J.I.L. One, L.L.C. v. Kemper

Ohio Court of Appeals
J.I.L. One, L.L.C. v. Kemper, 2014 Ohio 4932 (2014)
Cunningham

J.I.L. One, L.L.C. v. Kemper

Opinion

[Cite as J.I.L. One, L.L.C. v. Kemper,

2014-Ohio-4932

.] IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO

J.I.L. ONE LLC, d.b.a. J.I.L. : APPEAL NO. C-130555 INVESTMENTS, TRIAL NO. 11CV-09359 : Plaintiff-Appellant, : O P I N I O N. vs. : LAWRENCE KEMPER, : and : YOLANDA ST. CLAIR,

Defendants-Appellees. :

Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Municipal Court

Judgment Appealed from is: Affirmed as Modified

Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: November 7, 2014

Immerman & Tobin Co, L.P.A., and Thomas M. Glennon, for Plaintiff-Appellant,

Legal Aid Society of Southwest Ohio, LLC, and Noel M. Morgan, for Defendants- Appellees.

Please note: this case has been removed from the accelerated calendar. OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

C UNNINGHAM , Presiding Judge.

{¶1} Plaintiff-appellant J.I.L. One LLC, d.b.a. J.I.L. Investments (“JIL”),

appeals from the judgment of the Hamilton County Municipal Court in favor of

defendants-appellees Lawrence Kemper and Yolanda St. Clair on JIL’s claims related

to the breach of an installment land contract and on the appellees’ counterclaim for

breach of that contract. The trial court awarded the appellees, who were the vendees,

damages of $10,000. In the five assignments of error before us for review, we are

asked to determine the propriety of this award, in light of appellees’ successful

assertion of the defense of impossibility of performance. For the reasons that follow,

we modify the judgment for the appellees and affirm the judgment as modified.

I. Background Facts and Procedural History

{¶2} In 2009, Matthew Vilas, the owner of JIL, a company that owned,

rented, and sold real estate, solicited St. Clair, one of his tenants who he knew was

the recipient of subsidized housing, to purchase a property that the company was

renovating for a quick sale. To that end, Vilas gave St. Clair a letter that he had

drafted and had given to other tenants, promoting the use of the federal

government’s First-Time Homebuyer Credit Program. This program, administered

by the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), involved a limited-time tax credit (“stimulus

funds”) intended to stimulate the economy. The taxpayer seeking the stimulus funds

had to comply with specific regulations, such as entering into a purchase agreement

by a certain date and closing on the sale by a certain date, to qualify for the stimulus

funds, for which the taxpayer would apply after the “sale and purchase” by

submitting an amended tax return.

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{¶3} In relevant part, the three-page promotional letter that Vilas sent to St.

Clair provided as follows:

I am happy to offer you a limited once in a lifetime opportunity

for home ownership, that will never be offered again in our lifetime. I

am offering you home ownership on a land contract and by doing so

we are creating a gift to both of us from our government of 10% of the

purchase price, or a maximum of $8000 on any purchase in excess of

$8000. Where we as present owners would benefit is that we would

receive as the down payment the government gift created by the

purchase of your present home. * * * You would have to make all the

payments for 3 years in order for the gift to be FREE. * * * We would

like to be cashed out fully in 3 years if possible, even if you have to take

a friend or relative in to purchase the home for you down the road in 3

years * * *.

***

Our being full time 3rd generation Relators [we] want to bless

everyone with the American dream of home ownership. This window

of opportunity is closing by May 1st, 2009 and will in my opinion

never be offered again. NO ONE BUT A FOOL WOULD TURN DOWN

THIS FREE GIFT OF MONEY FROM OUR GOVERNMENT. The

BEAUTY of this opportunity from your view point is that they will give

the money on an agreement for deed or land contract and that is the

only way we could sell you your home.

{¶4} St. Clair and Kemper, her boyfriend, expressed an interest in buying a

property together from Vilas, but not the property that St. Clair had been renting.

