[Cite as BR Kettering Towne Ctr. L.L.C. v. Golden City Ballroom L.L.C., 2016-Ohio-5159.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
MONTGOMERY COUNTY
BR KETTERING TOWNE CENTER :
LLC :
: C.A. CASE NO. 26718
Plaintiff-Appellee :
: T.C. NO. 11CV5717
v. :
: (Civil Appeal from
GOLDEN CITY BALLROOM LLC : Common Pleas Court)
:
Defendant-Appellant :
:
:
...........
OPINION
Rendered on the ___29th___ day of ___July____, 2016.
...........
CHARLES M. BLUE, Atty. Reg. No. 0074329, 401 E. Stroop Rd., Kettering, Ohio 45429
Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellee
JAMES D. MILLER, II, Atty. Reg. No. 0088136, 7385 Far Hills Avenue, Dayton, Ohio
45459
Attorney for Defendant-Appellant
.............
FROELICH, J.
{¶ 1} Golden City Ballroom (“GCB”) appeals from a judgment of the Montgomery
County Court of Common Pleas, which overruled in part and sustained in part the
magistrate’s decision and ordered that (1) BR Kettering Towne Center, LLC (“KTC”)
recover $47,270.42, plus post-judgment interest, in unpaid rent from GCB, and (2) GCB
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recover the “floating floor” and mirrors it installed at the rented premises. 1 Only the
portion of the judgment relating to the unpaid rent and fees is at issue in this appeal.
{¶ 2} For the following reasons, the trial court’s judgment will be affirmed in part,
reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.
I. Evidence of Lease Negotiations at Trial
{¶ 3} This matter was tried before a magistrate in January 2013. With respect to
the unpaid rent claim, Tracy Edwards, an employee of KTC’s property manager, testified
on KTC’s behalf; Irina Kozheva, GCB’s co-owner and vice president, testified for GCB.
The parties also stipulated to certain facts and the admissibility of ten exhibits. The
testimony, stipulations, and documentary evidence at trial established the following facts.
{¶ 4} On December 30, 2004, GCB entered into a five-year lease with Center-Plex
Venture to rent the premises located at 2078 East Dorothy Lane in Kettering. (Exhibit I.)
GCB took possession of the premises on February 28, 2005, and under the terms of the
lease, the lease would expire on February 28, 2010.
{¶ 5} KTC acquired the deed to the commercial property on October 25, 2006.
The parties stipulated that KTC is the successor-in-interest to Center-Plex Venture for
purposes of the lease.
{¶ 6} The lease required GCB to pay a base rent, plus additional fees, including a
common area maintenance (CAM) charge, a fire and liability insurance charge, a real
estate tax charge, and a marketing fund charge. The initial base rent was free for four
months, $2,500 for the fifth and sixth months, and $3,000 for months seven through
1BR Kettering Towne Center filed a cross-appeal, but it moved to dismiss its cross-
appeal on February 1, 2016. We granted the motion on February 18, 2016.
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twelve. Each subsequent year charged a higher base rent based on cost per square
foot of space rented (4,250 sq. ft.). During the fifth year (March 2009 to February 2010),
the base rent was $4,604.70 per month and the additional fees came to approximately
$1,415 per month.
{¶ 7} The lease contained a holdover provision, Section 10.3, setting forth terms
should GCB remain in possession after the expiration of the lease. Section 10.3
provided:
In the event Tenant remains in possession of the Leased Premises after the
expiration of the tenancy created hereunder, and without the execution of a
new Lease or written consent of Landlord, Tenant, at the option of Landlord,
shall be deemed to be occupying the Leased Premises as a Tenant from
month to month, at twice the Fixed Minimum and Percentage Rent, subject
to all of the other conditions, provisions and obligations of this Lease insofar
as the same are applicable to a month-to-month tenancy.
{¶ 8} Section 10.5 addressed the effect of waivers of default. It stated: “No
consent or waiver, expressed or implied, by Landlord to or of any breach of any covenant,
condition or duty shall be construed as a consent or waiver to or of any other breach of
the same or any other covenant, condition or duty.
{¶ 9} Section 10.7, titled “Remedies Cumulative” further stated:
* * * No delay or omission of Landlord to exercise any right or power arising
from any default shall impair any such right or power or shall be construed
to be a waiver of any such default or any acquiescence therein. Neither
the rights herein given to receive, collect, sue for or distrain for any rent or
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rents, moneys or payments, or to enforce the terms, provisions and
conditions of the Lease, or to prevent the breach of nonobservance thereof,
or the exercise of any such right or of any other right or remedy hereunder
or otherwise granted or arising, shall in any way affect or impair or toll the
right or power of Landlord to declare the Lease Term hereby granted ended,
and to terminate this Lease as provided for in this Lease, or to repossess
without terminating the Lease, because of any default in or breach of the
covenants, provisions or conditions of this Lease.
