[Cite as Fussnecker v. Lamb, 2017-Ohio-8635.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
BROWN COUNTY
TOM FUSSNECKER, :
CASE NO. CA2017-04-003
Plaintiff-Appellant, :
OPINION
: 11/20/2017
- vs -
:
DONALD LAMB, :
Defendant-Appellee. :
CIVIL APPEAL FROM BROWN COUNTY MUNICIPAL COURT
Case No. CVF1600078
Michael P. Kelly, 108 South High Street, P.O. Box 467, Mt. Orab, Ohio 45154, for plaintiff-
appellant
Patrick L. Gregory, 717 West Plane Street, P.O. Box 378, Bethel, Ohio 45106, for defendant-
appellee
M. POWELL, J.
{¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Tom Fussnecker, appeals a decision of the Brown County
Municipal Court granting a judgment in favor of defendant-appellee, Donald Lamb.
{¶ 2} For over 20 years and until 2013, Fussnecker rented and farmed a 104.67-acre
parcel of land owned by Lamb on U.S. Route 68 in Georgetown, Ohio (the "Rte. 68 Farm").
A portion of the Rte. 68 Farm is woods and not farmable. In the fall of 2012, the parties
Brown CA2017-04-003
agreed that Fussnecker would pay to have a portion of the Rte. 68 Farm bulldozed to add
farmable acreage to the property. Fussnecker arranged for Earl Barnes to bulldoze the land.
On November 7, 2012, Fussnecker paid Barnes $2,000 for the bulldozing work.
{¶ 3} The parties contemplated that Fussnecker would continue to rent the Rte. 68
Farm from Lamb in 2013. As they had always done, the parties entered into a verbal lease
agreement. Fussnecker would pay Lamb $125 per acre in rent to farm 60 to 70 acres.
There was no specific term as to when the rent was due. On February 4, 2013, Fussnecker
wrote Lamb a check for $3,700 to help Lamb pay the real estate taxes for the Rte. 68 Farm.
{¶ 4} Approximately a month later, Lamb approached Fussnecker about purchasing
the Rte. 68 Farm. Pursuant to a written Contract to Purchase Real Estate signed and dated
March 13, 2013, Fussnecker bought the Rte. 68 Farm for $500,000. The contract provided
that the sale included fixtures, and that Fussnecker was to be given possession of the Rte.
68 Farm "on or before June 14, 2013." The contract further provided that "any rents due and
payable prior to date of closing, to be retained by seller. Any rents due and payable after
closing, to be retained by purchaser." The sale closed and Lamb conveyed the Rte. 68 Farm
to Fussnecker by deed.
{¶ 5} Lamb subsequently purchased another farm in Russellville, Ohio (the
"Russellville Farm"). Following Lamb's acquisition of the Russellville Farm, the parties
agreed that Fussnecker would rent and farm 34 acres of the Russellville Farm for 2013 at
$125 per acre for a total rent of $4,250.
{¶ 6} Problems arose between the parties when Lamb did not vacate the Rte. 68
Farm by June 14, 2013, as provided in the purchase contract, but remained until July 15,
2013. In addition, when Fussnecker took possession of the property, he discovered that
Lamb had removed a car lift from the garage that should have stayed on the property as a
fixture.
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{¶ 7} Consequently, Fussnecker filed a complaint against Lamb, seeking (1) $2,500
for the value of the car lift improperly removed from the Rte. 68 Farm, (2) $900 as rent for the
30 additional days that Lamb stayed on the Rte. 68 Farm, (3) $2,000 for the bulldozing work
on the Rte. 68 Farm, and (4) $3,700 for the check Fussnecker gave to Lamb in February
2013 to pay the real estate taxes on the Rte. 68 Farm. Regarding the last two items,
Fussnecker claimed he was entitled to a $5,700 credit against his rent of the Russellville
Farm. Alternatively, Fussnecker claimed the $3,700 was "an excess payment to be taken off
of the $500,000.00 purchase price" for the Rte. 68 Farm. Lamb filed an answer and
counterclaim against Fussnecker, asserting Fussnecker had not paid the $4,250 rent for
farming 34 acres of the Russellville Farm in 2013.
{¶ 8} The matter proceeded to a hearing before a magistrate. Fussnecker and Lamb
both testified. The parties' testimony differed as to when the rent for the Rte. 68 Farm was
typically due and paid. Fussnecker testified he had historically always paid the rent around
February because Lamb needed the money to pay the real estate taxes for the property. By
contrast, Lamb testified Fussnecker generally paid the rent in the fall after the crops were
harvested.
{¶ 9} Regarding the $2,000 Fussnecker paid for the bulldozing work on the Rte. 68
Farm and the $3,700 he paid Lamb in February 2013, Fussnecker testified the parties orally
agreed both amounts would be subtracted from either Fussnecker's 2013 rent for the Rte. 68
Farm or his 2013 rent for the Russellville Farm. Fussnecker conceded that when the parties
agreed both payments would be subtracted from his 2013 rent for the Russellville Farm,
Lamb had not yet purchased the property but had been talking about it. Fussnecker further
explained that after he purchased the Rte. 68 Farm, the $2,000 and $3,700 payments
necessarily had to be subtracted from his 2013 rent for the Russellville Farm because he no
longer owed rent to Lamb for the Rte. 68 Farm.