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The program for first-time homebuyers was subsequently extended to include

purchases before May 1, 2010. In the spring of 2010, JIL purchased a single-family,

three-bedroom, two-bath house at 1613 DeArmand Avenue in the North College Hill

area of Cincinnati for $22,900. According to Vilas, he spent $40,000 to improve it

before offering it to the appellees. At the time, Kemper was employed at a flooring

company, he had never owned a home, and he had income such that he could take

advantage of the First-Time Homebuyer Credit Program.

{¶5} On April 30, 2010, the appellees entered into an agreement with JIL to

purchase the DeArmand Avenue property under a land installment contract for

$70,000, with a down payment of $7000, which was to come from the stimulus

funds, and an additional down payment of $700, to be paid in monthly installments

of $100. The balance of the purchase price was to be paid in monthly installments of

principal and interest amortized over 300 months at an interest rate of 8.5 percent,

with a balloon payment due in 36 months.

{¶6} Importantly, the purchase agreement that Vilas drafted provided that

if the “stimulus funds” of $7000 were not paid to seller within 60 days of the

purchase agreement, which in this case was June 29, 2010, the purchase agreement

would be “null & void.”

{¶7} On June 30, 2010, the parties executed a Land Installment Contract

(“the contract”) that Vilas drafted. The contract was consistent with the terms

agreed to in the purchase agreement, except that it provided that if the vendees, the

appellees, failed “to receive and assign the said [stimulus funds from the IRS] of

$7,000.oo within 60 days from the date of this contract, Vendor may terminate this

Land Contract Agreement * * * .” The contract also provided that the vendees would

pay one-twelfth of the yearly real estate tax and insurance premium each month as a

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part of the total monthly installment payment, and that they would pay all utilities,

including water charges. The appellees took occupancy of the premises, and Vilas

recorded the contract in accordance with R.C. 5313.02(C).

{¶8} Kemper then applied for the stimulus funds by filing an amended tax

return. The IRS rejected his application because the transaction failed to comply

with the regulation that he “enter into a binding contract to buy the home before May

1, 2o10, and close before July 1, 2010,” to obtain the stimulus funds. The purchase

agreement that Vilas had drafted and the parties had signed had become void, and

therefore nonbinding, on June 29, 2010, when JIL did not receive the “stimulus

funds.”

{¶9} Vilas had not thoroughly investigated the details of the First-Time

Homebuyer Credit Program, which he described as “virgin territory,” but he was

surprised and angry when Kemper told him that the IRS had rejected his application.

He testified that he had not understood the ramifications of the 60-day deadline that

he had included in the purchase contract, and that two other purchasers had

successfully recovered stimulus funds despite the same language in the purchase

contracts. He sent Kemper a draft of a contentious letter that he intended for

Kemper to send to the IRS. Eventually, as his patience wore thin, Vilas sent the

appellees obnoxious and condescending letters, replete with threats to ruin their

credit if they did not comply with the terms of the contract.

{¶10} Vilas notified the appellees in March 2011 that JIL considered the land

contract terminated, but Vilas continued to accept their monthly installment

payments on behalf of JIL until April 2011. At that time, JIL served them with a

“Notice to Leave the Premises.”

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{¶11} When the appellees did not leave by the stated deadline, JIL filed a

complaint with claims for forfeiture and restitution of the premises and for money

damages related to the breach of the contract. The appellees answered and

counterclaimed, and paid the monthly installment payment into a court escrow

account. The appellees vacated the property in July 2011. According to the

appellees, JIL had agreed to waive the July installment payment in exchange for

their vacation of the premises at that time and an agreement to allow the clerk to

release the escrowed funds.

