless v. Willis Day Warehousing Co., 54 Ohio St.2d 64, 66, 375
N.E.2d 46 (1978). The burden then shifts to the non-moving party, who in return
must set forth specific facts showing that a genuine issue of fact exists and that a
reasonable factfinder could rule in that party's favor. Campbell Oil Co. at ¶9, citing
Brewer v. Cleveland Bd. of Edn., 122 Ohio App.3d 378, 386, 701 N.E.2d 1023
(1997).
{¶10} As co-Appellants Core and Samurai have presented identical
arguments in their separate briefs, their corresponding assignments of error will be
discussed together.
CORE’S FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY HOLDING THAT THE MADER LEASE
CONTAINS AN IMPLIED COVENANT TO DEVELOP, AND THUS
DENYING APPELLANTS [SIC] SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON MADERS'
COUNTERCLAIM.
SAMURAI’S SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
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THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY HOLDING THAT THE MADER LEASE
CONTAINS AN IMPLIED COVENANT TO DEVELOP.
{¶11} Appellants contend that the trial court erred in finding the existence of
an implied covenant to develop within the Mader lease. Under Ohio law, Appellants
assert that a court cannot find the existence of an implied covenant to develop when
the lease is not silent as to development. Appellants argue that paragraphs seven (a
unitization clause) and eight (an offsetting wells clause) of the Mader lease address
the development of the leasehold. As such, Appellants contend that the lease is not
silent regarding development of the leasehold and the trial court erred in finding an
implied covenant existed.
{¶12} In response, Appellees contend that neither paragraph seven nor
paragraph eight address the development of the leasehold. Appellees explain that
paragraph seven discusses Appellants’ obligations if the leased property is
consolidated into a developmental unit, which did not happen in this case. Similarly,
Appellees assert that paragraph eight addresses offsetting wells, which, again, is not
applicable in this case. As neither contains express contractual language that
negates an implied covenant to develop, Appellees argue that the trial court correctly
found the existence of such an implied covenant.
{¶13} The Ohio Supreme Court has held “that absent express provisions to
the contrary, a mineral lease includes an implied covenant to reasonably develop the
land.” Ionno v. Glen-Gery Corp., 2 Ohio St.3d 131, 132, 443 N.E.2d 504 (1983),
citing Beer v. Griffith, 61 Ohio St.2d 119, 399 N.E.2d 1227 (1980), paragraph two of
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the syllabus. Accordingly, “where a lease fails to contain any specific reference to
the timeliness of development, the law will infer a duty to operate with reasonable
diligence.” Ionno at 133.
{¶14} There is no question that the Mader lease does not contain an express
waiver of implied covenants. However, Appellees contend that paragraphs seven
and eight each address development of the lease, thus the lease is not silent as to
that issue. As each lease paragraph addresses a different concept, each paragraph
will be discussed separately. For ease of understanding, we begin our analysis with
paragraph eight.
Paragraph Eight: Offsetting Wells
{¶15} Paragraph eight states in full: “It is agreed that the acreage rentals or
royalties on any well, or wells, paid and to be paid as herein provided are and will be
accepted by Lessor as adequate and full consideration to render it optional with
Lessee as to whether or not it shall drill a well or wells to offset producing wells on
adjoining or adjacent properties.” (Mader Lease, ¶8).
{¶16} Appellants interpret this provision to suggest that Appellees agreed to
accept the acreage rentals or royalties as adequate and full consideration for
Appellees’ reservation of the right to determine how many offset wells would be
drilled on the leased property. Hence, Appellants believe this provision addresses
general development of the leasehold and that the paragraph acts as an express
disclaimer of the implied covenant of development. Appellees, however, interpret this
clause to give Appellants discretion as to how many wells must be drilled to offset
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producing wells on adjacent or adjoining properties. Appellees argue that this
provision only applies when a specific event takes place; introduction of producing
wells on adjacent property. In this case, that event did not occur. Thus, Appellees
urge that the provision clearly does not address development of the leasehold in
general.
