[Cite as Lehigh Gas-Ohio, L.L.C. v. Cincy Oil Queen City, L.L.C., 2016-Ohio-4611.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
LEHIGH GAS-OHIO, LLC, : APPEAL NO. C-150572
TRIAL NO. A-1104166
Plaintiff-Appellant, :
vs. :
CINCY OIL QUEEN CITY, LLC, :
and :
CINCY OIL HOPPLE ST., LLC, :
Defendants-Appellees. :
___________________________ :
TRIAL NO. A-1106892
LEHIGH GAS-OHIO, LLC, :
Plaintiff-Appellant, : O P I N I O N.
vs. :
SOLOMON BELAY :
Defendant-Appellee. :
Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas
Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Cause
Remanded
Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: June 29, 2016
Dinsmore & Shohl, LLP, and H. Toby Schisler, for Plaintiff-Appellant,
Benjamin, Yocum & Heather, LLC, Bradford C. Weber, Gary F. Franke Co., L.P.A.,
and Gary F. Franke, for Defendants-Appellees.
OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
D E W INE , Judge.
{¶1} This is our second go-round with this dispute. It involves two
properties, which each contain a gas station, an am/pm convenience store and a
Subway restaurant.
{¶2} The owner of the properties, Lehigh Gas, sold the opportunity to
operate the sites to Solomon Belay. The deal went bad quickly—among other things,
problems arose when Subway refused to approve Belay as a franchisee. Litigation
ensued.
{¶3} The trial court initially found that both parties had breached their
contracts and ordered Lehigh to return a portion of $300,000 in key money that
Belay had put up to run the sites. Lehigh appealed, and we reversed. We determined
that the court erred in finding that Lehigh had breached by interfering with Belay’s
attempts to get approved as a Subway and am/pm franchisee. We sent the matter
back to the trial court because the court had not considered other alternative
contractual and quasi-contractual theories asserted by Belay.
{¶4} On remand, the trial court again ordered part of the key money
returned, relying upon both contract theory and the principle of unjust enrichment.
We find neither theory applicable to the facts before us, so we reverse the court as to
the key money. There are also various issues relating to refunds sought by Belay for
security upgrades, inventory and fuel deposits, which we sort out in the opinion that
follows.
I. Background
{¶5} The initial framework for the deal was set forth in a nonbinding letter of
intent signed by Lehigh Gas-Ohio (“Lehigh”) and Belay in April 2010. Mr. Belay would
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
pay “key money” for the “business opportunity” to lease multiple properties and operate
the gas stations, am/pm convenience stores and Subway restaurants at the locations.
Mr. Belay eventually decided to purchase the opportunity to operate two of the four
properties listed in the letter of intent—one on Queen City Avenue and one on Hopple
Street. He paid $300,000 in key money, which consisted of $200,000 in cash and
$100,000 financed through two promissory notes with Lehigh.
{¶6} Mr. Belay set up two limited-liability companies, Cincy Oil Queen City
and Cincy Oil Hopple St. (collectively, “Cincy Oil”), to operate the businesses. The
parties formalized their arrangement with a set of three agreements for each property: a
lease agreement, a management-and-security agreement and a management agreement.
The lease provided for an initial five-year term that would be renewable for an additional
five years upon Cincy Oil’s election. The management-and-security agreement covered
the retail-gas sales at the properties. Cincy Oil was to pay a $40,000 fuel deposit
($20,000 per property) and receive commissions for selling Lehigh’s gasoline. The
management agreement allowed Cincy Oil to sell alcoholic beverages at the convenience
stores under Lehigh’s liquor permit until the permit was transferred to Cincy Oil. Cincy
Oil agreed to provide a monthly accounting of alcohol sales and to send Lehigh an
amount equal to the sales taxes tied to alcohol sales. Lehigh would in turn send the
taxes to the state. Importantly, none of the agreements referred to the key money.