{¶12} JIL subsequently dismissed its claim for forfeiture and restitution, and

amended its complaint to add a claim for unjust enrichment. Ultimately, JIL

demanded a judgment against the appellees for the unpaid stimulus funds; for

installment payments from April, July, and August 2011, which were allegedly

unpaid; for alleged damage to the property caused by the appellees; for the final bill

for water service that St. Clair and Kemper had allegedly failed to pay; and for the

fair market rental value of the premises during the time of occupation.

{¶13} In their amended answer, St. Clair and Kemper denied most of the

allegations, and set forth several affirmative defenses, including the defenses of

impossibility of performance and unconscionability. They also pleaded several

counterclaims asserting, among other things, fraud or fraudulent inducement and

the breach of the contract by declaring it terminated based on a term that was

impossible to perform.

{¶14} After a bench trial, the court found for the appellees on JIL’s claims

and against JIL on the appellees’ breach-of-contract counterclaim. The court

awarded damages of $10,000, the jurisdictional limit of the court, and entered a

judgment for the appellees in that amount. The court specifically found that the

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contract was one-sided, that the parties had understood when they formed the

contract that the appellees could not afford the $7000 down payment unless Kemper

received the stimulus funds, and that Kemper had applied for the stimulus funds, but

the IRS had denied his application because Vilas had drafted the purchase contract

inappropriately. Likewise, the court found that the appellees had paid the $700

down payment and every monthly installment payment, except for July’s payment,

which JIL had waived. Finally, the court found that the appellees had paid fair

market rental value for the premises and that the appellees had caused no

deterioration or destruction of the property. The court did not make any specific

finding with respect to the water bill for which JIL sought reimbursement.

{¶15} JIL raises five assignments of error that challenge this judgment for

the appellees.

II. Analysis

{¶16} We begin with JIL’s first and second assignments of error, which are

related. In its first assignment of error, JIL attacks as against the manifest weight of

the evidence the trial court’s resolution of its claim for the $7000 in stimulus funds

as provided for in the contract. In its second assignment of error, JIL attacks the

award of $10,000 to the appellees on their counterclaim that was based on the

allegation that JIL had breached the contract by declaring it terminated because of

the appellees’ failure to perform a term that JIL, through Vilas, “had rendered

impossible to perform.” JIL argues that the appellees could not get breach-of-

contract damages for a contract that they contended was impossible to perform. It

also argues in the alternative that the appellees failed to prove any actual breach-of-

contract damages.

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A. Impossibility of Performance

{¶17} These assignments are related because they both require for their

resolution the application of the doctrine of impossibility of performance. This

doctrine recognizes that a party’s performance may be affected by a fact existing at

the time the contract was made or by a supervening fact that renders performance

impossible. See 1 Restatement of the Law 2d, Contracts, Section 266, Comment a

(1981). The circumstances of this case are best characterized as an existing

impossibility, because, unbeknownst to either party, Kemper was not eligible for the

stimulus funds when the parties executed the land installment contract.

{¶18} The Restatement of Contracts provides that “[w]here, at the time a

contact is made, a party’s performance under it is impracticable without his fault

because of a fact of which he has no reason to know and the non-existence of which is

a basic assumption on which the contract is made, no duty to render that

performance arises, unless the language or the circumstances indicate to the

contrary.” (Emphasis added.) Id. at 266(1). Ohio appears to adhere to the stricter

standard of impossibility rather than the modern standard of impracticability

adopted by the Restatement. See Wittrock v. Paragon Paper Co., 1st Dist. Hamilton

No. C-840883,

1985 Ohio App. LEXIS 9676

(Dec. 18, 1985); Rollman v. A.P.W.O.,

1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-890712,

1991 Ohio App. LEXIS 454

(Feb. 6, 1991). But

under either standard, the appellees prevailed.