{¶ 10} Finally, the lease contained an anti-oral modification provision in Section
11.11. According to that Section, the lease incorporated all of the “negotiations,
considerations, representations and understandings” between KTC and GCB. Section
11.11 further provided that the lease “may be modified or altered only by agreement in
writing between Landlord and Tenant, and no act or omission of any employee or agent
of Landlord or Tenant or of Landlord broker shall alter, change or modify any of the
provisions hereof.”
{¶ 11} On January 13, 2010, a little over a month before the lease was set to
expire, Irina Kozheva, an owner/vice president of GCB, wrote a letter to KTC,
acknowledging that the February 2010 end of their lease term was approaching,
expressing its desire to remain a tenant, but stating that the current lease terms were
“unworkable.” (Exhibit V.) Kozheva requested a new monthly rent — including the
lease rate and all fees, charges and taxes — of no more than $3,500 per month.
{¶ 12} In a letter dated January 22, 2010, Carol Wass of Continental Real Estate,
the property manager of the premises and an agent of KTC, replied to Kozheva’s request.
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The letter, titled “Proposed lease renewal, Kettering Towne Center,” stated, in relevant
part:
In communicating with the Landlord and a review of your letter of January
13, 2010; the Landlord is prepared to offer the following:
The landlord is willing to offer 6 months at the requested rate in your
letter of January 13, 2010 and then the rate will go back after that
time to the existing rate. This will be contingent upon a signed
confidentiality agreement about the terms.
If you are in agreement with the above, please sign below and I will have a
more formalized document prepared.
This letter is not intended to create any legal rights or obligations, but rather
to summarize the basic terms in which Landlord and Tenant may enter into
an agreement. No such rights or obligations shall take effect until the lease
agreement has been fully executed by both parties.
(Exhibit IV.) Exhibit IV indicates that it was “agreed and accepted” by GCB on January
28, 2010; a signature and “Vice President” are on the signature line.
{¶ 13} As noted by the trial court, there was no evidence that a confidentiality
agreement was ever signed or that any “more formalized documents” were ever prepared
as a result of this letter. Nevertheless, Kozheva began making $3,500 monthly
payments in reliance on the letter.
{¶ 14} On February 28, 2010, the lease expired. The parties stipulated that,
“[f]rom March 1, 2010, to February 28, 2011, Golden City Ballroom remained in
possession of the Premises as a holdover tenant.”
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{¶ 15} On April 1, 2010, Cassidy Turley, a commercial real estate services firm,
became the property manager for KTC. Tracy Edwards, an employee of Cassidy Turley,
managed the premises as part of her duties. Edwards testified that she received a file
regarding GCB from the previous property manager, and she discovered that the lease
had expired. Edwards testified that she considered them to be “holdover tenants,” liable
for the holdover amount specified in Section 10.3 of the lease. She further testified that,
when she became property manager, GCB was paying $3,500 a month in rent.
{¶ 16} Edwards contacted GCB and was informed that GCB “had reached an
agreement to just pay $3,500 a month gross through the previous property management
company.” Edwards asked GCB to “send me copies of what they had so that I could do
further research and figure out where we were in the process.” GCB provided
documentation (a copy of the January 22 letter) to Edwards.
{¶ 17} Edwards’s testimony, as property manager for KTC, and Kozheva’s
testimony on behalf of GCB differed on what occurred between Edwards’s receipt of the
documentation and October 2010.
{¶ 18} Edwards testified that, after she received a copy of the signed January 22
letter from GCB, she called KTC and asked if a lease had ever been issued with the terms
in the letter. She reported that KTC responded that it had never received a copy of the
letter (Exhibit IV) and had not agreed to issue any lease with those terms.
{¶ 19} Edwards testified that, after communicating with KTC, she again contacted
GCB and spoke with the officer manager; the officer manager indicated that the owners
were out of the country due to a family emergency. Edwards testified that she told the
office manager that GCB was a holdover tenant, liable for double rent plus expenses, and
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she told the officer manager that the rent needed to be brought to date, so that they “could
enter lease negotiations and get all of the paperwork corrected.” (Tr. 12.)