{¶17} At least one Ohio appellate court has already confronted this issue.
The Fifth District determined that a lease containing a provision that has language
identical to paragraph eight of the instant lease did not amount to an express waiver
of the implied covenant of development. Lake v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co., 2 Ohio App.2d
227, 231-232, 207 N.E.2d 659 (5th Dist.1965). The Court noted that while the
provision addressed offset wells, this language did not give the lessee discretion to
determine the number of wells to be drilled for production purposes on the leasehold
in general. The sole purpose of the provision was to address offset of a producing
well on adjacent property. The provision, then, could only be triggered by the
introduction of a producing well on an adjacent parcel of property, not by any action
on the leasehold, itself. Id. at 232. Consequently, the court overruled the appellant’s
argument that the provision amounted to an express waiver of the implied covenant
of development, which is the identical argument advanced by Appellants in the
instant case.
{¶18} We begin our discussion by noting that production wells are different
than offset wells. Offset wells protect the leasehold’s lines against drainage from
wells on adjoining properties, whereas producing wells actually produce oil and gas
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from underneath the land. Thus the wells serve different purposes. Id. A paragraph
that purely addresses offset wells, without more, as paragraph eight does, has no
relevance to production wells. Consequently, paragraph eight’s grant of discretion as
to how many offset wells are drilled does not provide discretion to Appellants as
regards the number of production wells to be drilled. We agree with the Fifth
District’s determination in Lake. Paragraph eight cannot be construed as an express
disclaimer of the implied covenant of development.
Paragraph Seven: Unitization Clause
{¶19} Paragraph seven, the unitization clause, expressly provides “* * * the
Lessee shall in no event be required to drill more than one well on such unit.” (Mader
Lease, ¶7.)
{¶20} Appellees assert that paragraph seven provides a disclaimer of an
implied covenant to develop the leasehold. This ignores the meaning of the provision
when read in its entirety. Paragraph seven of the Mader lease reads, in relevant part:
The Lessor hereby grants to the Lessee, the right to consolidate the
leased premises, or any part thereof, with other lands to form an oil and
gas development unit of not more than six hundred forty (640) acres for
purpose of drilling a well thereon, but the Lessee shall in no event be
required to drill more than one well on such unit.
The remainder of the paragraph details the ability of lessors to use produced gas in
the event that a development until is created.
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{¶21} Unlike paragraph eight, there appears to be no prior case relevant to
the language found in this provision. It is apparent, however, that similarly to the
language of paragraph eight, paragraph seven addresses a specific scenario that
has not occurred in this case. Paragraph seven grants Appellants the right to
consolidate the leased premises with other lands and form development units. In the
event that Appellants elect to exercise this right, they are only required to drill one
well per such unit.
{¶22} Here, the leased premises were not consolidated. Thus, this provision
has never become relevant in regard to this leasehold. Even so, paragraph seven is
limited to consolidation of property which, again, has no bearing on the number of
wells drilled for development purposes. Because neither of these lease provisions
serve as a waiver of the implied duty to develop, the trial court correctly determined
that this lease is subject to the implied covenant. Accordingly, Appellants’
assignments of error in this regard are without merit and are overruled.
CORE’S SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY HOLDING THAT MADERS WERE
ENTITLED TO SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON THEIR CLAIM THAT
APPELLANTS BREACHED THE IMPLIED COVENANT TO DEVELOP,
AND BY DENYING APPELLANTS SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON SAID
CLAIM.
SAMURAI’S THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
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THE TRIAL COURT ERRRED [SIC] BY GRANTING SUMMARY
JUDGMENT IN FAVOR OF THE MADERS ON THEIR CLAIM THAT
THE IMPLIED COVENANT TO DEVELOP HAD BEEN BREACHED
{¶23} Appellants argue that even if we assume that an implied covenant to
develop exists in this lease, Appellees carried the burden of proving they breached
the covenant. Appellants argue that Appellees failed to produce any evidence to
suggest that the undeveloped area of the property had potential for development, so
they failed to prove that development of the remaining acreage was reasonable.