{¶19} The appellees established the defense of impossibility existing at the

time of the contract. JIL does not and cannot contend under these facts that Kemper

should have known at the time the contract was made that he would not receive the

stimulus funds because of the way Vilas had drafted the purchase agreement. Vilas

represented himself as an experienced real estate agent, and he knew that Kemper

8 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

would rely on him. Likewise, JIL does not and cannot dispute that from the very

beginning of the transaction the parties operated under the assumptions that

Kemper would qualify for the stimulus funds and that the appellees could not afford

the house without the stimulus funds. And nothing in the contract indicates that the

parties bargained for the appellees’ performance under the contract despite the

impossibility of obtaining the stimulus funds. Under these circumstances, the

appellees’ duty to pay the $7000 never arose. Thus, the trial court did not lose its

way in resolving JIL’s claim under the contract for the $7000 in favor of the

appellees, because the appellees pled and proved the affirmative defense of

impossibility of performance.

{¶20} That said, because the appellees prevailed on their affirmative defense

to JIL’s breach-of-contract claim for the stimulus funds, they could not recover

under the contract on the theory that JIL’s termination due to nonperformance was a

breach of the contract. See Mitchell v. Thompson, 4th Dist. Gallia No. 06CA8, 2007-

Ohio-5362, ¶ 23 (“When contractual impossibility occurs, the parties need not

perform their respective contractual obligations and will not recover because of a

breach.”).

{¶21} In this case, the proper remedy for the trial court was to rescind the

contract and provide restitution for any partial performance by either party before

the discovery of the impossibility. See 1 Restatement of the Law 2d, Contracts,

Section 266, Comment a (1981). The court applied this remedy in part, because it

ensured that JIL had been compensated with a fair rental value for the premises

during the period of Kemper’s and St. Clair’s occupation of the premises. But the

court also entered judgment for the appellees on their breach-of-contract

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counterclaim and awarded “damages,” even though the appellees did not establish

any breach-of-contract damages except for the loss of their $700 deposit.

{¶22} We agree with JIL that the trial court erred by awarding breach-of-

contract damages to the appellees under these circumstances. However, like JIL,

Kemper and St. Clair were entitled to credit for their partial performance. Because

the court found that the total monthly installment payment was equivalent to the fair

market rental value for the premises, and that they had paid a down payment of

$700, they were entitled to recover the $700 down payment.

B. Fraud

{¶23} To prevent reversal of the trial court’s judgment, the appellees argue

that the trial court entered a “general judgment” in their favor in the amount of

$10,000, which should be viewed as including compensatory and punitive damages

for Vilas’s tortious conduct in fraudulently inducing them to enter into the contract.

{¶24} We reject the appellees’ argument. First, the trial court did not enter a

general judgment. The court made specific findings of fact and conclusions of law

that accompanied the journal entry. The court rendered judgment for the appellees

after finding in their favor on their “breach of contract” counterclaims. The case does

not have any of the attributes of a general verdict.

{¶25} Second, the appellees failed to establish their cause of action for fraud

or fraud in the inducement. Initially, we note that the trial court did not recognize

their pleadings as setting forth such a counterclaim. Instead, the trial court

apparently treated the appellees’ allegations as part of the affirmative defenses of

unconscionability and impossibility. Although the appellees’ pleadings do not

contain a counterclaim captioned as “fraud” or “fraudulent inducement,” we agree

with the appellees that they arguably pled and tried such a claim. As identified in the

10 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

appellees’ brief, this claim was based on Vilas’s representation, set forth in the letter

that he gave to St. Clair when she was his tenant, of “free money from our

government” with which his company would “bless [its] tenants with home

ownership.” The appellees had attached the letter containing these representations

to their amended answer and counterclaims. JIL had notice of the counterclaim, as

demonstrated by its comments in closing argument that the claim was not pled with

particularity and, in the alternative, that it was not proved.

{¶26} Typically, “[a] claim of fraud in the inducement arises when a party is

induced to enter into an agreement through fraud or misrepresentation. * * * In

order to prove fraud in the inducement, a plaintiff must prove that the defendant

made a knowing, material misrepresentation with the intent of inducing the

plaintiff’s reliance, and that the plaintiff relied upon the misrepresentation.” ABM

Farms, Inc. v. Woods,

81 Ohio St.3d 498, 502

,

692 N.E.2d 574

(1998).

