Humitsch v. Collier, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000)
Humitsch v. Collier, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000)
Opinion of the Court
OPINION On September 17, 1998, appellee, Howard V. Humitsch, filed a complaint in the Lake County Court of Common Pleas against appellants, Cheryl Anne (aka "Cheryl") and Bruce Collier, and Sarducci's Pizza. In his complaint, appellee alleged that he had loaned appellants $20,000, but that they violated their agreement to repay and owed him $13,750. Appellee is the cousin of Cheryl Anne Collier's mother. Bruce Collier is Cheryl Anne Collier's husband. Sarducci's Pizza was the name of the pizza shop operated by the Colliers. A corporation, whose sole shareholder was Cheryl Collier, named SBC Management, Inc. ("SBC") owned Sarducci's Pizza, but SBC was not a party to the cause of action. A bench trial was held on April 30, 1999.
At trial, it was established that appellee met with appellants and wrote a check, dated June 12, 1994, for $20,000 with the name of the payee portion left blank and the word "loan" written in the memo portion of the check. Appellants later filled in the name "Cheryl Collier." Appellee testified that Cheryl Collier called him to ask him for a loan, but Cheryl testified that appellee called her to ask if he could give her a $20,000 gift. She further testified that: she was not a close relative of appellee; she had only met him a few times through her mother before he offered her the gift; and, she would not have felt right about accepting the gift and insisted upon repaying it. Deborah Geiss, appellee's granddaughter, testified that she was present at the meeting, heard nothing about the $20,000 being a gift, and heard appellee instruct appellants about repayment of the loan in the event that anything happened to him.
Cheryl Collier's testimony regarding repayment of the loan was as follows:
"[A]t the time, we thought we could do $200 a month. But I also told him that it was if we were able to pay that at the time because there is ups and downs in the business and it might not always be feasible to do that and we would pay him what we could, but I also told him that no matter what I would pay him back. [sic]"
Although the parties understood that the loan was made in part to enable appellants to pay business debts, appellee testified that "it was not a business loan" and that "it was a personal loan to them because of my relationship with [Cheryl's] mother." The extent of their agreement about interest was, according to appellee's testimony, that appellee told them "we can figure that out at the end of the payments."
Cheryl Collier deposited the entire $20,000 into her personal bank account. Of the $20,000, $4,500 of the loan proceeds remained in her personal account. Part of the remaining $15,500 went into Sarducci's checking account and the rest was used to pay business debts. Although Cheryl was the sole shareholder in SBC, Bruce Collier operated the pizza shop. If there were ever problems with repayment, appellee would discuss them with Bruce, not Cheryl. Appellants began repaying the loan on June 29, 1994 and made regular monthly $200 payments until February 1995. They missed payments in February and March 1995 because Cheryl had broken her ankle. The parties agreed that appellants could make up for the missed payments with bigger payments in subsequent months. Appellants made a total of seven payments totaling $1,950 in 1995. Their payments became more irregular in 1996, when they made eight payments totaling $1,600. For most of 1997, appellants made regular monthly $200 payments, until they made their last payment on November 17, 1997.
After November 1997, appellants stopped making payments because they claimed that their business was losing money. Appellee asked them to pay what they could and said it would be acceptable for them to pay $100 per month until their business improved. On August 24, 1998, Bruce Collier instructed Cheryl to write appellee a check for $100 from Sarducci's account, which was the final payment appellee received before filing the complaint. Appellants paid a total of $6,250 of the loan.
On May 7, 1999, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of appellee against the Colliers and SBC Management, Inc. for $13,750 plus interest of ten-percent per annum from December 1, 1997. Pursuant to appellants' motion, the trial court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law on June 16, 1999. Appellants raise the following assignments of error:
"[1.] The trial court erred in rewriting the contract of the parties and adding terms thereof.
"[2.] The trial court erred in holding defendant Bruce Collier personally liable for plaintiff's claim.
"[3.] The court erred in `reverse piercing' the corporate veil.
"[4.] The court erred in not finding appellee's claim barred by the statute of frauds.
"[5.] The judgment of the court is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence."
