Concrete Creations & Landscape Design L.L.C. v. Wilkinson , 2021 Ohio 2508 ( 2021 )


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  • [Cite as Concrete Creations & Landscape Design L.L.C. v. Wilkinson, 
    2021-Ohio-2508
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    CARROLL COUNTY
    CONCRETE CREATIONS &
    LANDSCAPE DESIGN LLC et al.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    GEORGE WILKINSON et al.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    Civil Appeal from the
    Court of Common Pleas of Carroll County, Ohio
    Case No. 2018CVH29069
    BEFORE:
    Carol Ann Robb, Gene Donofrio, David A. D’Apolito, Judges.
    JUDGMENT:
    Affirmed in part; Reversed in part; Remanded.
    Atty. Donald Wiley, Baker, Dublikar, Beck, Wiley & Mathews, 400 South Main Street,
    North Canton, Ohio 44720, for Plaintiffs-Appellants and
    Atty. Jason Bing, Atty. Michael Gruber, Atty. Todd Kotler, Gruber, Thomas & Co., 6370
    Mt. Pleasant Street, NW, North Canton, Ohio 44720, for Defendants-Appellees
    Dated: July 12, 2021
    –2–
    Robb, J.
    {¶1}   Plaintiffs-Appellants Concrete Creations & Landscape Design LLC and
    Diane Wallace appeal the decision of the Carroll County Common Pleas Court after a
    bench trial. The court entered judgment against Defendant-Appellee George Wilkinson
    for breach of contract and conversion. Appellants contend the court erred in failing to find
    Wilkinson was also liable for defamation, fraud, and intentional interference with business
    relations. These arguments are overruled.
    {¶2}   Appellants then argue the court awarded inadequate breach of contract
    damages of $15,000 for wrongful dissociation and $20,000 for violating the non-compete
    clause. To the contrary, Wilkinson’s cross-appeal asserts these contract damages were
    speculative and excessive. The award for breach of the dissociation clause was within
    the trial court’s discretion in weighing the evidence and is upheld. However, the award
    for breach of the non-compete clause was speculative and unsupported by sufficient
    evidence, allowing only a nominal damage award.
    {¶3}   Wilkinson’s cross-appeal also alleges the court’s finding of liability for
    conversion was against the manifest weight of the evidence. In the alternative, he urges
    the proper amount of damages for conversion was the value at the time of conversion
    rather than the replacement cost. Upholding his argument in part, the conversion damage
    award is reduced from $13,948.50 to $12,000.
    {¶4}   For the following reasons, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed in part and
    reversed on two items: (1) the conversion damage award is reversed and reduced to
    $12,000; (2) the breach of contract award for the non-compete clause is reversed, and
    the case is remanded with instructions to enter a nominal damage award on the non-
    compete contract claim.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    {¶5}   On October 11, 2017, Diane Wallace and George Wilkinson signed an
    Operating Agreement while forming Concrete Creations & Landscape Design LLC
    (CCLD).    The agreement named Wallace as the manager, Wilkinson as the Chief
    Executive Officer, and a third member as the Chief Financial Officer.
    {¶6}   Wallace said she was to provide the financial backing to start the company
    and the other two were to provide customers, labor, and equipment, Wilkinson from his
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    –3–
    lawn care business and the third member from his concrete business. (Tr. 11). Yet, they
    agreed to release the third member soon after formation, and he left with his equipment.
    (Tr. 12-13). Moreover, Wallace acknowledged there was a verbal agreement that she
    pay Wilkinson for his labor in the amount of $1,000 per week, which was then decreased
    to $750 per week. (Tr. 51, 102, 159).
    {¶7}   After the agreement was signed that fall, Wilkinson performed lawn care for
    CCLD.     In preparation for winter, Wilkinson engaged CCLD in a subcontracting
    relationship with a business (BG) who had various clients in need of snow plowing. When
    it started snowing, Wilkinson plowed for CCLD using his personal pickup truck. Wallace
    purchased plowing equipment for Wilkinson’s truck, such as a plow and a bed box for
    salt. (Tr. 23, 49-50). For assistance plowing, Wilkinson secured the services of a third-
    party (DD), who Wallace agreed would be their back-up if the former third member and
    Wilkinson’s friend were both unavailable. (Tr. 16, 19).
    {¶8}   Wallace purchased a building, which she wanted the company to lease from
    her. Salt and equipment was stored in the building. She put $4,000 into a company bank
    account for expenses and left for Florida before Christmas. (Tr. 16-17). Wilkinson said
    Wallace was behind in paying him, and he could not afford to live. During a snowstorm
    requiring him to plow the same lots multiple times, he ran out of money for expenses,
    such as fuel for plowing. (Tr. 159).
    {¶9}   On January 13, 2018, Wilkinson informed Wallace that he quit. CCLD
    replaced Wilkinson’s labor by paying DD to provide additional snow plowing services.
    CCLD continued to use Wilkinson’s truck but later returned it to him upon his demand.
    Wallace claimed Wilkinson agreed to transfer ownership of his truck to the company,
    which he denied. Wallace said CCLD lost most of its customers after Wilkinson quit.
    Later, Wilkinson briefly found employment with Cornerstone Landscaping (Cornerstone).
    {¶10} On May 14, 2018, CCLD and Wallace filed suit against Wilkinson alleging:
    breach of contract (for disassociating from and competing with CCLD); fraud (for
    misrepresentations when he allegedly agreed to transfer his truck to CCLD, promised he
    would not compete with CCLD, and said he would only use the company debit card for
    business expenses but then charged personal expenses); defamation (for written
    statements on his Facebook page and in texts); conversion (for maintaining possession
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    –4–
    of company assets); intentional interference with business relationships (with BG and
    other unnamed entities); breach of fiduciary duty (reiterating allegations on competing,
    conversion of property, and defamation); and conspiracy (with Wilkinson’s wife as an
    additional defendant). A permanent injunction was requested (to enjoin competition and
    turn over passwords and assets). Punitive damages were sought on the fraud and
    defamation claims.
    {¶11} Wilkinson filed an answer with counterclaims.           He set forth claims for
    conversion and breach of contract against both CCLD and Wallace and claims for breach
    of good faith and fair dealing and breach of fiduciary duty against Wallace. He alleged
    he was not fully compensated and the company was not fully funded by Wallace in
    accordance with her representation to do so.
    {¶12} The case was tried to the court in a bench trial on August 25, 2020, and the
    court issued its judgment on September 16, 2020. The court found against Wilkinson on
    all counts of his counterclaim. The court found the company was funded by Wallace and
    it could not be concluded she still owed him money, noting the company used his personal
    account for deposits at first and his testimony did not sufficiently establish that all deposits
    were used for business expenses.
    {¶13} On the complaint filed by Wallace and CCLD, the court found the allegations
    of fraud against Wilkinson were unsupported and ruled in his favor on the defamation
    claim, finding his statements were protected opinions.          On the claim for intentional
    interference with business relations, the court found the evidence lacked credibility as to
    the reason for CCLD’s terminated relationships with BG (the business who provided
    CCLD with some plowing jobs) or other customers and did not show Wilkinson actively
    interfered in CCLD’s relationship with Cornerstone just because he worked there after he
    left CCLD.
    {¶14} However, on the breach of contract claim, the court determined Wilkinson
    violated the “Non-competition” clause in Section 19.07 of the Operating Agreement due
    to his employment with Cornerstone, a customer of CCLD. He did not violate the clause
    as a result of his employment with a subsequent company (G&T), where he began
    working in the fall of 2018, as there was no evidence G&T was a customer and the non-
    compete clause only prohibited contacting or providing services for CCLD’s customers
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
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    and disclosing the customer list. The court awarded $20,000 in damages for Wilkinson’s
    breach of contract by working for Cornerstone but denied the request to enjoin his
    solicitation of customers as the clause was only effective for two years.