{¶27} And “fraud is generally predicated on a misrepresentation relating to a

past or existing fact, and not on promises or representations relating to future

actions or conduct.” Williams v. Edwards,

129 Ohio App.3d 116, 124

,

717 N.E.2d 368

(1st Dist. 1998). An exception to this rule occurs when “an individual makes a

promise concerning a future action, occurrence, or conduct, and, at the time he

makes it, has no intention of keeping the promise. In such a case, the individual

possesses actual fraudulent intent and a claim for fraud may be asserted against

him.”

Id.

{¶28} Fraudulent intent can be inferred in the proper case, where the facts of

the surrounding circumstances allow it. See

id. at 125

. But this is not such a case.

The evidence at trial undisputedly established that the First-Time Homebuyer Credit

Program that Vilas promoted was legitimate and that Kemper would have been

11 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

entitled to the “free money” but for Vilas’s improper drafting of the purchase

contract. And there was no evidence to reasonably support an inference that Vilas

knew Kemper would not qualify for the “free money,” or that he had acted with such

recklessness or utter disregard for the truthfulness of that matter, when he made the

representation that induced the appellees.

{¶29} Absent from the record is any evidence that Vilas had drafted the

purchase contract to intentionally disqualify Kemper from receiving the stimulus

funds. To the contrary, Vilas testified that he thought he had complied with the

regulations. And, the record demonstrates that after executing the contract on behalf

of JIL, he gave the appellees possession of the premises and recorded the land

contract. The record simply does not support a finding of fraudulent intent. See

Information Leasing Corp. v. Chambers,

152 Ohio App.3d 715

,

2003-Ohio-2670

,

789 N.E.2d 1155, ¶ 89

(1st Dist.).

{¶30} As a result, we cannot uphold the trial court’s judgment to the

appellees to the extent that it exceeds the $700 down payment. Accordingly, we

overrule the first assignment of error, but we sustain the second assignment of error

in part and overrule it in part.

C. Compensation for Other Items

{¶31} JIL’s final three assignments of error challenge as against the manifest

weight of the evidence the trial court’s denial of compensation for items set forth in

the complaint. The third assignment of error relates to the July installment payment

that the trial court found JIL had waived, the fourth assignment of error relates to

the bill that the appellees had incurred for water service during their occupation of

the premises, and the fifth assignment of error relates to the cost of restoring the

premises to the condition that it was when the appellees first took possession.

12 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

{¶32} After reviewing the evidence at trial, we cannot say that the trial court

lost its way in resolving the facts against JIL with respect to the claim for the July

2011 installment payment and for the alleged damages to the premises. Here, as in

the trial of other civil cases, the weight to be given the evidence and the credibility of

the witnesses were primarily for the trier of fact. See State v. DeHass,

10 Ohio St.2d 230

,

227 N.E.2d 212

(1967), paragraph one of the syllabus.

{¶33} But we arrive at a different conclusion with respect to the water bill.

The only evidence at trial demonstrated that the appellees had agreed to pay for the

water service, but had failed to pay the bill and that JIL had paid it. The appellees’

only defense to the claim was that they would have paid it if they had been allowed to

stay. Thus, we conclude that the trial court’s failure to award JIL the amount of

$654.42 for the water bill was not just against the manifest weight of the evidence,

but also contrary to law, and that his amount must be offset against the award to the

appellees. Therefore, we sustain the fourth assignment of error, but we overrule the

third and fifth assignments of error.

III. Conclusion

{¶34} Accordingly, we reduce the amount of the judgment for the appellees

from $10,000 to $45.58, and we affirm the judgment as modified.

Judgment affirmed as modified.

HILDEBRANDT and FISCHER, JJ., concur.

Please note:

The court has recorded its own entry on the date of the release of this opinion.

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