{¶ 20} Edwards indicated that the May rent had not been paid, and that she had
asked GCB for $3,500; Edwards testified that the amount was brought current in
September 2010. When asked why she had demanded $3,500 instead of the holdover
rent amount, Edwards stated, “The understanding was once the 3,500 was caught up,
was that, the owner [KTC/landlord] would authorize an agreement providing Golden City
Ballroom with a period of time where they would not be liable for expenses, and that they
would waive the holdover period because they would be signing an extension of their
lease.” Edwards testified that, after the rent was brought current in mid-September,
Cassidy Turley began to negotiate a new lease between KTC and GCB.2
{¶ 21} In contrast, Kozheva testified that, after sending the documentation to
Edwards, she did not hear anything back from KTC until October 2010, when she received
a lease proposal from KTC. Kozheva testified that she was anxious to get in touch with
KTC about the lease, that she called KTC and left messages several times, that her
business partner was pushing her to resolve the matter, and that they were on a month-
to-month payment plan and had “no idea” what was going on. (Tr. 56.) Kozheva stated
2 Edwards’s testimony regarding GCB’s balance is not entirely consistent with the
account ledger (Ex. II), which the parties stipulated “accurately records credits for all
payments made by Golden City Ballroom to BR Kettering Towne Center, LLC, during the
period shown, as well as the security deposit paid by Golden City Ballroom.”
The account ledger reflects that no payment was made in May 2015 and shows
an additional payment of $3,500 on September 15, 2010. The September payment
brought GCB’s account current only if KTC charged GCB $3,500 per month beginning on
March 1, 2010. The ledger shows what GCB would owe with GCB being charged the
holdover rent and fees beginning on March 1, 2010; the ledger’s balance after the
September 15 payment was $51,061.52.
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that GCB had an office manager and receptionist, but that neither of those individuals had
anything to do with billing or legal matters.
{¶ 22} On October 15, 2010, Cassidy Turley sent a proposal for a three-year lease
with a base rent of $3,500 gross for six months, $3,500 with triple net operating expenses
for months 7-12, and $4,200 with triple net operating expenses for the second and third
years. (Ex. VIII.) Edwards stated that the agreement would be backdated to the
beginning of the holdover period. Both Kozheva and Edwards testified that GCB did not
accept this proposal.
{¶ 23} Cassidy Turley sent GCB a second proposal in November 2010. (Ex. VII.)
The second proposal was for a three-year lease with base rent of $3,500 gross for the
first nine months, $3,500 with triple net operating expenses for months 10-16, and $4,200
with triple net operating expenses for months 17-36. At the end of the proposal, there is
a signature indicating that the proposal was accepted by GCB and the signatory’s title is
stated as “vice president.” However, the acceptance is dated November 2, 2010, prior
to the typewritten date at the top of the proposal (November 17, 2010). Edwards did not
recall receiving an executed copy of the second proposal; no lease was prepared with
those terms.
{¶ 24} On December 21, 2010, Edwards sent GCB a letter, indicating the “2011
Operating Expenses Budget” had been finalized. The letter stated that, commencing
January 1, 2011, GCB’s new rental amount would be $4,494 per month consisting of
$3,500 for base rent, $318 for CAM, $629 for real estate taxes, and $46 for insurance.
(Ex. X.) Edwards testified that these amounts were based on her “understanding that
the parties were nearing an agreement to execute a new lease and that the rent would
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be remaining at 3,500 into some point at 2011.” (Tr. 19.) Kozheva testified that she did
not sign a new lease after receiving this letter.
{¶ 25} Kozheva testified that, after receiving the December 2010 letter, GCB
already knew that it could not afford rent plus triple net, so she and her business partner
began looking for another place to lease. GCB found a location in Centerville with more
favorable terms, and provided KTC 30 days’ notice that it would be vacating the premises
by February 28, 2011.
{¶ 26} On January 25, 2011, KTC sent GCB a letter acknowledging receipt of
GCB’s notice to leave the property, confirming that GCB would be vacating the property
on February 28, and notifying GCB that it owed KTC past rent in the amount of
$87,245.77. (Ex. III.) KTC indicated that, beginning in March 2010, GCB had been
required to pay double rent ($4,604.72 x 2) plus a triple net charge of $1,585.67 per
month, for a monthly total of $10,795.07 per month. (Eleven months at $10,795.07 per
month amounted to $118,745.77.) KTC stated that GCB had paid only $3,500 per month
from March 2010 through November 2010, for a total of $31,500 in payments, and had
not paid any rent in December 2010 and January 2011. KTC concluded that GCB owed
past due rent of $87,245.77 ($118,795.77 - $31,500).