{¶7} Cincy Oil took over operations in August 2010 upon execution of the
agreements. Things went quickly south. Because Belay had not yet been approved as a
franchisee of either am/pm or Subway, he operated under Lehigh’s franchise
agreements. He had received verbal approval of his am/pm franchise application, but
his attempt to get approval as a Subway franchisee was not successful. To be approved,
Mr. Belay needed to pass a Wonderlic intelligence test, and neither he nor his wife could
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manage to do so. Further problems arose involving Cincy Oil’s sale of alcoholic
beverages at the locations. In violation of the management agreement, Cincy Oil did not
provide Lehigh with a monthly accounting of the alcohol sales and did not forward the
sales tax payments to Lehigh. Because of this failure, Lehigh sent Cincy Oil a letter in
November 2010 stating that it was in default of the management agreement. Lehigh
also notified am/pm of Cincy Oil’s default, and am/pm rescinded its franchise approval.
{¶8} Despite the default notice, Cincy Oil continued to refuse to send the
alcohol sales taxes to Lehigh. Lehigh filed an eviction action, asserting that Cincy Oil’s
failure to forward the taxes to Lehigh was a breach of the lease. Cincy Oil
counterclaimed, alleging breach of contract, tortious interference, fraud and unjust
enrichment. After a hearing, the court granted the eviction but held off on determining
the remaining claims and counterclaims. Cincy Oil vacated the properties in July 2011,
and Mr. Belay stopped paying on one of the promissory notes that he had signed to
finance part of the key money. Lehigh filed a breach-of-contract complaint against
Belay. Mr. Belay filed counterclaims mirroring the counterclaims filed by Cincy Oil in
the eviction action. The eviction case and the breach-of-contract case were consolidated.
{¶9} The trial court held a hearing on the claims that remained following the
eviction. After a hearing and a review of briefs, the court issued a decision finding that
both parties had materially breached the agreements—Lehigh by interfering with Belay’s
attempts to get approval as a franchisee of am/pm and Subway, and Belay by failing to
forward the alcohol sales taxes. The court determined that Lehigh was entitled to
recover $125,019 in alcohol sales taxes. Cincy Oil was to be refunded $99,210.91 for
what it paid for inventory, $40,000 for fuel deposits, and $30,000 for safes it had
installed to upgrade security at the properties. Additionally, the court concluded that
Lehigh should return $67,631.55 for gas commissions that it had withheld from Cincy
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
Oil. As for the key money that Belay had paid up front for the business opportunity, the
court decided that $250,000 should be divided evenly between the parties, so that
Lehigh would return $125,000 to Cincy Oil.1 The net result of the court’s determination
was that Lehigh owed Cincy Oil $236,823.44. The court also specifically found that
there had been no fraud and dismissed Cincy Oil’s remaining counterclaims.
{¶10} Lehigh appealed. Cincy Oil did not. In Lehigh v. Cincy Oil Queen City,
LLC, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-130127, 2014-Ohio-2799 (“Lehigh I”), we decided that the
trial court erred when it determined that Lehigh had breached the parties’ contracts by
interfering with the franchise-approval process. We noted that “after finding that
Lehigh had materially breached the agreements, [the court] declined to consider the
defendants’ claim for restitution under alternative theories.” Id. at ¶ 52. Thus, we
remanded for the court “to determine whether the defendants would be entitled to a
return of any of the ‘key money’ and deposits, or compensation for the inventory or
security upgrades, under the terms of the agreements or under a quasi-contract
theory.” Id.
{¶11} On remand, the trial court concluded that Cincy Oil should recover
under two alternative theories—the doctrine of impossibility of performance and unjust
enrichment. The court found that “[t]he contract is silent as to what happens to the ‘key
money’ if the assets/‘opportunity’ cannot be transferred.” Despite the contract’s silence
on the issue, the court determined that “when it became impossible for [Cincy Oil] to
become the franchisee and license holder, a reasonable interpretation of the agreement
between the parties is that [Cincy Oil] receive a pro rata share of the ‘key money’ back.”
The court continued,
1 The trial court apparently reduced the amount Belay had paid in key money ($300,000) by
$50,000 to account for the promissory note that he had not yet paid.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
Even if [Cincy Oil] could not recover under a contract theory, [it] would
be entitled to recover under an unjust enrichment claim. * * * In this case,
[Cincy Oil] conferred a benefit on [Lehigh] with the ‘key money’ and
payments for security to the premises and unused inventory. Plaintiff
clearly knew of the benefit. And for the reasons discussed above, it would
be unjust for [Lehigh] to retain the funds.