We will address appellants' fourth assignment of error first. In that assignment, appellants assert that the trial court erred by not declaring the contract void under the statute of frauds. Appellants argue that the contract they had with appellant was, by its terms, incapable of being performed within one year and, thus, unenforceable if not in writing. See R.C.
"An alleged oral agreement to pay money in installments is `an agreement that is not to be performed within one year' pursuant to R.C.
Although appellants properly raised the affirmative defense of the statute of frauds in their answer, they did not dispute that they owed the money at trial. Cheryl Collier admitted on the stand that appellee loaned them $20,000 and appellants' attorney argued to the court that "there is no dispute that the money is owed by somebody and that the question is how much is owed at this point." Thus, there is no question that the $20,000 was a loan that appellee expected appellants to repay, not a gift. Appellant's fourth assignment of error is without merit.
In their first assignment of error, appellants assert that the trial court erred by adding terms to the parties' contract. Specifically, they argue that the trial court erred by implying an interest term and by ruling that the entire contract, which was an installment contract, had been breached when all of the installments had not become due and there was no acceleration clause in the contract. They also argue that the court erred by holding Bruce Collier personally liable, which we will address in the second assignment of error.
Appellants argue that under the law in Ohio, an agreement to pay off a loan in installments creates a separate obligation as to each installment. According to their argument, without an agreement to accelerate the payment of the entire debt, the failure to pay a single installment does not constitute default of the entire agreement and mature an obligation to immediately pay the entire debt. In other words, breach of an installment payment contract by nonpayment is not a total breach of contract.
In support they cite the following cases: The Elworthy-Helwick Co. v.Hess (1918),
The cases cited by appellant address promissory notes and monthly rent installments, neither of which are presented by the current case. As the trial court noted in its findings of fact: "The money to be obtained by the [Colliers] was to be a loan * * *. The loan was to be repaid at the rate of $200 per month." Thus the trial court labeled the arrangement between the parties as an installment loan.
All of the case law we have found regarding loans repayable in installments indicates that the general rule is that each default in payment may give rise to a separate cause of action, Eden Realty Co. v.Weather-Seal, Inc. (1957),
Under R.C.
In their second assignment of error, appellants assert that there was no evidence to prove that Bruce Collier was liable on the debt to appellee. Although only Cheryl Collier's name appeared on the check given by appellee, the evidence was sufficient to support a conclusion that the oral agreement was between appellee and both Cheryl and Bruce Collier. Bruce Collier was present at the negotiations, appellee gave both parties the check and did not fill in a specific name, and appellee made the loan in part because of problems with the pizza shop that Bruce was running. Appellants' second assignment of error is without merit.
In their third assignment of error, appellants assert that the trial court erred by holding SBC, which was not a party to the lawsuit, liable for the personal debt of its shareholder. Only parties to a contract may be held liable under it. "A corporation is a separate legal entity from its shareholder even where there is only one shareholder in the corporation." Zimmerman v. Eagle Mtge. Corp. (1996),
Normally piercing the corporate veil works to hold owners of a corporation personally liable for corporate debts when: control over the corporation by those to be held liable was so complete that the corporation has no separate mind, will, or existence of its own; control over the corporation by those to be held liable was exercised in such a manner as to commit fraud or an illegal act against the person seeking to disregard the corporate entity; and, injury or unjust loss resulted to the plaintiff from such control and wrong. Belvedere Condominium UnitOwners' Assn. v. R.E. Roark Cos., Inc. (1993),
Under the "reverse piercing" theory advanced by appellee and the trial court, appellee was seeking to reach the corporate assets of appellants, even though the corporation was not a party to the contract. This approach has been allowed in limited cases where the corporation was found to be the alter ego of its controlling shareholders and a creditor has been allowed to reach assets of the corporate entity to satisfy the debts of the controlling alter ego. LiButti v. U.S. (C.A. 2 1997),
In their fifth assignment of error, appellants assert that the trial court's findings were against the manifest weight of the evidence for reasons spelled out in their other four assignments of error, which we previously addressed. Appellants' fifth assignment of error is without merit.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed on the second, fourth, and fifth assignments of error and reversed on the first and third assignments of error. This case is remanded for further action consistent with this opinion.
