Thompson v. Kmv II, Ltd., Unpublished Decision (3-7-2003)
Thompson v. Kmv II, Ltd., Unpublished Decision (3-7-2003)
Opinion of the Court
{¶ 2} On May 24, 2001, the Thompsons filed a complaint asking for money damages after appellant brought an action to evict the Thompsons from the All Seasons Mobile Home Park located in Deerfield. The Thompsons claimed appellant sought to evict them for not signing an agreement and paying a fee to have a dog on the property. The Thompsons stated they notified appellant the dog was no longer at their residence, but appellant still improperly filed an action for eviction. The Thompsons claimed the eviction notice breached the actual and implied contracts between the parties. The Thompsons asked for denial of the eviction and for money damages.
{¶ 3} The Thompsons' complaint was consolidated with appellant's eviction action, filed for the claimed violations of a park rule. On September 24, 2001, the matter came before the trial court for hearing. Carol Wise, appellant's general manager, testified that the Thompsons are tenants at the All Seasons Mobile Home Park. The Thompsons have an oral month-to month tenancy. Tenants at the mobile home park are permitted to own one pet. The pet must be registered, the owner has to provide veterinarian records, and provide a photograph. Wise testified that the Thompsons have a pet, but did not comply with any part of the park rule.
{¶ 4} Appellant sent a rule violation letter to the Thompsons regarding the pet. When the situation was not resolved, appellant sent a three-day notice of eviction for non-compliance with the rule. Wise denied receiving any notice that the Thompsons no longer kept the dog on the premises.
{¶ 5} John Conti, the manager of the All Seasons Mobile Home Park, testified he posted the three-day notice on the Thompsons' door and saw the dog at that time. Conti did not know if the dog was still at the Thompsons' mobile home.
{¶ 6} On October 3, 2001, the trial court found that appellant sent a thirty-day notice to the Thompsons alleging three violations of park rules relating to having an unregistered dog. The court found the Thompsons did not comply with the registration rules after the thirty-day notice was given. Appellants then served the Thompsons with a three-day notice. The court determined that appellant did not comply with R.C.
{¶ 7} Appellant assigns the following error for review:
{¶ 8} "The trial court erred in denying defendant-appellant's request for a writ of restitution by ruling that defendant-appellant had not complied with ORC Section
{¶ 9} In its sole assignment of error, appellant contends the trial court erred by requiring appellant prove two violations before being able to evict the Thompsons. Appellant asserts that R.C. 3733.09.1(A) is the statute governing the eviction of a tenant from a mobile home park and not R.C.
{¶ 10} Appellant argues that R.C.
{¶ 11} As the Thompsons owned their trailer, R.C. Chapter 3733 is applicable. R.C.
{¶ 12} In Hamlet Mobile Home Park v. Sigmund (1997),
{¶ 13} Here, appellant gave the Thompsons the required thirty-day notice of the violation. The facts in Sigmund are different as that case involved a second material violation. Apparently the violation for which the thirty-day notice was given had been remedied. If a resident commits one material violation, then the park operator is required to give a notice specifying the violation and giving a date by which the violation must be remedied. That date must be not less than thirty days after the notice is issued. If the resident does not comply with the park rules before that date, then the park operator can terminate the rental agreement by giving the three-day notice required under R.C.
{¶ 14} The trial court found that appellant sent the Thompsons a thirty-day notice and that the Thompsons did not comply with the park rules. The court then found appellant served the Thompsons with a three-day notice. However, the trial court denied appellant a writ of restitution after requiring appellant to prove two material violations occurred. This is not required under the statute if the resident has been served with a thirty-day notice and the resident does not remedy the violation.
{¶ 15} The trial court misapplied the law by requiring two material violations of park rules before a writ of restitution can be granted. As established above, only one material violation is required if the resident does not remedy the condition causing that violation and proper notice is given.
{¶ 16} A reading of the trial court's judgment entry shows the court did not state that the Thompsons' failure to register their dog constituted a material violation of the park rules, as required under R.C.
JUDITH A. CHRISTLEY, J., concurs, WILLIAM M. O'NEILL, P.J., concurs with concurring opinion.
Concurring Opinion
{¶ 17} For the reasons that follow, I am in agreement with a reversal of this matter, but for reasons different than those found in the majority opinion. I am in agreement with the majority that the trial court did not apply the correct statutory construction in its judgment entry. However, the analysis does not stop there. This is not a simple small claims court action. At issue here is an application for a court order directing a family to essentially disassemble their home and move it down the street. Basic concepts of due process demand a full and fair hearing before such a draconian measure is enforced. A "fair hearing" by any definition would require a hearing before a judge who accurately applies the correct statutory criteria before entering judgment. That did not happen here.
{¶ 18} As stated by the Supreme Court of Ohio:
{¶ 19} "The General Assembly * * * created formidable restrictions on the ability of manufactured home park operators to evict tenants. These restrictions were made necessary by the fundamental differences between apartment or conventional house tenants and manufactured home tenants. When an apartment or home tenant is evicted, the tenant simply needs to move his belongings to his new home. While this may present some difficulties, they are insignificant when compared to the dilemma faced by the manufactured home tenant who may be unable to find another park and who faces expensive storage or prohibitive moving costs. Clearly, in many instances `mobile' homes are not mobile at all. In reality, they areimmobile homes. Once they are put in place, they require a considerable amount of disassembly before they can be transported to a new location. This has led some jurisdictions to specifically find that `mobile' homes have become immobile."1
{¶ 20} It is important to note that the homeowners were not even present at the eviction hearing. Their attorney apparently had a conflict in his schedule, and his ill-timed motion to continue the hearing was overruled, on the record, at the beginning of the hearing. While it is true that the discretion to grant a motion to continue is within the sound discretion of a trial court, such discretion is not absolute.2
{¶ 21} I can think of few circumstances more compelling than the one encountered here. Consider this factual scenario. The tenants have sued their "park" for numerous allegedly harassing encounters in the court system of Portage County. Remember, they are the plaintiffs in this action. Even the trial court judge was troubled by the lack of a claim for "back rent" in this matter, only to be advised, on the record, this matter was about an unregistered dog. Yet incredibly, the court went forward, oblivious to the allegations in the original complaint that the dog in question was, in fact, long gone.
{¶ 22} The only statutory authority to evict under these circumstances would be found in R.C. 3733.09.1(A)(4), which deals with a violation of "* * * rules of the manufactured home park adopted pursuant to the rules of the public health council." This record is devoid of any reference to such a rule and how it was adopted.
{¶ 23} This is not a small claims action. The trial court clearly got it wrong. The majority is correct in a reversal, but there is no basis for granting judgment to anyone based upon the record before us.
{¶ 24} I believe the proper outcome in this matter would be a reversal, combined with a remand to the trial court. The trial court must, as a matter of law, apply the correct law in its analysis before entering judgment on behalf of either party. It is not possible to conduct meaningful appellate review until that has happened.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.