    {¶15} The court also found Wilkinson liable for breaching the contract due to his
    wrongful dissociation in violation of Section 13.04 of the Operating Agreement. The court
    awarded $15,000 in damages for this breach of contract.
    {¶16} On the conversion claim against Wilkinson, the court found he returned all
    items in his possession belonging to the company except a detachable plow. The court
    awarded $13,948.50 as damages for conversion, which was the cost Wallace paid for a
    replacement plow.
    {¶17} Wilkinson was additionally ordered to turn over any social media passwords
    belonging to CCLD. It was noted the bifurcated punitive damages request for fraud and
    defamation were moot due to the non-liability findings on those claims. The court also
    said a prior voluntary dismissal of the claim against Wilkinson’s wife involved a dismissal
    of the conspiracy count and declared any other outstanding claims were denied.
    {¶18} Appellants filed a timely notice of appeal. They set forth four assignments
    of error, which challenge the court’s decisions on: (1) defamation, (2) fraud, (3) intentional
    interference with business relations, and (4) contractual damages.
    {¶19} Wilkinson filed a timely cross-appeal. He sets forth three assignments of
    error, which challenge the court’s decisions on: (1) liability for conversion, (2) contractual
    damages, and (3) conversion damages.
    {¶20} Before proceeding we note two pages of Wallace’s deposition were used at
    trial in cross-examination for impeachment purposes on her past landscaping experience.
    (Tr. 54). As Wilkinson’s brief points out, this did not mean the entire deposition was
    evidence at the bench trial which could be cited by Appellants in this appeal which
    considers only the evidence presented and admitted during the bench trial.
    DEFAMATION
    {¶21} Appellants’ first assignment of error alleges:
    “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO FIND THAT THE APPELLEE – A
    FORMER BUSINESS PARTNER OF THE APPELLANT – HAD COMMITTED [LIBEL]
    ‘PER SE’ IN AN ATTEMPT TO DAMAGE APPELLANTS’ REPUTATION IN HER
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
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    TRADAND OCCUPATION BY PUBLISHING TEXTS AND SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS
    ACCUSING THE APPELLANT OF BEING A ‘LIAR’, A ‘CHEAT’, ‘MENTALLY ILL’,
    ‘STUPID’, AND ‘A SCAMMER’.”
    {¶22} Wallace obtained copies of statements Wilkinson made on his personal
    Facebook page and in texts he sent to his friend (who showed the texts to Wallace). The
    court listed the messages it was admitting as exhibits, and there was no objection. (Tr.
    198-200). The court found in favor of Wilkinson on the defamation claim after applying
    the Ohio Supreme Court’s Scott/Vail totality of the circumstances test for determining
    whether a statement is a constitutionally protected opinion. On appeal, five specific labels
    used by Wilkinson are raised by Appellants to support their defamation claim: liar, cheat,
    scammer, mentally ill, and stupid.
    {¶23} Appellants suggest they were relieved from proving various elements of
    defamation because these labels constituted libel “per se” as they were harmful on their
    face and they injuriously affected character and a trade or profession. See Becker v.
    Toulmin, 
    165 Ohio St. 549
    , 
    138 N.E.2d 391
     (1956). See also Akron-Canton Waste Oil
    Inc. v. Safety-Kleen Oil Serv. Inc., 
    81 Ohio App.3d 591
    , 601, 
    611 N.E.2d 955
     (9th
    Dist.1992) (a written statement accusing the plaintiff of a crime is defamation per se).
    Appellants cite a case holding: “A statement that someone is a liar, such as that made in
    the leaflet, clearly is one which would tend to injure that person's reputation, and courts
    have considered such statements to be defamatory on their face.” See Dale v. Ohio Civ.
    Serv. Emp. Assn, 
    57 Ohio St.3d 112
    , 117, 
    567 N.E.2d 253
     (1991).1 Assuming Wilkinson’s
    statements were false, Appellants say the trial court should have given more weight to
    the fact that the contested words were written by a former business partner which would
    lead a reader to believe they were credible assertions based on special knowledge.
    {¶24} Wilkinson counters by pointing out this defamation per se argument is
    irrelevant if his words were constitutionally protected under the opinion privilege, quoting:
    1 The issues before the Dale Court were whether the defamation occurred during a labor dispute, which
    required the plaintiff to show actual malice, and whether there was evidence meeting this standard. There
    was no discussion of the Scott test for protected opinion. Dale was decided in 1991, after the United States
    Supreme Court’s Milkovich decision and before the Ohio Supreme Court’s 1995 Vail case reaffirmed the
    totality of the circumstances test for the opinion privilege previously set forth in Scott. See Vail, 72 Ohio
    St.3d at 281 (“Regardless of the outcome in Milkovich, the law in this state is that embodied in Scott.”).
    Dale was also decided before the specific application of Scott to a non-media defendant in Wampler.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    –7–
    “Once a determination is made that specific speech is ‘opinion,’ the inquiry is at an end.
    It is constitutionally protected.” Vail v. The Plain Dealer Publishing Co., 
    72 Ohio St.3d 279
    , 284, 
    649 N.E.2d 182
     (1995) (Douglas, J., concurring). In other words, defamation
    per se does not eliminate the constitutional privilege of free speech. Wilkinson urges the
    contested words were vague, general, and not readily verifiable and observes he was
    “clearly speaking as his own advocate, in his own opinion, rather than neutral narrator of
    facts.” He emphasizes the failure in Appellants’ brief to specifically acknowledge the
    Scott/Vail opinion privilege test applied by the trial court.
    {¶25} In reply, Appellants point to the portions of their brief reviewing the
    circumstances which correspond to factors in the Scott/Vail totality of the circumstances
    test, such as: the specific words, the context of a former business relationship, and the
    resulting inference of his special knowledge of objectively verifiable facts about Wallace.
    {¶26} Defamation occurs when a publication contains a false statement “made
    with some degree of fault, reflecting injuriously on a person's reputation, or exposing a
    person to public hatred, contempt, ridicule, shame or disgrace, or affecting a person
    adversely in his or her trade, business or profession.”                   American Chem. Soc. v.
    Leadscope Inc., 
    133 Ohio St.3d 366
    , 
    2012-Ohio-4193
    , 
    978 N.E.2d 832
    , ¶ 77. A plaintiff
    suing for defamation must generally show: a statement of fact was published; it was false;
    it was defamatory; the plaintiff suffered injury as a proximate result of the publication; and
    the defendant acted with the requisite degree of fault in publishing the statement. 
    Id.
    {¶27} A publication is considered to be libel per se if the publication on its face
    “reflects upon the character of such person by bringing him into ridicule, hatred, or
    contempt, or affects him injuriously in his trade or profession” by the use of unequivocal
    words. Becker, 165 Ohio St. at 553-558 (as opposed to libel per quod where harmless
    words become defamatory through innuendo and interpretation). This 1956 Becker case
    cited in Appellants’ brief said if a publication was libelous per se, then there was a
    presumption as to falsity, malice,2 and damages. Id. at 557.
    {¶28} Initially, it must be recognized the presumptions are rebuttable. See, e.g.,
    Sayavich v. Creatore, 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 07-MA 217, 
    2009-Ohio-5270
    , ¶ 93-94
    2The term malice referred to fault or state of mind, not actual malice (as required for punitive damages).
    See generally Pickle v. Swinehart, 
    170 Ohio St. 441
    , 442-443, 
    166 N.E.2d 227
     (1960).