Samurai also emphasizes that the implied covenant of development requires
“prudent production of oil and gas” to ensure that the lessor receives the benefit and
purpose of the lease: royalty payments. As Appellees have admittedly received
royalty payments for the developed portion of the leased premises, Samurai argues
that Appellees have been receiving the benefit of the lease and are estopped as a
matter of law from asserting a breach.
{¶24} In response, Appellees argue that Appellants have developed only 110
of the 514 acres of the leased property. As Core and Samurai have failed to make
any efforts over the last thirty years to develop the remaining 414 acres, Appellees
assert that the implied covenant of development has been breached as to the
undeveloped acreage.
{¶25} Before we can determine the validity of the parties’ arguments, we must
first examine the evidence presented to the trial court in the summary judgment.
Civ.R. 56(C) states in relevant part:
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Summary judgment shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings,
depositions, answers to interrogatories, written admissions, affidavits,
transcripts of evidence, and written stipulations of fact, if any, timely
filed in the action, show that there is no genuine issue as to any
material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law. No evidence or stipulation may be considered except as
stated in this rule.
{¶26} Appellees presented a June 28, 2010 demand letter they sent to
Samurai and a July 2, 2010 response letter sent by Samurai to Appellees. In the
demand letter Appellees assert that Samurai failed to fulfill its obligations to drill and
produce oil from the property as required by the lease. The letter sought either a
commitment to further drill or forfeiture of the undeveloped property within ten days.
Samurai responded in a letter stating that the land is held by continuous production
and that as all obligations have been fulfilled, Samurai would not forfeit its rights to
the property. The letter is signed by Sam Skipper, president of Samurai.
{¶27} Appellants urge that the letters were not properly before the trial court
as they were attached to Appellees’ post-damages hearing motion, which occurred
after the trial court’s initial summary judgment decision. While this appears to be
technically true, it is apparent that the substance of both letters were properly of
record and before the trial court prior to the court’s final ruling.
{¶28} The record demonstrates that Appellants attached Sam Skipper’s
deposition to their motion for summary judgment, filed prior to Appellees’ own motion
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for summary judgment. In the deposition, Mr. Skipper was asked a series of
questions about “exhibit nine,” which was the demand letter. Even if Appellees did
not provide a copy of this demand letter to the trial court before the court’s initial
ruling on Appellees’ partial motion for summary judgment, because this letter had an
exhibit number and was discussed within a deposition, its contents were properly
presented to the trial court in summary judgment. We also note, as Appellants raised
at the damages hearing, the trial court’s ruling on the partial motion for summary
judgment was not final at the time it received the memorandum on damages. These
documents were properly produced to the court prior to final decision on the matter.
{¶29} More importantly, Appellants concede that approximately 415 acres of
Appellees’ property have not been developed over the course of more than thirty
years. A review of the record shows that the Mader lease was signed on May 7,
1979. Sam Skipper stated in his deposition that only one well has been drilled on the
Mader property in all that time, and that well was completed on August 21, 1980. Mr.
Skipper acknowledged in his deposition that the completed well covered
approximately 109 acres and that the remaining 415 acres remained undeveloped.
Appellees rely on this admission to prove that breach occurred. Thus, we turn to the
question whether evidence that substantial portions of a leased premises have
remained undrilled is sufficient to prove a breach of the implied covenant of
development.
{¶30} According to the Ohio Supreme Court, an implied covenant of
development requires a lessee “to reasonably develop the lands by drilling and
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operating such number of wells as would be ordinarily required for the production of
the oil contained in such lands, and afford ordinary protection to the lines.” Harris v.
Ohio Oil Co., 57 Ohio St. 118, 127, 48 N.E. 502 (1897). The sole purpose of the
covenant is to ensure development of leased land. Anderson v. Chief Drilling, Inc.,
5th Dist. No. 82-CA-15, 1983 WL 6351, *3 (Jan. 14, 1983).