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{¶ 10} Lamb testified that the $3,700 payment had nothing to do with the Russellville
Farm and that it was "for cash rent" for the Rte. 68 Farm before he sold that property to
Fussnecker. Lamb further testified that the $2,000 and $3,700 payments were never
mentioned or discussed at the closing for the sale of the Rte. 68 Farm, and Lamb was not
asked to pay back $5,700 to Fussnecker.
{¶ 11} On September 13, 2016, the magistrate found in favor of Fussnecker regarding
the car lift and the 30 additional days Lamb stayed on the Rte. 68 Farm and awarded
Fussnecker $2,467.12 and $900 for those items respectively. The magistrate found in favor
of Lamb regarding Fussnecker's 2013 rent for the Russellville Farm and awarded Lamb
$4,250. Regarding Fussnecker's claims for the $2,000 and $3,700 payments related to the
Rte. 68 Farm, the magistrate found in favor of Lamb. The magistrate found that (1) the
purchase contract for the Rte. 68 Farm was ambiguous, (2) the amounts could not be
credited against Fussnecker's rent for the Russellville Farm because Lamb did not own the
Russellville Farm at the time those amounts were paid, and (3) as a result of the parties'
failure to address those amounts at the closing of Lamb's sale of the Rte. 68 Farm to
Fussnecker, Fussnecker's claims for those amounts merged into the deed. Based upon all
of the foregoing, the magistrate granted a $882.88 net judgment in favor of Lamb.
Fussnecker filed objections to the magistrate's decision. On March 21, 2017, the municipal
court overruled the objections and adopted the magistrate's decision.
{¶ 12} Fussnecker now appeals, raising the following assignment of error:
{¶ 13} THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT DID NOT GIVE PLAINTIFF-
APPELLANT CREDIT FOR MONIES PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT EXPENDED ON PROPERTY
PRIOR TO PURCHASING SAID PROPERTY AS WELL AS ON SEPARATE PROPERTY HE
WAS RENTING FROM DEFENDANT-APPELLEE.
{¶ 14} Fussnecker argues the municipal court erred in finding that his claims for the
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$2,000 and $3,700 payments he made related to the Rte. 68 Farm were barred pursuant to
the doctrine of merger by deed. Fussnecker asserts that the doctrine is inapplicable and that
both payments were separate transactions that had nothing to do with his purchase of the
Rte. 68 Farm.
{¶ 15} The doctrine of "merger by deed" holds that when a deed is delivered and
accepted without qualification pursuant to a sales contract for real property, the contract
becomes merged into the deed and no cause of action upon said prior agreement thereafter
exists. Richter v. Moreland, 12th Dist. Warren No. CA2005-03-031, 2006-Ohio-2946, ¶ 12,
citing Fuller v. Drenberg, 3 Ohio St.2d 109, 111 (1965). The doctrine merges prior
agreements and representations made by parties into the deed. Schmiedebusch v. Rako
Realty, Inc., 5th Dist. Delaware No. 04CAE08062, 2005-Ohio-4884, ¶ 44. Hence, the
purchaser is limited to the express covenants of the deed only. Suermondt v. Lowe, 165
Ohio App.3d 427, 2006-Ohio-224, ¶ 19 (5th Dist.). A deed is not unqualifiedly accepted if it is
accepted under protest and with a reservation of rights. Id.
{¶ 16} We find no error in the municipal court's determination that Fussnecker's claims
for the $2,000 bulldozing work on the Rte. 68 Farm and the $3,700 he paid in February 2013
to help Lamb pay the real estate taxes for the Rte. 68 Farm could not be credited against
Fussnecker's 2013 rent for the Russellville Farm because Lamb did not own that property at
the time those amounts were paid.
{¶ 17} We further find no error in the municipal court's determination that both claims
were barred by the doctrine of merger by deed. Both payments clearly related to the Rte. 68
Farm. At the time both payments were made, Fussnecker intended to rent the property from
Lamb for 2013. As Fussnecker testified, the parties had agreed both payments would be
applied against Fussnecker's 2013 rent for the property. When Lamb approached
Fussnecker about buying the Rte. 68 Farm, and later at closing, there was no discussion
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about adjusting the purchase price to reflect the payments made by Fussnecker. Nor was
there any discussion or agreement that both payments would remain separate from the
contract. See Suermondt, 2006-Ohio-224 (under the doctrine, if it can be shown that the
parties actually intended that the provisions of a prior agreement continue in force, then the
provisions do so continue). Instead, Fussnecker proceeded with the closing and accepted
the deed to the Rte. 68 Farm without any qualification. Once the deed was unqualifiedly
accepted, Fussnecker became bound by the terms of the deed, prior agreements and
representation made by the parties were merged into the deed, and no cause of action
existed on the prior contract against Lamb. Richter, 2006-Ohio-2946 at ¶ 12;
Schmiedebusch, 2005-Ohio-4884 at ¶ 44.
{¶ 18} Fussnecker's assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 19} Judgment affirmed.
S. POWELL, P.J., and PIPER, J., concur.
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