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    –8–
    (presumption of damages in a defamation per se claim is rebuttable); Wilson v. Wilson,
    2nd Dist. Montgomery No. 21443, 
    2007-Ohio-178
    , ¶ 14 (legal presumptions are
    rebuttable, including the defamation presumption of damages). We also note truth is a
    complete defense to a claim for defamation (regardless of whether the libel is per se).
    See Ed Schory & Sons Inc. v. Society Natl. Bank, 
    75 Ohio St.3d 433
    , 445, 
    662 N.E.2d 1074
     (1996), citing R.C. 2739.02.
    {¶29} Furthermore, as the Dale Court pointed out, former law holding a defendant
    strictly liable for publishing certain defamatory statements (unless he could prove privilege
    or truth) has been substantially altered due to First Amendment concerns. Dale, 57 Ohio
    St.3d at 113-114. The plaintiffs in “all defamation cases” are governed by a clear and
    convincing standard of proof. Id. at 113, citing Lansdowne, 32 Ohio St.3d at 180-181
    (clear and convincing evidence required on the element of fault, but not on harm). “The
    plaintiff in a defamation case now has the burden of proving both that the statement was
    false and the defendant was at least negligent in publishing it.”          Id. at 114, citing
    Lansdowne v. Beacon Journal Pub. Co., 
    32 Ohio St.3d 176
    , 178-180, 
    512 N.E.2d 979
    (1987) (maintaining a negligence standard for private plaintiffs, instead of extending the
    public figure actual malice for liability to private plaintiffs, but increasing the standard of
    proof), citing Gertz v. Robert Welch Inc., 
    418 U.S. 323
    , 347, 
    94 S.Ct. 2997
    , 
    41 L.Ed.2d 789
     (1974) (“so long as they do not impose liability without fault, the States may define
    for themselves the appropriate standard of liability for a publisher or broadcaster of
    defamatory falsehood injurious to a private individual”).
    {¶30} The trial court’s application of a privilege meant it was not required to reach
    the matter of fault and various other matters. Most notably: “one of the elements of a
    private figure's cause of action in defamation is a false statement, and a statement
    deemed to be an opinion as a matter of law cannot be proven false.” (Citations omitted).
    Wampler v. Higgins, 
    93 Ohio St.3d 111
    , 
    752 N.E.2d 962
     (2001), fn. 8. As the Supreme
    Court pointed out in Wampler, even the 1956 Becker case said words that are defamatory
    per se carry certain presumptions “unless published on a privileged occasion.” 
    Id.,
    quoting Becker, 165 Ohio St. at 557. One such privilege is the “opinion privilege” which
    recognizes opinions are “nonactionable expressions” of a defendant’s personal judgment.
    Wampler, 93 Ohio St.3d at 127, 132.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    –9–
    {¶31} “The right to sue for damage to one's reputation pursuant to state law is not
    absolute. Instead, the right is encumbered by the First Amendment to the United States
    Constitution.” Soke v. Plain Dealer, 
    69 Ohio St.3d 395
    , 
    1994-Ohio-337
    , 
    632 N.E.2d 1282
    (1994). Even more so, the right is encumbered by the free speech rights in the Ohio
    Constitution: “Every citizen may freely speak, write, and publish his sentiments on all
    subjects, being responsible for the abuse of the right; and no law shall be passed to
    restrain or abridge the liberty of speech, or of the press.” Ohio Constitution, Article 1,
    Section 11. In granting the opinion privilege to a defendant in a defamation action, the
    Ohio Supreme Court has interpreted this constitutional provision as providing a stronger
    protection for opinions than the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. See
    Wampler, 93 Ohio St.3d at 116-117, 132; Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 281.
    {¶32} In Scott, the Ohio Supreme Court adopted a totality of the circumstances
    test for determining whether an allegedly defamatory statement was the allegation of a
    factual item or was a non-actionable protected opinion. Scott v. News-Herald, 
    25 Ohio St.3d 243
    , 250, 
    496 N.E.2d 699
     (1986). The test was reaffirmed in Vail as this state’s
    position under the Ohio Constitution in response to interceding First Amendment law.
    Vail, 
    72 Ohio St.3d 279
    . The cases initially involved media defendants, but the Court
    thereafter specified that a defendant who is a private citizen benefits from the same totality
    of the circumstances test in ascertaining the absolute opinion privilege. Wampler, 93
    Ohio St.3d at 125 (private individual sued another private individual who expressed
    protected opinions in a writing criticizing the plaintiff’s ethics).
    {¶33} This totality of the circumstances test is “a compass to show general
    direction and not a map to set rigid boundaries.” Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 250. It is not a
    “bright-line test.” Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 282. Still, the applicability of the opinion privilege
    to determine whether an alleged defamatory statement constitutes opinion or fact in a
    particular Ohio case is a question of law for the court. Wampler, 3 Ohio St.3d at 127;
    Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 250.
    {¶34} In applying the totality of the circumstances test to ascertain the status of a
    statement as a protected opinion, the Court supplied “at least four factors” to review: (1)
    the specific language used; (2) whether the statement was verifiable; (3) the general
    context of the statement; and (4) the broader context in which the statement appeared.
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    – 10 –
    Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 282, upholding Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 250. The standard is “fluid”
    with the weight assigned to any one factor dependent on the facts and circumstances
    presented. Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 282. We now review the law on each of the factors,
    and then apply the law to the statements raised in this appeal.
    {¶35} First, in viewing the specific language used, the court must consider how
    the words are commonly understood. Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 251. The court asks
    “whether a reasonable reader would view the words used to be language that normally
    conveys information of a factual nature or hype and opinion; whether the language has a
    readily ascertainable meaning or is ambiguous.”          Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 282-283.
    Allegedly actionable words tend to be understood as mere opinion if they are: loosely
    definable, variously interpretable, indefinite, imprecise, ambiguous, value-laden, or
    subjective statements. Wampler, 3 Ohio St.3d at 128-129 (such as the description of a
    landlord as ruthless, uncaring, greedy, self-centered, and mindless), citing Cole v.
    Westinghouse Broadcasting Co. Inc., 
    386 Mass. 303
    , 
    435 N.E.2d 1021
     (1982) (where the
    defendant called a journalist’s reporting “sloppy and irresponsible”) and Buckley v. Littell,
    
    539 F.2d 882
     (2d Cir.1976) (“fellow traveler” of “fascists” was susceptible of widely
    different interpretations).
    {¶36} Second, in determining if the statement is verifiable, the court is to consider
    whether “[u]nlike a subjective assertion the averred defamatory language is an articulation
    of an objectively verifiable event.” Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 252. If the “statement lacks a
    plausible method of verification, a reasonable reader will not believe that the statement
    has specific factual content” but will understand the statement is “value-laden and
    represents a point of view that is obviously subjective.” Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 283.
    {¶37} Third, in viewing the general context of the words, the court employs “an
    analysis of the larger objective and subjective context of the statement.” Scott, 25 Ohio
    St.3d at 252. Although not dispositive, the use of language such as “in my opinion” or “I
    think” are considered “highly suggestive of opinion.” Id. See also Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at
    282 (such as where a column was titled, “Commentary”). In ascertaining whether the
    words should be “characterized as statements of objective facts or subjective hyperbole,”
    this context factor leans toward finding a mere opinion if “[t]he general tenor of the column
    is sarcastic, more typical of persuasive speech than factual reporting.” Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d
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    – 11 –
    at 282. The factor may be weighed in favor of a finding of protected opinion if the context
    demonstrates the writer “is not making an attempt to be impartial” and “no secret is made
    of his bias.” Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 253 (noting a reader of the words in context would
    be “hard pressed” to accept the statements as impartial reporting).