{¶ 27} Edwards testified that GCB did not return the keys to the premises, and she
was uncertain when the property was actually vacated. Kozheva testified that GCB
vacated the premises on February 28, but GCB employees went back on March 1, with
KTC’s agreement, to remove the hardwood floor and mirrors that GCB had installed.
(Additional testimony was presented about the installation and attempted removal of the
hardwood floor and mirrors; that testimony is not relevant to this appeal.)
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{¶ 28} In August 2011, KTC brought suit against GCB, seeking unpaid rent and
fees that had allegedly accrued during a holdover period after the expiration of the parties’
lease. KTC also sought interest on the unpaid amounts and reasonable expenses and
attorney fees. GCB denied that it owed any rent, and it filed counterclaims alleging that
KTC had improperly prevented GCB from removing a custom wood dance floor and
custom mirrors from the premises.
II. The Magistrate’s and the Trial Court’s Rulings
{¶ 29} On March 7, 2013, the magistrate found in GCB’s favor on both KTC’s
complaint and GCB’s counterclaims.3 With respect to KTC’s claim, the magistrate held
that the lease had been expressly modified for six months following the expiration of the
lease and that KTC had implicitly agreed to an additional six-month modification for the
second six-month period.
{¶ 30} With respect to the first six-month period after the lease expired, the
Magistrate stated:
Just prior to the expiration of the lease term, Defendant, via letter (Ex. vi),
requested modification of the lease terms, specifically, reduction of the rent
to $3,500.00 per month. Plaintiff, via letter (Ex. iv), indicated that it was
willing to offer 6 months at the requested rate “and then the rate will go back
after that time to the existing rate,” contingent upon execution of a
confidentiality agreement. The proposal letter indicated that Plaintiff would
prepare the necessary paperwork. These terms were accepted by
3
Because GCB’s counterclaims are not at issue on appeal, we will address only the
magistrate’s and the trial court’s decisions concerning the unpaid rent and fees, and we
will not discuss the counterclaims.
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Defendant on January 28, 2011 in writing (ex. iv). Plaintiff never prepared
the agreed upon paperwork. Nonetheless, in reliance upon Plaintiff’s
representations, Defendant began paying (and Plaintiff accepted) rental
payments in the amount of $3,500.00 per month. According to Exhibit 2,
Defendant made the following payments:
March 2, 2010 $5,399.51
April 9, 2010 $3,500.00
April 29, 2010 $3,500.00
June 2, 2010 $3,503.97
June 28, 2010 $3,500.00
August 1, 2010 $3,509.86
August 31, 2010 $3,500.00
These amounts were accepted by Plaintiff and there is no indication that
Defendant was informed that it was behind on rent or that Plaintiff sought to
collect the “holdover rent” in the amount set forth in the original Lease
Agreement. Accordingly, the Magistrate finds that, although Plaintiff failed
to prepare the agreed upon documents, the parties[’] actions indicate that
there was a modification of the Lease Agreement for the six months
following expiration of the original lease term.
{¶ 31} The magistrate further explained its conclusion that the parties had implicitly
modified the lease for the second six-month period, as follows:
In October, 2010, the parties began negotiating for an additional
lease term. However, both the October 2010 and the November 2010
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proposals were rejected by Defendants. During this time, Defendant
continued to pay, and Plaintiff continued to accept without conditions, rental
payments in the amount of $3,500.00. The Magistrate notes that the
December 21, 2010 letter from Cassidy Turly [sic], the property
management firm acting on Plaintiff’s behalf, suggests that [GCB] would be
liable for additional charges in excess of the “base rent” of $3,500.00.
However, based upon Ms. Edward’s testimony that this letter was a form
letter generated and sent to all tenants at Kettering Towne Center, the
Magistrate does not find the letter to reflect the understanding of the parties.
Rather, the Magistrate finds that there was an implied modification of the
Lease Agreement, which extended through February of 2011. This implied
modification is evidenced by Plaintiff’s acceptance of the following
payments:
September 15, 2010 $3,500.00
October 22, 2010 $3,505.18
November 1, 2010 $3,500.00
January 24, 2010 $3,500.00
February 15, 2010 $3,500.00
February 28, 2011 $4,072.00 (Security Deposit)
March 22, 2011 $20.94
The first and only time Plaintiff indicated that it would not accept rental
payments in the $3,500.00 amount was the letter dated January 25, 2011.
(The Magistrate notes that Section 10.1 of the Lease Agreement requires
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Plaintiff to notify Defendant of any default on rent or other payments due
under the Lease Agreement.) Nonetheless, even after this letter was sent,
Plaintiff accepted the February rental payment in the amount of $3,500.00.