{¶12} As a result, the court determined that Lehigh should pay the outstanding
gas commissions to Cincy Oil and return four-fifths of the money Cincy Oil had paid for
the key money2, fuel deposits, inventory and safes. The court arrived at the four-fifths
share by reasoning that Cincy Oil only had operated the convenience stores for one year
out of the initial five-year lease term. The court also concluded that the question of the
promissory note debt was resolved by its damages award. Lehigh now appeals, arguing
that Cincy Oil was not entitled to damages under either a contract or unjust enrichment
theory.
II. Cincy Oil Isn’t Entitled to Return of the Key Money Under a
Contract Theory
{¶13} In their counterclaims, Mr. Belay and Cincy Oil alleged that Lehigh had
breached the parties’ contracts in four ways: failing to transfer liquor permits, interfering
with the franchise approvals, failing to work with Cincy Oil with respect to business
operations and retaining ATM and gas-revenue commissions, fuel deposits and
inventory. In Lehigh I, we found that the evidence did not support a finding that Lehigh
had interfered with the franchise-approval process. On remand, the trial court did not
find that Lehigh had committed any of the other breaches alleged by Cincy Oil in its
2On remand, the trial court stated that the amount of key money paid was $350,000, but the
parties seem to agree that the amount was actually $300,000.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
counterclaim. Nonetheless, it found that Belay had a contractual right to a refund of a
portion of the key money.
{¶14} As noted in the trial court’s decision, none of the agreements signed by
the parties mentions the key money that was provided for in the nonbinding letter of
intent. While Lehigh and Cincy Oil agree that the money was for a business opportunity,
they disagree about what the business opportunity encompassed. Cincy Oil maintains it
paid for the franchises and that, without approval to run the franchises, the contract was
void. Lehigh counters that Cincy Oil got what it paid for—the chance to operate the
franchises pending approval. Cincy Oil’s failure to obtain approval, Lehigh argues, did
not invalidate the contract. We think Lehigh has the better argument. There is no
evidence in the record that the parties reached any agreement that the key money would
be returned in the event that the franchises did not approve Belay as a franchisee. The
written agreements between the parties contain no such provision, and there is no
evidence that the parties reached any oral understanding that the key money would be
returned should things not work out.3 Absent an agreement, Cincy Oil cannot
demonstrate a breach of contract on Lehigh’s part with respect to the key money.
{¶15} Despite the lack of an agreement, the trial court relied upon the contract
doctrine of impossibility of performance to order a refund of the key money. In simple
terms, the doctrine excuses performance under a contract because it has been rendered
impossible due to the occurrence of an unforeseeable event. See Mth Real Estate, LLC v.
Hotel Innovations, Inc., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 21729, 2007-Ohio-5183. See also
Skilton v. Perry Local School Dist. Bd. of Edn., 11th Dist. Lake No. 2001-L-140, 2002-
Ohio-6702. The doctrine is an affirmative defense to a breach-of-contract claim. See
3Even if there was evidence of an oral agreement between the parties, we are not convinced the
agreement would satisfy the statute of frauds. See R.C. 1335.05.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
J.I.L. One LLC v. Kemper, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-130555, 2014-Ohio-4932, ¶ 19-20.
It cannot be used, as done here, as a means of recovering damages under a contract.
{¶16} Further, the doctrine may only be used to excuse performance under a
contract when the event that makes performance of the contract impossible is
unforeseeable. Skilton at ¶ 28. In this case, the lack of franchise approval was not
unforeseeable. Indeed, Mr. Belay acknowledged that when he signed the agreements, he
knew he still needed to get Subway’s approval, and that he had been told by Subway that
it had “every right to approve or disapprove—for any reason—[his] potential to become a
Subway franchisee.”
{¶17} In essence, the trial court used the doctrine to fill in what it found lacking
in the agreements—provision for the refund of money if the deal didn’t work out. But
“where the terms in an existing contract are clear and unambiguous, [a court] cannot in
effect create a new contract by finding an intent not expressed in the clear language
employed by the parties.” Alexander v. Buckeye Pipeline Co., 53 Ohio St.2d 241, 246,
374 N.E.2d 146 (1978). The parties entered into six separate contracts governing their
relationship—none of which expressed any intent for the key money to be returned if the
deal went bad. The trial court erred when it used the doctrine of impossibility to create
such a term.