    {¶38} Fourth, applying the factor as to the broader context, the Court considers
    the location of the published words. Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 253-254 (emphasizing the
    article was on the sports page as opposed to the legal news). See also Vail, 72 Ohio
    St.3d at 282 (stressing the commentary piece appeared in the “forum” section as opposed
    to the news section). The social context and the writer’s reputation for hyperbole and
    opinion can be considered. Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 282. In examining the “broader social
    context” and the influence that a certain “genre” of writing will have on the reader, the
    court can consider if the writing is part of a “social forum for personal opinion.” Wampler,
    93 Ohio St.3d at 131 (such as a letter to the editor).
    {¶39} Again, Appellants raise five labels on appeal as supporting the defamation
    claim: liar, cheat, scammer, mentally ill, and stupid.
    {¶40} We start with “liar” and “cheat” as they were both from Wilkinson’s personal
    Facebook page and depicted on the same screenshot (and the same exhibit). (Ex. 112).
    More than two weeks after he quit, Wilkinson noted that he was waiting for the return of
    his pickup truck and said: “I’ve been promised it will be here by noon today. I really hope
    so…but coming from a liar I just don’t know.” After a friend commented, he replied: “I
    don’t know either. One minute they’re super cool the next minute they’re trying to cheat
    you.”
    {¶41} The verb “cheat” is “loosely definable,” and the expression of belief that
    someone is “trying to cheat” is “inherently imprecise and subject to myriad subjective
    interpretations.” See Wampler, 3 Ohio St.3d at 128 (as was the description of the plaintiff
    as an “uncaring” and “ruthless speculator” who charged “exorbitant rent” due to “self-
    centered greed” and was ruining the community like a “mindless” corporation). The
    phrase “trying to cheat” may be even more “loosely defined” than the word “scammer”
    (discussed below in the analysis of Wilkinson’s texts). See McCabe v. Rattiner, 
    814 F.2d 839
    , 842 (1st Cir.1987) (the word “scam” does not have a precise definition, means
    different things to different people, and there is no single usage in common phraseology).
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
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    In Vail, the Court found the description of the plaintiff as an anti-homosexual, gay-bashing
    bigot “lacks precise meaning and would be understood by the ordinary reader for just
    what it is—one person's attempt to persuade public opinion. * * * Each term conjures a
    vast array of highly emotional responses that will vary from reader to reader.” Vail, 72
    Ohio St.3d at 283. The phrase “trying to cheat” was similarly Wilkinson’s subjective
    “value-laden” expression of feeling which was susceptible to widely different
    interpretations.
    {¶42} Calling someone a “liar” is more well-defined. In Scott, the first factor was
    weighed in the plaintiff’s favor where the defendant wrote that the plaintiff lied at a hearing.
    Scott, 
    25 Ohio St.3d 243
    . Notably however, Scott involved a specific accusation that the
    plaintiff lied at a hearing after swearing to tell the truth, and the Court still found the
    statement was a protected opinion under the totality of the circumstances. In Vail, the
    Supreme Court concluded the accusation that a person was not “pro” honesty could be
    construed by a reader as an objective statement which communicates a fact, but the
    Court still found it “insufficient to overcome the conclusion that an ordinary reader would
    believe that statement, just as the others, to be the opinion of the writer.” Vail, 72 Ohio
    St.3d at 283.
    {¶43} We move to the second factor which looks at whether the statement is
    objectively verifiable.   If the “statement lacks a plausible method of verification, a
    reasonable reader will not believe that the statement has specific factual content” but will
    understand the statement is “value-laden and represents a point of view that is obviously
    subjective.” Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 283. We consider whether there exists a plausible
    method of verifying the statements calling a person a “liar” who “[o]ne minute [is] super
    cool [but,] the next minute [is] trying to cheat you.” In Vail, the Court said references to
    the plaintiff’s honesty were “possibly verifiable facts,” but the disputed writing in that case
    suggested the reason behind the writer’s belief. Id. (then concluding the words “in the
    context in which they were written” clearly represented a subjective point of view and did
    not support a defamation cause of action). In Scott, it was clear “the averred defamatory
    language [was] an articulation of an objectively verifiable event” because whether the
    plaintiff lied under oath was objectively verifiable by the transcript of the hearing discussed
    by the defendant in the writing. Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 252.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
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    {¶44} As the factors are fluid, context can be used in assessing the verifiability of
    the statement. In the particular contested “liar” post, Wilkinson did not seem to actively
    connect the term “liar” to a fact. His mention of the truck seemed to be an expression of
    concern over whether he should believe the appointment to return the truck would
    proceed as scheduled. This particular post did not mention facts which could be verified
    or disproven. The post could be read with his next contested post which suggested
    Appellants were “trying to cheat” him. This could support a reading of his comments as
    referencing the fact that his truck was being used by the company instead of being
    returned to him. The continued use of his truck was objectively verifiable. (We note the
    continued use of his truck was proven to be true, and the propriety of this continued use
    was a subject of this lawsuit wherein the court found no agreement to transfer ownership
    of his truck to the company.)
    {¶45} The combined posts and words surrounding the specific contested
    language also tie in to the third factor, the general context of the words. Although
    Wilkinson did not preface his comments with “in my opinion” or “I think,” he did essentially
    express that he did not know what to think in both contested posts. See Scott, 25 Ohio
    St.3d at 252 (although not dispositive, the use of labeling language suggesting the
    statement is a personal judgment will “strongly militate in favor of the statement as
    opinion”).   Opining that someone is “trying to cheat” can be seen as more of an
    unformulated position of opinion than saying someone “cheated” already. Wilkinson
    clearly was “not making an attempt to be impartial” and “no secret is made of his bias.”
    See id. at 253. The context tends to show Wilkinson’s comments were “subjective
    hyperbole” on his personal situation and closer to “persuasive speech” than to factual
    reporting. See Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 282. Additionally, he did not name CCLD or Wallace
    in his Facebook posts; although, Appellants point to a post by a different person noting,
    “it’s your partner.”
    {¶46} The broader social context factor would include the consideration of the
    location of the posts on Wilkinson’s personal Facebook page where he was expressing
    concern to his friends about the promised return of his truck. Wallace believes the broad
    context factor works in her favor due to his status as her former business partner, which
    makes him appear to be a factual reporter. Having no access to his personal mode of
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 14 –
    transportation under the circumstances was an emotional subject, and a reader would
    understand it as such; the writing was contained on Wilkinson’s own “social forum for
    personal opinion.” See Wampler, 93 Ohio St.3d at 131.
    {¶47} In weighing the circumstances, we reiterate that no one factor is dispositive,
    and we compare the precedent. In Scott, the Court upheld summary judgment and found
    the statement that a school official lied (at a hearing after being sworn to tell the truth)
    was a protected opinion, even though the factors on the specific language and verifiability
    weighed in the plaintiff’s favor. Scott, 
    25 Ohio St.3d 243
    . In Vail, the Court upheld the
    dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim after finding the following statements
    about the plaintiff were protected speech: she “doesn't like gay people”; her “anti-
    homosexual diatribe” constituted “hate-mongering”; she “added gay-bashing to the
    repertoire of right-wing, neo-numbskull tactics”; she was a “bigot”; and “Honesty, it
    would appear, is one value on which [she] is not so ‘pro.’” Vail, 
    72 Ohio St.3d 279
     (the
    totality of the circumstances showed “the ordinary reader would accept this column as
    opinion and not as fact”). In Wampler, the Court upheld summary judgment after finding
    it was mere opinion to write that a building owner was greedy, self-centered, uncaring,
    ruthless, and mindless, among other things. Wampler, 
    93 Ohio St.3d 111
    .