Thus, the Magistrate finds that the parties’ conduct indicates that there was
more likely than not a modification of the Lease Agreement whereby Plaintiff
agreed to accept $3,500.00 per month as the total amount of “holdover
rent.” Failure to find modification under these circumstances would result
in injury to Defendant, who continued to occupy the premises in reliance
upon Plaintiff’s acceptance of the $3,500.00 rental payments. Although
the parties originally intended that Plaintiff would memorialize their
agreement in a written Lease, Plaintiff failed to perform according to the
parties’ agreement, yet continued to accept performance by Defendant in
the form of reduced rent payments. It would be unfair to penalize
Defendant for Plaintiff’s failure to formalize the expressly agreed upon 6
month modification or the additional 6 month implied modification.
{¶ 32} KTC objected to the magistrate’s decision, asserting, in part, that the
magistrate erroneously concluded that the parties’ conduct amounted to a modification of
the lease agreement.
{¶ 33} On December 3, 2014, the trial court overruled in part and sustained in part
KTC’s objections. The trial court first addressed whether an oral modification of the
original lease between the parties was permissible. The trial court disagreed with the
magistrate that the original lease permitted oral modifications. The trial court cited
Section 11.11 of the lease, which stated that, in part: “All negotiations, considerations,
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representations and understandings between Landlord and Tenant are incorporated
herein and may be modified or altered only by agreement in writing between Landlord
and Tenant, and no act or omission of any employee or agent of any employee or agent
of Landlord or Tenant or of Landlord broker shall alter, change or modify any of the
provisions hereof.” The court also noted that the holdover provision required a new lease
or written consent of the landlord to alter the holdover terms.
{¶ 34} The trial court nevertheless found that the “no oral modifications” clause
could be waived by the actions of the parties. The court further noted, however, that
Section 10.7 of the lease constituted an anti-waiver provision, barring consideration of
KTC’s failure to immediately demand the holdover rent amount.
{¶ 35} Considering the evidence at the hearing, the trial court concluded that
Exhibit IV, the January 22, 2010 letter, demonstrated that KTC accepted a modification
of the lease, at least for the first six months following the expiration of the original lease
term. The trial court discussed Edwards’ testimony that she informed a person at GCB
that there was no lease modification and had advised GCB that it needed to become
caught up on their $3,500 payments. The trial court found that this testimony “shows
that the intention of Plaintiff’s [sic] at this time was to require Defendant’s [sic] to become
current on making $3,500 monthly payments, in return for which the parties could enter
into negotiations.” The trial court found that KTC accepted a modification of the lease,
at least until GCB’s account was brought current and negotiations could begin in
September 2010.
{¶ 36} The trial court further found, however, that GCB’s proposed monthly rent of
$3,500 was not acceptable to KTC beginning in September 2010. The court noted that
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KTC “consistently demanded additional compensation in return for allowing rent to
temporarily remain at $3,500 gross; in both lease proposals they [sic] demand a period
of time where Defendant would pay triple operating expenses.”
{¶ 37} The trial court further found that GCB did not reasonably rely on any
purported modification of the rental amount of $3,500 from September 2010 to February
2011. The court reasoned:
* * * Ms. Kozheva apparently viewed the agreement between her and
Plaintiff as the first six months at $3,500, followed by a month-to-month
tenancy at $3,500. This view of a month-to-month tenancy at $3,500 is not
supported by any of the evidence, and is indeed contradicted by it. Ms.
Edwards was clear in her April or May 2010 phone call that they were not
agreeing to a permanent agreement for month-to-month tenancy at $3,500,
but instead that Plaintiff merely wanted Defendant to become caught up so
that negotiations between the parties could begin. If a month-to-month
agreement for $3,500 was acceptable to Plaintiff, then no negotiations
would have been necessary, and no further lease proposals would have
been sent.
The October 15, 2010 and November 17, 2010 lease proposals also
made it clear that Ms. Kozheva’s view of a month-to-month tenancy was not
correct. Both proposals contain language that makes it clear further
agreements between the parties must be in writing. “This proposal is for
informational purposes only and is contingent all terms contained within
shall be considered nonbinding until execution of a mutually acceptable
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lease document.” (And, unlike the January letter, these proposals contain
no language that promises Plaintiff will take the next step in formalizing the
agreement, which could reasonably induce Defendant into reliance).
Although both proposals offer a gross monthly rent of $3,500 for a period of
time, both also include a period of time where Defendants would pay triple
operating expenses. Ms. Kozheva wants to enjoy the benefit of $3,500
monthly rent, without the Plaintiff’s demanded cost of paying triple operating
expenses.