III. Cincy Oil Cannot Show Lehigh was Unjustly Enriched
{¶18} In the alternative, the trial court concluded that Cincy Oil was entitled to
damages based on an unjust-enrichment theory. As an initial matter, Lehigh argues that
the trial court erred in even considering unjust enrichment because Cincy Oil did not
appeal or cross-appeal the trial court’s initial decision which dismissed all of Cincy Oil’s
counterclaims except its breach-of-contract claim. In Lehigh’s view, Cincy Oil waived
any argument about unjust enrichment, and the trial court could not consider whether
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
unjust enrichment applied. But Cincy Oil, as the prevailing party, was not required to
cross-appeal. See App.R. 3(C)(2). And the trial court was required to follow our remand
order. See Nolan v. Nolan, 11 Ohio St.3d 1, 462 N.E.2d 410 (1984), syllabus (“Absent
extraordinary circumstances * * * an inferior court has no discretion to disregard the
mandate of a superior court in a prior appeal in the same case.”). Thus we conclude that
the applicability of unjust enrichment was properly before the trial court on remand.
{¶19} The gist of Cincy Oil’s equitable claim was that Lehigh was unjustly
enriched by Cincy Oil’s payment of key money. To make a case of unjust enrichment,
Cincy Oil needed to show that (1) it conferred a benefit on Lehigh, (2) Lehigh was aware
of the benefit and (3) it would be unjust for Lehigh to retain the benefit. Here, Cincy Oil
clearly satisfied the first two elements: the $300,000 that it gave to Lehigh conferred a
benefit of which Lehigh was aware. At issue is the third element—whether Lehigh’s
retention of the key money in light of the failed business deal was “unjust.”
{¶20} “It is not sufficient for the plaintiff to show that it has conferred a benefit
upon the defendants. It must go further and show that under the circumstances it has
the superior equity so that, as against it, it would be unconscionable for the defendant to
retain the benefit.” Cincinnati v. Fox, 71 Ohio App. 233, 239, 49 N.E.2d 69 (1st
Dist.1943). The difficulty in defining what is sufficiently “unjust” to warrant restitution
has been addressed in the Restatement:
In reality, the law of restitution is very far from imposing liability for
every instance of what might plausibly be called unjust enrichment. The
law’s potential for intervention in transactions that might be challenged
as inequitable is narrower, more predictable, and more objectively
determined than the unconstrained implications of the words “unjust
enrichment.” Equity and good conscience might see an unjust enrichment
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
in the performance of a valid but unequal bargain, or in the legally
protected refusal to perform an equal one (as where the statute of
limitations bars enforcement of a valid debt).
***
The concern of restitution is not, in fact, with unjust enrichment in any
such broad sense, but with a narrower set of circumstances giving rise to
what might more appropriately be called unjustified enrichment.
Compared to the open-ended implications of the term “unjust
enrichment,” instances of unjustified enrichment are both predictable
and objectively determined, because the justification in question is not
moral but legal. Unjustified enrichment is enrichment that lacks an
adequate legal basis; it results from a transaction that the law treats as
ineffective to work a conclusive alteration in ownership rights.
Restatement of the Law 3d, Restitution and Unjust Enrichment Section 1 (2011).
{¶21} Cincy Oil cannot show that it had superior equity such that Lehigh’s
retention of the key money was “unjustified.” It was Cincy Oil’s breach that brought
about the termination of the agreements. And, as we determined in Lehigh I, there was
no evidence that Lehigh bore legal responsibility for Belay’s failure to be approved as a
franchisee. Putting the best light on Belay’s position, the most that can be said is that he
entered into a “valid but unequal bargain”—a circumstance the Restatement tells us is
not cause for restitution.
{¶22} We conclude that the evidence does not demonstrate that Lehigh was
unjustified in retaining the key money. The trial court’s determination that Cincy Oil
should recover a portion of the key money under either the doctrine of impossibility of
performance or unjust enrichment was error.