    {¶48} Upon weighing the factors as relevant to the totality of the circumstances
    elicited during the bench trial in this case, we conclude the two contested comments
    posted on Wilkinson’s personal Facebook page in a conversation with friends (saying he
    was concerned about a promise from a “liar” and suggesting Wallace was “trying to cheat”
    him) are protected opinions.
    {¶49} The other three descriptors contested on appeal (scammers, mentally ill,
    and stupid) were used by Wilkinson in private texts to his friend. Wilkinson said: “I hope
    everything works out for you today. Just be careful. [DD] and Diane are scammer’s!!”
    (Ex. 57) (DD is the aforementioned plowing subcontractor). In another set of texts,
    Wilkinson said to his friend: “They must be mentally ill or something” and “It’s their fault
    and they’re too f****** stupid to realize it.” (Asterisks original to the text.) (Ex. 66).
    {¶50} As to the factor examining the specific language, the word “scammer” is
    similar to the “trying to cheat you” language addressed above. Scammer is an expression
    that is “loosely definable” or “inherently imprecise and subject to myriad subjective
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 15 –
    interpretations.” See Wampler, 3 Ohio St.3d at 128. It is the writer’s subjective, “value-
    laden” statement of hyperbole and name-calling. See Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 283 (just as
    the description of the plaintiff as anti-homosexual and bigoted). “[T]he word ‘scam’ does
    not have a precise meaning. * * * ‘it means different things to different people ... and there
    is not a single usage in common phraseology.’ While some connotations of the word may
    encompass criminal behavior, others do not.” McCabe, 814 F.2d at 842.
    {¶51} The label of “stupid” is also extremely subjective and does not necessarily
    relate to intelligence or mean someone is intellectually inferior.         It is often used
    hyperbolically to show feelings and magnify the differences in opinions during a heated
    argument. Likewise, the phrase “[t]hey must be mentally ill or something” is indefinite,
    imprecise, ambiguous, value-laden, subjective, and variously interpretable.              See
    Wampler, 3 Ohio St.3d at 128-129. “A statement that someone is ‘crazy’ is an expression
    of opinion that generally does not subject one to liability.” Rizvi v. St. Elizabeth Hosp.
    Med. Ctr., 
    146 Ohio App.3d 103
    , 110, 
    765 N.E.2d 395
     (7th Dist.2001) (summary judgment
    for a teaching physician who said a resident physician was crazy). As to both examples,
    this court has observed: “People frequently use adjectives such as ‘stupid’ or ‘crazy’ to
    express their feelings or opinions about an individual. No reasonable listener would
    interpret such expressions as factual assertions about the individual's mental capacity.”
    Paige v. Youngstown Bd. of Edn., 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 93CA212 (Dec. 23, 1994).
    {¶52} On the second factor, the texts admitted into evidence and raised on appeal
    did not include objectively verifiable facts presented by Wilkinson as proof that Wallace
    (and her sub-contractor) were “scammers,” “stupid,” and “must be mentally ill or
    something.”    The lack of precision in the definition of scammer makes the general
    assertion someone is a scammer incapable of being proven true or false. McCabe, 814
    F.2d at 842. We will not scour the record for support for each factor where an appellant’s
    brief does not specify the evidence or the page in the record. Although only raised in the
    facts of the brief and not set forth in the arguments supporting this assignment of error,
    we note that after calling Wallace a scammer, Wilkinson’s text opined that she “screwed”
    him and others (used in the sense of a synonym to scammed). But, getting “screwed” by
    Wallace is just as general and subjective as the statement calling her a scammer and
    does not appear to be objectively verifiable as a result.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 16 –
    {¶53} As to the text “[t]hey must be mentally ill or something,” there are
    subsequent statements in the text about a failure to pay him, his dire personal financial
    situation, and his belief they want to “take me down.” Yet, it does not appear the financial
    comments related to the mentally ill opinion. Wallace does not refer us to items presented
    by Wilkinson as factual and admitted in evidence which could be objectively verified or
    disproven. From the exhibits admitted by the trial court, the “reasonable reader would not
    believe that the statement has specific factual content” but would understand it is
    hyperbolic, “value-laden and represents a point of view that is obviously subjective.” See
    Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 283.
    {¶54} As for the general context of the admitted texts, we mentioned some of the
    surrounding commentary. Notably, the use of “must be” before “mentally ill” and the
    addition of “or something” after it shows this was not Wilkinson’s attempt at a diagnosis
    or a disclosure of one. Moreover, Wilkinson’s application of the comment “must be
    mentally ill or something” to two people at once is indicative that he was not reporting on
    a fact but was using hyperbole. There is no indication the statement was meant to be
    taken literally.
    {¶55} Calling Wallace (and the subcontractor) “stupid” was also clearly
    Wilkinson’s subjective opinion and did not appear to be related to intelligence. He was
    venting about his dire financial situation. The context of the statements demonstrates he
    was “not making an attempt to be impartial” and “no secret is made of his bias.” See
    Scott, 25 Ohio St.3d at 253. As to his warning that Wallace and her sub-contractor were
    “scammers” and his next text in the same exhibit vaguely saying Wallace “screwed” him
    and others, the general internal context of the words conveyed the “tenor” of personal
    and generalized complaint and persuasion rather than factual reporting. See Vail, 72
    Ohio St.3d at 282.
    {¶56} The broader social context was Wilkinson speaking by personal text to one
    friend, someone he knew before they met Wallace. This is an especially private and
    limited “social forum for personal opinion.” Wampler, 93 Ohio St.3d at 131. See also
    Vail, 72 Ohio St.3d at 282 (in addition to the social context, the writer’s reputation for
    hyperbole and opinion can be considered).
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
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    {¶57} In considering the totality of the circumstances, it appears Wilkinson’s use
    of the words “scammer,” “stupid,” and “must be mentally ill or something” in private text
    messages to a friend can be considered constitutionally protected opinions. Accord Rizvi,
    146 Ohio App.3d at 110 (where we upheld summary judgment for a physician who said
    another physician was crazy after finding it was an expression of opinion); Paige, 7th Dist.
    No. 93CA212 (where this court held no reasonable listener would interpret the
    expressions “crazy” or “stupid” as factual assertions about the plaintiff's mental capacity);
    McCabe, 814 F.2d at 842 (placing the subheading “scam” before complaining about a
    timeshare was a protected opinion).
    {¶58} As the trial court recognized, once the absolute privilege of opinion applies,
    the defamation inquiry is at an end. This assignment of error is overruled.
    FRAUD
    {¶59} Appellants’ second assignment of error contends:
    “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO FIND THAT THE APPELLEE WAS
    GUILTY OF FRAUD WHEN HE HAD, AMONG OTHER ACTIONS, ADMITTED TO
    COMMITTING THEFT FROM THE APPELLANT, AND IN HIDING EQUIPMENT
    BELONGING TO THE APPELLANT AFTER WRONGFULLY TERMINATING HIS
    CONTRACTUAL RELATIONSHIP WITH APPELLANT.”