Although the Court has already found that the December 21, 2010
letter from Plaintiff does not accurately reflect the understanding of the
parties, it should be noted that Defendant’s attempts to use this letter to
bolster their claim of a $3,500 monthly rental agreement are completely
nonsensical. The letter, though it does list the base rent as $3,500, also
includes taxes and fees, making the total rent $4,494.00. This letter
therefore cannot be said to have reasonably induced Defendant to rely on
an agreement for $3,500 gross monthly rent.
Similarly, Defendant’s reliance on Plaintiff’s lease proposals
backdating the rent to cover the months since the term of the original lease
expired is misplaced. This backdating does not necessarily show a waiver
of holdover rent. Instead, it is an inducement Plaintiff offers to convince
Defendant to enter into a new lease. If Plaintiff had indeed waived their
holdover rights entirely and was content with Ms. Kozheva’s view of a
month-to-month rent at $3,500, then no negotiations or lease proposals,
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particularly ones that offered different terms and carried careful legal
disclaimers, would be necessary.
No action of the Plaintiff after September 2010 could be reasonably
relied upon as a modification of the lease. At most, their actions showed a
willingness to modify the lease, if Defendant assented to several demands.
(Citations to exhibits omitted.) The trial court concluded that, from September 2010 to
February 2011, KTC was entitled to rents and fees as set forth in the holdover provision
of the lease.
{¶ 38} On May 22, 2015, the trial court issued a final judgment entry consistent
with its December 3, 2014 decision. With respect to the unpaid rent and fees, the court
entered judgment in favor of KTC in the amount of $47,270.42, plus interest. Although
not expressly calculated by the trial court, this amount appears to be the difference
between six months of rent at $10,795.07 ($64,770.42) and five months of payments of
$3,500 ($17,500).4
{¶ 39} GCB appeals the trial court’s judgment, challenging only the trial court’s
monetary judgment in favor of KTC for unpaid rent and fees.
III. Holdover Rent to KTC for Second Six-Month Period
{¶ 40} GCB’s assignment of error states:
The trial court erred by overruling the magistrate’s decision with respect to
the parties’ modification of the lease and/or Plaintiff-Appellee’s waiver of the
holdover provision.
4
The trial court’s judgment did not account for KTC’s retention of GCB’s security deposit
or the CAM, tax, and insurance reconciliation charges that are reflected on Exhibit II.
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{¶ 41} In its appellate brief, GCB claims that the trial court erred in construing the
terms of the lease as prohibiting a waiver of the holdover provision. It asserts that
Section 10.5, the “Effects of Waivers of Default” provision, expressly permitted KTC to
waive lease terms. GCB further argued that Section 10.7, which contains anti-waiver
language, made the lease’s terms regarding waiver ambiguous and, since KTC drafted
the document, the terms should be interpreted in favor of GCB, thus allowing for waiver
of the holdover provision. Finally, GCB contends that KTC waived by estoppel the
holdover provision by continuing to accept GCB’s $3,500 rent payments throughout
GCB’s month-to-month tenancy.
{¶ 42} KTC responds that Sections 10.5 and 10.7 “pertain to and are intended to
address two different situations,” and the clauses “do not in any way contradict one
another, nor do they render each other ambiguous.” KTC further asserts that the anti-
waiver provision in Section 10.7 precludes any claim of waiver by estoppel.
{¶ 43} “Leases are contracts and are subject to traditional rules of contract
interpretation. ‘Contracts are to be interpreted so as to carry out the intent of the parties,
as that intent is evidenced by the contractual language.’ Skivolocki v. E. Ohio Gas Co.
(1974), 38 Ohio St.2d 244, 313 N.E.2d 374, paragraph one of the syllabus; Shifrin v.
Forest City Ent., Inc., 64 Ohio St.3d 635, 597 N.E.2d 499, 1992-Ohio-28. ‘Common
words appearing in a written instrument will be given their ordinary meaning unless
manifest absurdity results, or unless some other meaning is clearly evidenced from the
face or overall contents of the instrument.’ Alexander v. Buckeye Pipe Line Co. (1978),
53 Ohio St.2d 241, 374 N.E.2d 146, paragraph two of the syllabus (superseded by statute
on other grounds). The construction of a written contract is a matter of law for the court.
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Id. at paragraph one of the syllabus.” (Some citations omitted.) EAC Properties, L.L.C.
v. Brightwell, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 10AP-853, 2011-Ohio-2373, ¶ 13.