_________________________________ NADER, J.
FORD, P.J., concurs, CHRISTLEY, J., dissents with Dissenting Opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
While I am in complete agreement with the majority's treatment of appellants' second, third, and fifth assignments of error, I respectfully concur in judgment only with its disposition of appellants' fourth assignment of error, and dissent with respect to the first assignment of error.
R.C.
As the majority correctly points out, the Supreme Court of Ohio has previously held that "[a]n alleged oral agreement to pay money in installments is `an agreement that is not to be performed within one year' pursuant to R.C.
"To fall within the words of the [statute of frauds], therefore, the agreement must be one of which it can truly be said at the very moment that it is made, `This agreement is not to be performed within one year'; in general, the cases indicate that there must not be the slightest possibility that it can be fully performed within one year.
"It makes no difference how long the agreed performance may be delayed or over how long a period it may in fact be continued. * * * It makes no difference how long the parties expect performance to take or how reasonable and accurate those expectations are, if the agreed performance can possibly be completed within a year. Facts like these do not bring a contract within [the statute of frauds]. * * *" (Footnotes omitted.) Corbin on Contracts (1952) 446-446, Section 444.
In other words, part of the agreed and contracted for performance in an installment loan is the delay of repayment by means of an agreed upon schedule of payments. To the debtor, that consideration would be the obvious advantage of an installment loan over a demand loan. As a result, a true installment loan cannot be paid off early without changing the terms of the contract.
I would agree, therefore, with the majority that an oral loan agreement calling for specified installment payments would usually be a contract which would fall within the statute of frauds. I would also agree with the majority that such an agreement may fall outside the statute of frauds where the time of payment under the agreement is either indefinite or dependent upon a contingency which may happen within one year.Sherman at syllabus.
While the majority recognizes this exception, it nevertheless concludes with little discussion that the instant oral agreement was neither indefinite nor based upon a contingency providing for the possibility of an early payoff. Therefore, it concludes that, without the judicial admissions regarding the loan's existence, the instant oral installment loan would have been subject to the statute of frauds.
After looking at the record in the case at bar, I cannot agree with this conclusion. The record reflects that the trial court correctly found that the original oral agreement provided that appellants would pay $200 per month for one hundred months. Shortly thereafter, it appears that the parties verbally modified their agreement in order to allow appellants to reduce or skip payments when necessary so long as the difference was made up later.
Thus, this mutually agreed to modification changed the definite terms of repayment to indefinite terms of repayment. Such a change resulted in a contract which was no longer restricted by the statute of frauds.1 See Long v. Agler (June 8, 1999), Van Wert App. No. 15-98-19, unreported, at 6, 1999 Ohio App. LEXIS 2571; Coriell v. Estate of McGraw (Nov. 19, 1996), Scioto App. No. 95 CA 2396, unreported, at 9, 1996 WL 677030. Further, and most importantly, it resulted in an installment loan being transformed into a demand loan which did not require an anticipatory breach or an acceleration clause in order for the creditor to demand payment of the whole amount.
Thus, I not only disagree with the majority's conclusion with respect to its analysis of the application of the statute of frauds, but, I also disagree with its ultimate decision to hold appellants liable only for the missed payments instead of the entire balance owed. That conclusion could only be maintained if this contract were in fact an installment contract, resulting in a separate cause of action for each breach. EdenRealty Co. v. Weather-Seal, Inc. (1957),
However, as already discussed, this is not an installment loan. Thus, the multiple breach, multiple cause of action theory is not applicable to the facts of this case. As was previously noted, the subsequent modification by the parties changed the character of the original installment loan to that of a loan of an indefinite nature; i.e., a demand loan. A demand loan can be called due at any time. The trial court was, therefore, correct in awarding the entire amount of the loan balance, and I would also affirm this aspect of its decision.
For these reasons, I respectfully concur in judgment only with regard to the fourth assignment of error, and I dissent with respect to the first assignment of error.
____________________ CHRISTLEY, J.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.