    {¶60} To recover for fraud, a plaintiff must prove: (1) a representation (or a
    concealment of a fact if there is duty to disclose), (2) which is material to the transaction,
    (3) made falsely, with knowledge of its falsity or with such utter disregard as to its truth
    that knowledge may be inferred, (4) with the intent to mislead another into relying on it,
    (5) justifiable reliance on the representation, and (6) injury proximately caused by the
    reliance. Burr v. Board of Cty. Commrs. of Stark Cty., 
    23 Ohio St.3d 69
    , 
    491 N.E.2d 1101
    (1986), paragraph two of the syllabus. As to the first element, Appellants acknowledge
    they are alleging a representation (rather concealment with duty to disclose) as their sole
    statement of law is: “Fraud is legally defined as a knowingly false representation causing
    resulting injury.” (Apt.Br. 9)
    {¶61} The complaint alleged Wilkinson committed fraud by falsely representing he
    would contribute his pickup truck to the company, would only use the company debit card
    for company expenses, and would refrain from competing. On these allegations, the
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 18 –
    judgment entry concluded: the court did not believe Wilkinson ever agreed to give his
    personal vehicle to CCLD; there was no indication Wilkinson made a representation as
    to the debit card usage; and at the time he signed the Operating Agreement, his promise
    on competition was not false and he did not know he would be leaving the company.
    {¶62} On appeal, Appellants briefly contend Wilkinson knowingly made false
    representations by: promising to contribute his truck to the business but then keeping it;
    continuing to possess company equipment; promising to provide labor to the business
    (and then wrongfully dissociating); and using a gift card stolen from Wallace’s mail.
    Appellants say the trial court’s judgment ruling against them on their fraud claim was
    against the manifest weight of the evidence.
    {¶63} Weight of the evidence concerns “the inclination of the greater amount of
    credible evidence, offered in a trial, to support one side of the issue rather than the other.”
    Eastley v. Volkman, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 328
    , 
    2012-Ohio-2179
    , 
    972 N.E.2d 517
    , ¶ 12 (applying
    Thompkins to civil cases), quoting State v. Thompkins, 
    78 Ohio St.3d 380
    , 387, 
    678 N.E.2d 541
     (1997). “Weight is not a question of mathematics, but depends on its effect
    in inducing belief.” 
    Id.
     In determining whether a verdict is against the manifest weight of
    the evidence, an appellate court reviews the entire record, weighs the evidence and all
    reasonable inferences and determines whether, in resolving conflicts in the evidence, the
    fact-finder clearly lost its way and created such a manifest miscarriage of justice that the
    conviction must be reversed and a new trial ordered. Eastley, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 328
     at ¶
    20, citing Thompkins, 78 Ohio St.3d at 387.
    {¶64} The power of the appellate court to reverse a judgment as being against the
    manifest weight of the evidence is to be exercised only in the exceptional case in which
    the evidence weighs heavily against the judgment. State v. Lang, 
    129 Ohio St.3d 512
    ,
    
    2011-Ohio-4215
    , 
    954 N.E.2d 596
    , ¶ 220, citing Thompkins, 78 Ohio St.3d at 387. We
    make every reasonable presumption in favor of the judgment and any finding of facts; if
    the evidence is susceptible of more than one construction, we are bound to interpret it in
    favor of the fact-finder’s ruling. Eastley, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 328
     at ¶ 21, citing Seasons Coal
    Co. Inc. v. Cleveland, 
    10 Ohio St.3d 77
    , 80, 
    461 N.E.2d 1273
     (1984), fn. 3.
    {¶65} First, we address the appellate argument that Wilkinson committed fraud by
    representing he would provide labor to the business but then wrongfully dissociating from
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 19 –
    the company. The fraud claim in the complaint did not mention this topic. The trial court
    considered the evidence of wrongful dissociation when addressing Appellants’ contract
    claim and had no indication Appellants believed the contractual promise constituted fraud.
    {¶66} Unlike other claims set forth in the complaint, fraud is a special matter that
    must be pled in the complaint with specificity. Civ.R. 9(B) (“In all averments of fraud * *
    *, the circumstances constituting fraud * * * shall be stated with particularity.”).
    Considering the multitude of claims presented without specific pleading requirements and
    the relation of the dissociation to the contract claim, there is no indication this issue was
    tried as part of the fraud claim by implied consent; this is not argued in any event.
    Accordingly, the matter of dissociation after promising to provide labor was not before the
    court in the context of the fraud claim.
    {¶67} Wilkinson also points out he provided labor for months after signing the
    agreement and there was no proof any statement as to the dissociation clause was made
    falsely with knowledge of falsity and with intent to mislead. The trial court pointed this out
    in rejecting the fraud claim on the non-compete clause, which was set forth in the
    complaint under the fraud claim but which is not maintained on appeal. On that topic, the
    trial court found the defendant did not know he would be quitting when he signed the
    agreement. Such finding was not contrary to the weight of the evidence.
    {¶68} A subsequent failure to maintain a promise made when the business was
    formed does not mean the promise was false when it was made. See Burr, 23 Ohio St.3d
    at 73 (fraud elements); Link v. Leadworks Corp., 
    79 Ohio App.3d 735
    , 742, 
    607 N.E.2d 1140
     (8th Dist.1992) (unless there was no intent on the part of the promisor to perform,
    the general rule prohibits a fraud claim based on a promise of future performance). See
    also Lucarell v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 
    152 Ohio St.3d 453
    , 
    2018-Ohio-15
    , 
    97 N.E.3d 458
    , ¶ 63 (“a misrepresentation must involve a matter of fact that relates to the past or
    present” rather than a future prediction). Appellants fail to cite testimony indicating a
    contractual promise on dissociation was known to be false when the Operating
    Agreement was signed. And, this issue was not before the court as related to fraud in
    any event.
    {¶69} As to the argument in Appellants’ brief on possession of company
    equipment, the fraud claim in the complaint specified an allegation that Wilkinson
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 20 –
    promised to transfer his pickup truck to CCLD. The Operating Agreement did not bind
    him to contribute his truck to the company. As to any verbal agreement, the court found
    Wilkinson’s testimony more credible than Wallace’s testimony and concluded he did not
    promise to transfer his truck to the CCLD. The trial judge was in the best position to weigh
    the evidence and judge each witness’s credibility by observing gestures, voice inflections,
    and demeanor during the testimony at the bench trial. See Seasons Coal, 10 Ohio St.3d
    at 80.
    {¶70} In addressing other “lies” they claim qualified as fraud, Appellants’ brief
    contends Wilkinson hid equipment after he quit, alluding to the snow plow. The trial court
    addressed the plow in the conversion claim, finding Wilkinson converted the plow Wallace
    purchased for CCLD by failing to return it (after saying his yard was too wet to move it
    when a demand for return was made). The fraud claim in the complaint did not mention
    a plow or other equipment. Plus, Wallace did not testify that Wilkinson’s representation
    on the condition of his yard was false (even if it was a poor excuse) or that it induced
    reliance (as it occurred after he quit).
    {¶71} We turn to the statement in Appellants’ assignment of error claiming the trial
    court erred in failing to find fraud based on an admitted theft and to the argument
    thereunder stating Wilkinson lied to Wallace about “his theft of a gift card out of the
    appellant’s home mailbox which he used for his personal use * * *.” (Apt.Br. 9).
    {¶72} We begin by pointing out the fraud claim in the complaint alleged Wilkinson
    made false representations as to the company “debit card” by saying he would only
    charge company expenses (but then allegedly using it for expenses unrelated to the
    business). The complaint’s introductory fact section alleged Wilkinson “converted” funds
    by “stealing” a “Visa card” from Wallace’s mail. At trial, Wallace’s testimony distinguished
    between this “gift card” (which Wilkinson obtained from her mail while she was in Florida)
    and a Farmer’s Bank debit card attached to the company’s bank account (which Wilkinson
    was authorized to use). And, Wilkinson testified the gift card was Wallace’s personal gift
    card and unrelated to the company. (Tr. 160).