{¶ 44} The modification of a contractual term is distinct from the waiver of a
contractual term. A modification to a contractual provision is an agreement by the parties
to change or modify the term in question. “Oral modification of a written contract must
be supported by new and distinct consideration.” Coldwell Banker Residential Real
Estate Services v. Sophista Homes, Inc., 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 13191, 1992 WL
303073, * 3 (Oct. 26, 1992), quoted by Ayers v. Burnett, 2d Dist. Clark No. 2013-CA-88,
2014-Ohio-4404, ¶ 15. In contrast, waiver is “a voluntary relinquishment of a known
right.” Arnett v. Bardonaro, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 25371, 2013-Ohio-1065, ¶ 42,
citing Glidden Co. v. Lumbermans Mut. Casualty Co., 112 Ohio St.3d 470, 2006-Ohio-
6553, 861 N.E.2d 109, ¶ 49. A party who has waived its right to enforce a contract term
can revoke the waiver, absent prejudice to the other party. Cleveland Thermal Energy
Corp. v. Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 80312, 2002-Ohio-
3904, ¶ 28.
{¶ 45} Sections 10.5 and 10.7 of the parties’ lease addressed waiver. Section
10.5 contemplated that KTC may waive a covenant, condition or duty imposed by the
lease, but, a waiver of a lease term was not a permanent change to the terms of the
contract. Section 10.5 indicated that the waiver of “any breach of any covenant,
condition or duty” shall not be construed as the waiver of any other breach of the same
or other covenant, condition, or duty.
{¶ 46} Section 10.7, titled “Remedies Cumulative,” limited how waiver may occur.
It stated, in relevant part, “No delay or omission of Landlord to exercise any right or power
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arising from any default shall impair any such right or power or shall be construed to be
a waiver of any such default or any acquiescence therein.” In other words, waiver could
not be inferred merely from KTC’s delay or failure to exercise a right or power provided
by the lease.
{¶ 47} GCB asserts that Sections 10.5 and 10.7, read together, create an
ambiguity about whether waiver is permitted. We find nothing ambiguous about these
two sections of the lease. And, the two sections may be read together without creating
any inconsistency.
{¶ 48} KTC asserts that the anti-waiver provision in Section 10.7 precludes a claim
of waiver by estoppel. However, by its language, Section 10.7 does not prohibit KTC
from waiving provisions of the lease. Rather, as KTC stated in its appellate brief,
“Section 10.7 provides that mere delay in exercising a right does not constitute a waiver
of that right.” Nothing in Section 10.7 – or any other part of the original written lease --
precludes waiver by affirmative conduct by KTC.
{¶ 49} GCB contends that KTC waived by estoppel the holdover provision by
continuing to accept GCB’s $3,500 rent payments throughout GCB’s month-to-month
tenancy. We disagree. And while not an issue on appeal, we find a discussion of the
first six-month period following the expiration of the parties’ written lease to be helpful to
our discussion of the second six-month period.
{¶ 50} As quoted above, the lease’s holdover provision, Section 10.3, provided:
In the event Tenant remains in possession of the Leased Premises after the
expiration of the tenancy created hereunder, and without the execution of a
new Lease or written consent of Landlord, Tenant, at the option of Landlord,
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shall be deemed to be occupying the Leased Premises as a Tenant from
month to month, at twice the Fixed Minimum and Percentage Rent, subject
to all of the other conditions, provisions and obligations of this Lease insofar
as the same are applicable to a month-to-month tenancy.
(Emphasis added.)
{¶ 51} It is undisputed that GCB remained in possession of the premises following
the expiration of the 2005 lease, and no new lease was executed. However, the parties’
written exchange in January 2010 reflected an understanding that, with KTC’s consent,
GCB would continue its occupancy of the leased premises, beyond the expiration of the
lease, if necessary, under terms that were different than the holdover provision. The
January 22, 2010 correspondence from Carol Wass of Continental Real Estate, the
property manager, indicated that KTC was willing to offer a new lease with 6 months at
$3,500 per month and then the “existing rate,” which was base rent of $4,604.70 per
month, plus additional fees that came to approximately $1,415 per month. GCB
accepted KTC’s proposed terms, and KTC was to draft “a more formalized document” to
be execute by the parties.
{¶ 52} The language of the January 22 letter made clear that a new written lease
was required and that the letter should not be construed as creating a contract between
the parties or a modification of the original lease’s terms. However, the letter does
indicate that the parties had reached an understanding as to new rental rates, and in light
of KTC’s indication that it would prepare a “more formalized document,” the letter
constituted written consent for GCB to remain in the leased premises while KTC prepared
a formal contract (i.e., lease) consistent with the parties’ understanding. By granting
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consent for GCB to remain on the premises while it prepared a formal lease agreement,
KTC waived its right to enforce the holdover rent provision in the original lease. KTC’s
acceptance of $3,500 in monthly rent from GCB during the first six-month period following
the expiration of the lease was additional evidence that the holdover lease amount was
waived.