{¶31} We begin our analysis with a discussion of Lake, supra, where the Fifth
District held that an oil and gas company’s failure to develop approximately one-half
of a leased premises over the course of approximately twenty-two years amounted to
a breach of the implied covenant of development. Id. at 234. The Court cited to
caselaw from the United States Supreme Court holding that an oil and gas
company’s failure to develop “eight-sixteenths” of a leased premises over a course of
seventeen years amounted to a breach. Id. at 233, citing Sauder, Admx. v. Mid-
Continent Petroleum Corp., 292 U.S. 272, 54 S.Ct. 671, 78 L.Ed. 1255 (1934).
{¶32} Because the United States Supreme Court holds that failure to develop
one-half of a leased property over the course of seventeen years in Sauder, and our
sister district has determined that failure to develop one-half of a leasehold over the
course of twenty-two years amounts to a breach of the implied covenant of
development, it is readily apparent that the admitted failure to develop four-fifths of a
leasehold over more than thirty years in this case is also a breach.
{¶33} As regards Appellants’ theory that Appellees’ acceptance of royalties
from the developed property estops them from asserting breach, this argument is
contrary to Ohio law. According to Lake, a lessor does waive his right to cancel the
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portion of the lease from which oil was produced by accepting payment for the
produced oil. However, acceptance of such royalties does not affect the “right to
seek cancellation of the lease as to another part of the premises, if as to such other
part there has been a breach by the lessee of an implied covenant of development.”
Lake, supra, at 233 (emphasis deleted). Appellees have not waived their right to
cancel the lease as regards the undeveloped portion of their land merely because
they accepted royalties from the developed portion of the land.
{¶34} Accordingly, Appellant Core’s second and Appellant Samurai’s third
assignments of error are also without merit and are overruled.
CORE’S THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY HOLDING THAT MADERS PROVED
THAT DAMAGES WERE AN INADEQUATE REMEDY FOR BREACH
OF THE IMPLIED COVENANT TO DEVELOP AND ORDERING A
PARTIAL FORFEITURE OF THE MADER LEASE.
SAMURAI’S FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY ORDERING THE REMEDY OF
FORFEITURE OF THE MADER LEASE BECAUSE THE MADERS
FAILED TO OFFER ANY EVIDENCE IN SUPPORT OF THEIR CLAIM.
{¶35} In their final assignment, Appellants argue that even if we find that an
implied covenant to develop the property exists, and that this covenant was
breached, forfeiture was not the appropriate remedy. Appellants contend that
Appellees failed to present any evidence as to damages, so that summary judgment
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to Appellees could not be granted in this case. They assert that Appellees did not
provide any damage evidence in their motion for partial summary judgment.
Appellants also argue that the trial court held a hearing on damages to allow
Appellees an additional opportunity to present evidence regarding damages. Despite
this second opportunity, Appellees again failed to present any evidence of damages.
{¶36} Appellants also contend that the mere fact that damages may be
difficult to measure does not mean that damages are inadequate and the contract
must be forfeited. In support of their argument, Appellants cite to Beer, supra and
Ionno, supra, which collectively held that the lessor bears the burden of proving
damages are inadequate. As Appellees’ sole argument at the hearing was that
damages would be too difficult to measure, Core and Samurai contend that
Appellees failed to meet their burden and the trial court erred in awarding partial
forfeiture.
{¶37} Appellees also cite to Beer, supra, and Moore v. Adams, 5th Dist. No.
2007AP090066, 2008-Ohio-5953, both of which hold that forfeiture of a lease is
proper when the implied covenant of development is breached. In response to
Appellants’ argument regarding the burden of proving damages, Appellees contend
that any attempt at proving damages for the failure to drill over the course of more
than thirty years would be speculative.