    {¶73} The Farmer’s Bank debit card was issued in the name of “George Wilkinson
    Concrete Creations” for his use after Wilkinson and Wallace went to the bank together to
    open a company bank account before she left for Florida. (Tr. 27-28, 47). Wallace
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 21 –
    deposited $4,100 into the account and complained Wilkinson “drained” it through
    unauthorized expenditures.     She mentioned withdrawals for insurance premiums for
    Wilkinson’s truck, which was used to plow for customers, while claiming the truck should
    be transferred to CCLD. She also mentioned $2,300 in salt purchases, pointing to a large
    amount of salt she had stored in her building and opining the long distance between the
    plowing jobs and building did not justify buying salt near the job sites.
    {¶74} Wallace also testified Wilkinson used the Farmer’s Bank debit card to pay
    for Taco Bell and gasoline, which she “didn’t feel [he] had the authority to do * * *.” (Tr.
    23-24). She conceded it would have been a reasonable business expense to charge
    diesel gas for his truck if he was visiting customers. She said he also purchased some
    unleaded gas and opined this was improper even if he was driving an unleaded gas
    vehicle to visit prospective customers (because the truck was the vehicle related to
    company business). (Tr. 68-69). We note there was testimony indicating Wilkinson
    occasionally transported an employee who lived fairly far from the business (due to issues
    with the employee’s vehicle and driver’s license). (Tr. 192-193). Wilkinson’s wife testified
    she was not happy about the extra time Wilkinson had to spend transporting this
    employee to work, but Wallace testified she wanted this employee to work more than
    Wilkinson allowed.
    {¶75} A reasonable fact-finder in weighing the evidence could find many of the
    charges were valid business expenses. Regardless, Wilkinson’s mere use exceeding
    what Wallace expected would be a business expense is not itself fraud.            Although
    Wilkinson could not recall if Wallace expressly said he was permitted to use his Farmer’s
    Bank debit card for these expenses, he testified there was no company policy or
    instructions defining allowable debit card use. (Tr. 144, 170). Wallace did not testify as
    to a statement Wilkinson made on his use of the debit card. The trial court therefore
    found no testimony on the agreed use of the card. In fact, Appellants’ brief does not
    specify arguments against the trial court’s fraud ruling as applied to the use of this
    particular card. Still, the above review assists in distinguishing the cards and the issues.
    {¶76} The specific argument in Appellants’ brief complains of the “theft” and use
    of a “gift card” from Wallace’s mail. Considering the complaint’s labeling of the act of
    taking the card from her mail as conversion and the failure to specify the “gift card” under
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 22 –
    the fraud claim where the company “debit card” was mentioned, specificity under Civ.R.
    9(B) could be seen as lacking under the circumstance of this case. The trial court’s
    findings did not specifically refer to the gift card. The court rejected the fraud claim as to
    “debit card usage” and generally denied any outstanding claims or motions not specified
    in the entry. If the trial court decided to address and reject the gift card under the fraud
    claim, the observation made by the trial court as to debit card usage would apply to the
    gift card as well: there was no evidence of a representation by Wilkinson as to card
    usage.
    {¶77} At trial, Wilkinson admitted his use of the gift card but said he paid Wallace
    back. (Tr. 145, 160). Wallace’s testimony not only failed to mention any representation
    by Wilkinson as to the gift card, but also failed to refer to any induced reliance. In setting
    forth one sentence on the law applicable to fraud, Appellants acknowledge a false
    representation was required, but they do not then point to a representation regarding the
    gift card. Notably, fraud has different elements than conversion, and Appellants do not
    challenge the conversion decision on appeal.3
    {¶78} There is no indication the court clearly lost its way and created a manifest
    miscarriage of justice on the fraud claim. This assignment of error is overruled.
    INTENTIONAL INTERFERENCE WITH BUSINESS RELATIONS
    {¶79} Appellants’ third assignment of error claims:
    “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO FIND THAT THE APPELLEE
    COMMITTED AN INTENTIONAL INTERFERENCE WITH APPELLANT’S BUSINESS
    RELATIONSHIP WHEN APPELLEE WENT TO WORK FOR A CUSTOMER OF THE
    APPELLANT AFTER DISASSOCIATING HIMSELF FROM APPELLANT’S COMPANY,
    AND IN VIOLATION OF A NON-COMPETITION AGREEMENT.”
    3 An appellant’s brief shall contain “[a]n argument containing the contentions of the appellant with respect
    to each assignment of error presented for review and the reasons in support of the contentions, with
    citations to the authorities, statutes, and parts of the record on which appellant relies.” App.R. 16(A)(7). An
    appellant cannot use a reply brief to assign a new error by the trial court or to raise a new reason to reverse
    the judgment. Oxford Mining Co. LLC v. Ohio Gathering Co. LLC, 7th Dist. Belmont No. 19 BE 0016, 2020-
    Ohio-1363, ¶ 73; Shutway v. Chesapeake Expl. LLC, 
    2019-Ohio-1233
    , 
    134 N.E.3d 721
    , ¶ 77 (7th Dist.).
    Accordingly, we cannot address an additional statement in the reply brief which suggests Wilkinson’s use
    of receipts to pay expenses before depositing them into the company account constituted fraud. In any
    event, the fraud claim in the complaint did not specify this allegation as required by Civ.R. 9(B), and the
    reply does not cite testimony on a representation by Wilkinson.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 23 –
    {¶80} We begin by outlining the breach of contract decision as Appellants suggest
    it supports the argument that the court should have found Wilkinson liable for intentional
    interference with business relations.    The trial court found Wilkinson breached the
    contract by wrongfully dissociating from CCLD and by violating a non-compete clause,
    which prohibited contacting or providing services for CCLD’s customers and disclosing
    the customer list and which lasted two years from dissociation. A few months after leaving
    CCLD, Wilkinson gained employment at Cornerstone, and a few months later, he gained
    employment at G&T. As to G&T, the court found no evidence this was a CCLD customer
    or the job otherwise violated the non-compete clause. As to Cornerstone, however, the
    court found Wilkinson’s employment there was a breach of the non-compete clause as
    Cornerstone was a customer of CCLD.
    {¶81} Then, in rejecting Appellants’ claim for intentional interference with business
    relations, the court observed: “While it’s true Wilkinson did go to work for a customer
    [Cornerstone], there was not enough evidence to show that he actively terminated or
    interfered with any business relationships of [CCLD].” The trial court also said it “could
    not find any credibility” to the assertion that Wilkinson intentionally interfered with
    Appellants’ business relationship with BG or other customers.         (BG was the other
    company who subcontracted snow plowing to CCLD.)
    {¶82} Appellants say they lost all contracts due to Wilkinson dissociating from
    CCLD. They point out some of the lost contracts were with Cornerstone, the company
    Wilkinson went to work for in violation of the non-competition clause. They urge the
    evidence weighs in favor of a conclusion that Wilkinson induced the customers to stop
    using CCLD’s services that winter.
    {¶83} Wilkinson responds by pointing to the judge’s finding of a lack of credible
    evidence on this claim. Wilkinson says there is no evidence he actively and in fact
    induced a third-party with intent to cause the termination of the relationship. Focusing on
    Cornerstone (as Appellants’ argument fails to specifically mention BG), Wilkinson
    suggests his wrongful dissociation and subsequent employment with Cornerstone did not
    constitute intentional interference which caused the termination of relationships with
    CCLD merely because the acts violated the contract.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 24 –
    {¶84} “The torts of interference with business relationships and contract rights
    generally occur when a person, without a privilege to do so, induces or otherwise
    purposely causes a third person not to enter into or continue a business relation with
    another, or not to perform a contract with another.” A&B-Abell Elevator Co. Inc. v.