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IV. The Contracts Resolve the Question of Fuel Deposits, Inventory
and Security Improvements
{¶23} Along with the key money, the trial court also determined that Lehigh
should return four-fifths of the amount that Cincy Oil had paid for fuel deposits,
inventory and the safes it had installed. The court apparently applied the same logic to
these items as it applied to the key money issue: since Cincy Oil had only operated the
sites for one-fifth of the lease term, it should get four-fifths of its money back. Although
not explicit in its reasoning, the court appears to again rely both on the contract doctrine
of impossibility and the alternative concept of unjust enrichment.
{¶24} In doing so, the court overlooked the fact that there were explicit
contractual terms covering the fuel deposits, inventory and safes. It is axiomatic that a
court cannot create new terms that contradict the terms of the parties’ contractual
agreements. Similarly, “[i]t is clearly the law in Ohio that an equitable action in
quasi-contract for unjust enrichment will not lie when the subject matter of that
claim is covered by an express contract[.]” Ryan v. Rival Mfg. Co., 1st Dist. Hamilton
No. C-810032, 1981 Ohio App. LEXIS 14729, *3 (Dec. 16, 1981). Thus, rather than
invent new contractual terms or rely upon an unjust-enrichment theory, the court
should have looked to the terms of the contracts. Our review of these contracts
convinces us that only money paid for fuel deposits should be returned to Cincy Oil.
{¶25} Under Section 7 of the Management and Security Agreements, Cincy Oil
agreed to pay a $20,000 fuel deposit for each property. According to the agreements,
“[t]he deposit shall be returned to [Cincy Oil] ninety days following the termination of
this Agreement, subject to the deduction for any sums due [Lehigh] from [Cincy Oil] but
unpaid at the time of termination.” Lehigh made no claim for any sums to be withheld
from the deposit. Consistent with the contract, Lehigh should have returned the
$40,000 deposit following the termination of the agreement.
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OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
{¶26} The parties’ agreements are also determinative of the question of the
inventory and the safes. Article 8 of the Lease Agreements for both properties provides
that
[u]pon expiration or termination of this Lease, Tenant shall have the
right to remove from the Premises * * * any * * * moveable personal
property of Tenant, provided that Tenant repair any damage to the
Premises or to Landlord’s equipment cased by the removal of the
same. If within ten (10) days after expiration or termination of this
Lease, Tenant shall have failed to remove any of Tenant’s * * *
moveable personal property from Premises, Landlord shall
automatically become owner of such * * * moveable personal
property, and shall have the right to keep, sell in place, or remove the
same in any manner.
{¶27} In the face of such clear contract language, the only question is whether
the safes and the inventory were “personal property” subject to the provisions in Article
8. They were: Black’s Law Dictionary defines personal property as “any movable or
intangible thing that is subject to ownership and not classified as real property.”
Black’s Law Dictionary 1254 (8th Ed.2004). Under the contract, following
termination of the lease agreement, Cincy Oil had ten days to remove its personal
property, which by definition includes any inventory it had purchased and its safes.
When it didn’t remove the property, it became Lehigh’s, and Lehigh was not required
to compensate Cincy Oil for the abandoned personal property.
{¶28} Thus, we conclude that the court erred when it ordered four-fifths of the
money paid for fuel deposits, inventory and safes paid to Cincy Oil. Instead, Lehigh
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must return the full $40,000 paid for fuel deposits. It need not, however, repay Cincy
Oil for the inventory and the safes it left behind.
V. Conclusion
{¶29} We overrule Lehigh’s first assignment of error to the extent it challenged
the award of the fuel deposits under the contract. In all other respects, we sustain it and
the second assignment of error. That leaves us with the following:
Lehigh is liable to Cincy Oil for:
$67,631.55 for gas commissions
$40,000 for fuel deposits.
Cincy Oil is liable to Lehigh for:
$125,019 for withheld alcohol sales taxes
$31,799.85 plus interest for its default on the promissory note.4
We therefore affirm the trial court’s judgment in part, reverse it in part, and
remand the case to the trial court for entry of judgment in accordance with this opinion.
Judgment accordingly.
C UNNINGHAM , P.J., and M OCK , J., concur.
Please note:
The court has recorded its own entry on the date of the release of this opinion.
4 The part of the trial court’s initial order that Lehigh was liable for the gas commissions and
Cincy Oil for the alcohol sales taxes was not appealed and remains valid.
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