{¶38} In Ohio, “[w]here certain causes of forfeiture are specified in an oil and
gas lease, others cannot be implied. Under such a lease, the remedy for a breach of
an implied covenant, without more, is damages, and not forfeiture of the lease, in
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whole or in part.” Ionno, supra, at 134-135, quoting Harris, supra, paragraph two and
three of the syllabus. However, “where legal remedies are inadequate, forfeiture or
cancellation of an oil and gas lease, in whole or in part, is an appropriate remedy for
a lessee’s violation of an implied covenant.” Ionno, supra, at 135, quoting Harris,
supra, at paragraph four of the syllabus.
{¶39} The record before us reveals great confusion about the aim of the
“damages” hearing set by the trial court. While the court granted Appellees’ partial
motion for summary judgment, declaring breach, the court did not address any
remedy. Instead, the court set the matter for “hearing.” The record shows that the
hearing appears to have been set as an oral extension of the competing motions for
summary judgment filed by all parties. While the trial court expressly referred to the
hearing as a damages hearing within its entry, the court did not mention that
evidence would be taken nor give any other indication that the hearing was for
evidentiary purposes. The judgment entry setting the hearing did state that “[u]pon
conclusion of hearing, if the Court finds damages are an inadequate remedy, the
court will consider if forfeiture of the lease is appropriate.” (8/20/13 J.E., p. 10.)
Because this language appears to imply that further consideration would become
necessary, this did not aid in comprehension as to the actual goal of the hearing. We
note that at the hearing Appellees attempted to introduce an affidavit of an expert in
regard to damages, but were refused by the court on objection. This also does not
aid in determining the true intent of the hearing. While an affidavit is not acceptable
evidence at an evidentiary hearing in most instances, it is also readily apparent that
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the time had long passed for submitting new evidence in aid of summary judgment,
and the court could have ruled against this affidavit for this reason, as well.
{¶40} Appellants assert that the damages hearing was improper as it gave
Appellees a second opportunity to produce the evidence that they failed to include in
their motion. Appellants also argue that despite this second opportunity, Appellees
have wholly failed to present any evidence that they were damaged by the alleged
breach. However, in explaining its decision to hold a damages hearing, the trial court
described the hearing as “a necessary extension of the summary judgment ruling.”
(10/9/13 Damages Hrg., p. 16.) This record appears to reflect that the judge
recognized that implied covenant issues were threshold issues that needed to be
determined before damages could be addressed. Hence, the court granted partial
summary judgment on this threshold issue. Pursuant to Harris and Lake, the court
was also aware that the adequacy of damages must be addressed before a court can
award forfeiture. It appears the court deemed it prudent to allow the parties to
present arguments as to both the adequacy of damages and the appropriateness of
forfeiture. Based on this rationale, the trial court’s decision to hold oral argument was
proper. Despite the fact that the trial court, during the hearing, may have intended
the parties to introduce evidence as to damages, this purpose was not apparent
when the hearing was set. It was reasonable for Appellees to believe its purpose
was, in fact, oral argument intended to aid summary judgment in an “extension” of
summary judgment. However, Appellants are partially correct that the record does
not reveal actual evidence of either damages, or in the alternative, evidence that
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damages were incalculable and thus, inadequate. Appellants argue that no breach
occurred, but that even if they breached, Appellees were not damaged. Appellees,
because of the confused purpose for the hearing, never got a chance to offer
evidence, but contend that any damage award must be inadequate, given the length
of time Appellants have been in breach. Clearly, then, material disputes of fact exist
precluding summary judgment on the issue of damages.
{¶41} Accordingly, we reverse and remand the matter of damages to the trial
court for purposes of trial on the merits of damages to determine whether damages
are inadequate, and if so, whether forfeiture is proper.
Conclusion
{¶42} As the lease contains no express disclaimer, the parties’ lease contains
an implied covenant of development pursuant to Beer and Ionno. Appellees
produced evidence proving a breach of this covenant, and Appellants have conceded
that they failed to develop four-fifths of the leased property over the course of more
than thirty years. A material question of fact still exists as to damages. Accordingly,
we reverse and remand for trial on the merits to determine damages and, if
inadequate, whether forfeiture is proper.
Donofrio, P.J., concurs.
Robb, J., concurs.