{¶ 53} However, at the end of the first six-month period following the expiration of
the lease, GCB had no reasonable expectation that KTC would continue to accept $3,500
in rent. KTC’s January 22, 2010 proposal, to which GCB agreed, indicated that GCB’s
rent would increase after six months to the then-existing rate (i.e., the January 2010 rate).
Although KTC did not demand more than $3,500 from GCB beginning in September 2010,
nothing in KTC’s conduct indicated that it would accept $3,500 as payment in full from
September 2010 onward.
{¶ 54} Cassidy Turley became KTC’s property manager in April 2010. As found
by the trial court, Edwards’s telephone communication with GCB in April or May 2010
indicated that KTC had not agreed to a permanent month-to-month tenancy at $3,500.
Edwards further testified that, after GCB fell behind on its May rent, KTC wanted GCB to
become caught up on its $3,500 rent so that negotiations between the parties could begin
on the terms of a new lease.
{¶ 55} In October 2010, KTC sent a lease proposal to GCB, which offered $3,500
for the first six months (consistent with the January 2010 correspondence), with the rental
amount increasing to $3,500 with triple net operating expenses for months seven through
twelve and $4,200 with triple net operating expenses for the next two years. KTC sent
a different lease proposal in November 2010, which proposed $3,500 for months one
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through nine, $3,500 with triple net operating expenses for months 10 through 16, and
$4,200 with triple net operating expenses for months 17 through 36. Both proposals
contained language that made clear that the proposals were non-binding until the
execution of a mutually acceptable lease.
{¶ 56} On December 21, 2010, Edwards sent a letter to GCB, stating that,
beginning January 1, 2011, GCB’s new rent would be $3,500 plus operating expenses,
for a total rent of $4,494. Nothing in the record indicates that the parties had reached an
agreement to this effect. Moreover, these terms include operating expenses, which GCB
asserts were waived by KTC. The trial court reasonably found that the December 2010
letter “cannot be said to have reasonably induced Defendant to rely on an agreement for
$3,500 gross monthly rent.” Based on the evidence at the bench trial, we agree with the
trial court that KTC did not agree to accept $3,500 gross in rent for the second six-month
period following the expiration of the original lease. The trial court did not err in overruling
the magistrate’s ruling in this respect.
{¶ 57} However, we do not agree with the trial court’s legal conclusion that GCB
was required to pay the amount of holdover rent set forth in Section 10.3 during the
second six-month period. As stated above, KTC waived the holdover rent by consenting
to GCB’s continued occupancy of the leased premises while lease terms were being
finalized. The parties understood when that waiver occurred that GCB would pay $3,500
for six months and then the January 2010 rate ($4,604.70 per month plus the additional
fees) thereafter. KTC had the right to revoke the waiver of the holdover provision, with
sufficient notice to GCB, but there is no evidence in the record that it did so. KTC did not
agree to accept $3,500 for the second six-month period following the expiration of the
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original lease, but it also did not inform GCB that it was revoking its written consent for
GCB to occupy the premises at the January 2010 rate while lease terms were being
negotiated and finalized. Based on the evidence at the bench trial, as found by the trial
court, KTC was entitled to rent at the January 2010 rate for the second six-month period
following the expiration of the original lease.
{¶ 58} GCB’s assignment of error is overruled to the extent that it asserts that the
trial court erred in overruling the magistrate’s decision that KTC was not entitled to
additional rental payments from GCB; the trial court correctly found that KTC was entitled
to unpaid rent for the second six-month period following the expiration of the original
lease. However, GCB’s assignment of error is sustained to the extent that it claims that
the trial court erred in awarding KTC six months of rental payments at the holdover rate
set forth in Section 10.3 of the original lease; for that six-month period, KTC was entitled
to rent at the January 2010 rate.
IV. Conclusion
{¶ 59} The portion of the trial court’s judgment awarding $47,270.42, plus post-
judgment interest, in unpaid rent to KTC will be reversed, and the matter will be remanded
to the trial court for recalculation of the amount of unpaid rent due to KTC for the second
six-month period following the expiration of the original lease. In all other respects, the
trial court’s judgment will be affirmed.
.............
FAIN, J. and WELBAUM, J., concur.
Copies mailed to:
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Charles M. Blue
James D. Miller, II
Hon. Richard Skelton