    Columbus/Central Ohio Bldg. & Constr. Trades Council, 
    73 Ohio St.3d 1
    , 14, 
    651 N.E.2d 1283
     (1995) (applying free speech privileges). The specific cause of action alleged here,
    called tortious (or intentional) interference with business relations (or relationships), is an
    intentional tort.   “Ohio does not recognize a negligent interference with contractual
    relationship claim.” Watson v. Neurology Consultants Inc., 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 91
    C.A. 74 (June 25, 1992) (“there is no duty of ordinary care with respect to damages
    flowing from a third party contract”).’
    {¶85} The elements of tortious interference with business relations can be listed
    as: (1) a business relationship; (2) the tortfeasor’s knowledge thereof; (3) an intentional
    interference causing termination of the relationship; (4) lack of justification; and (5)
    resulting damages. Christopher v. Automotive Fin. Corp., 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 06 MA
    186, 
    2008-Ohio-2972
    , ¶ 39-40 (adding the justification element after listing the other
    elements), applying Fred Siegel Co. L.P.A. v. Arter & Hadden, 
    85 Ohio St.3d 171
    , 176,
    
    707 N.E.2d 853
     (1999) (a tortious interference with contract case listing the elements and
    setting forth the following factors for “determining whether an actor has acted improperly
    in intentionally interfering with a contract or prospective contract of another”: nature and
    proximity of the acts, interests of parties and society, motive, relationship, and fair
    competition).
    {¶86} The intent must be to interfere and thereby cause the resulting failed
    business relationship.     Fred Siegel, 85 Ohio St.3d at 176 (requiring “intentional
    procurement of” the third-party’s termination of the contract or relationship). “It is not
    enough that he intend to perform the act; he must intend to produce the harm.” Haller v.
    Borror Corp., 
    50 Ohio St.3d 10
    , 16, 
    552 N.E.2d 207
     (1990).                Moreover, tortious
    interference does not occur merely because a breach of contract was intentional and the
    breach interfered with other business relationships; independent inducement of a third-
    party is required. Castle Hill Holdings LLC v. Al Hut Inc., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 86442,
    
    2006-Ohio-1353
    , ¶ 85, 88, 91 (an intentional breach of contract is not a tort).
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 25 –
    {¶87} At trial, Wilkinson testified he went to work for Cornerstone a few months
    after his January 13, 2018 dissociation from CCLD. (Tr. 147). He said he never told an
    existing customer to terminate a relationship with CCLD or a prospective customer to
    refrain from hiring CCLD. (Tr. 174-175). He said CCLD previously performed some snow
    plowing as a subcontractor for Cornerstone. (Tr. 165). Wallace testified she anticipated
    additional subcontracts for plowing work with Cornerstone but said this did not occur
    because Wilkinson committed CCLD to various subcontracts through BG. (Tr. 15-16, 94).
    Wallace testified that CCLD lost all contracts within 2 weeks “[b]ecause George quit.” (Tr.
    46, 122). She elsewhere said she lost all contracts except three within 30 days and BG
    canceled all but two of the subcontracts by the end of January. (Tr. 35, 51, 109).
    {¶88} Wallace also suggested BG also cancelled some contracts due to property
    damage during plowing. (Apt.Br. 6, citing Tr. 41). CCLD repaired plow damage to
    property (grass and landscaping pavers) at BG’s request. Wallace believed the damage
    was caused by Wilkinson when he plowed at some unknown time before he quit,
    presenting hearsay that her other driver claimed he did not cause the damage.                If
    Appellants are suggesting the business relations with some BG customers deteriorated
    in part as a result of property damage allegedly caused when Wilkinson was still plowing,
    a fact-finder could recognize that accidental damage can occur during snow plowing and
    can occur without the driver realizing damage was caused. There was no indication the
    damage was intentional. And, a fact-finder need not concur with Wallace’s assumption
    that Wilkinson was the cause of the damage.
    {¶89} As to the loss of all contracts which existed before Wilkinson quit, Wallace
    suggested Wilkinson’s abrupt dissociation caused plowing issues and resulted in
    customers discontinuing to use CCLD’s plowing services. A person’s dissociation from a
    company in violation of a contract which incidentally results in foreseeable issues that
    cause clients to refrain from utilizing the company’s service does not equate to a holding
    that the person who quit intentionally interfered with every business relationship that was
    lost. See, e.g., Digital & Analog Design Corp. v. North Supply Co., 
    44 Ohio St.3d 36
    , 46,
    
    540 N.E.2d 1358
     (1989). Even when a breach of contract interfered with other business
    relations, the plaintiff “is limited to an action for breach of contract and may not recover in
    tort for business interference” unless “the breaching party indicates, by his breach, a
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 26 –
    motive to interfere with the adverse party's business relations rather than an interference
    with business resulting as a mere consequence of such breach.” 
    Id.
    {¶90} The trial court was not required to find Wilkinson’s motive for quitting was
    to cause CCLD to lose customers but could reasonably conclude Wilkinson quit because
    he was exhausted, frustrated, behind in receiving his salary, and out of funds for
    necessary plowing expenses. We also note CCLD had a list of other drivers. The weight
    of the evidence did not require the court to presume the loss of the Cornerstone
    subcontracts was caused by intentional procurement of this harm by Wilkinson because
    he quit and went to work for them in violation of the non-compete clause. He went to
    work for Cornerstone later, after the loss of the initial subcontracts.
    {¶91} As to other testimony that CCLD lost jobs to future customers in her
    neighborhood to Cornerstone, there was no indication Wilkinson knew these were
    customers of CCLD, which is a required element of the tort. Fred Siegel, 85 Ohio St.3d
    at 176; Christopher, 7th Dist. No. 06 MA 186 at ¶ 40. In fact, there is no indication they
    were customers or that Wallace had any relationship at all with them.
    {¶92} On the credibility of Wilkinson’s testimony about not telling customers to
    stop using CCLD’s services, it must be remembered the trier of fact occupies the best
    position from which to judge witness credibility by observing gestures, voice inflections,
    and demeanor. Seasons Coal, 10 Ohio St.3d at 80. In addition, various allegations as
    to the tortious interference with a business relations claim are based on what Appellants
    believe are reasonable inferences, but which belief the trial court did not share. The trial
    court could reasonably discount the theories implied by Wallace’s testimony. There was
    no indication Wilkinson caused a business relations failure by complaining about Wallace
    in texts to his friend. The trier of fact, who occupied the best position from which to weigh
    the evidence, was not required to find he intentionally and actually interfered with CCLD’s
    relationships with its customers as a result of the comments on his personal Facebook
    page wherein he was concerned about the return of his truck; we also note the court
    found he was entitled to his truck. “If the evidence is susceptible of more than one
    construction, the reviewing court is bound to give it that interpretation which is consistent
    with the verdict and judgment, most favorable to sustaining the verdict and judgment.”
    Eastley, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 328
     at ¶ 21, quoting Seasons Coal, 10 Ohio St.3d at 80, fn. 3.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 27 –
    {¶93} “[I]n determining whether the judgment below is manifestly against the
    weight of the evidence, every reasonable intendment and every reasonable presumption
    must be made in favor of the judgment and the finding of facts.” Eastley, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 328
     at ¶ 21, quoting Seasons Coal, 10 Ohio St.3d at 80, fn. 3. The trial court did not
    clearly lose its way in weighing the evidence and assigning credibility on Appellants’
    allegations of intentional interference with business relations. Accordingly, the judgment
    for Wilkinson on this claim was not contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence, and
    this assignment of error is overruled.
    BREACH OF CONTRACT DAMAGES
    {¶94} Both sides contest the amount of the damages awarded for contractual
    breaches, with Appellants saying they were inadequate and Wilkinson saying they were
    speculative and excessive. On this topic, Appellants’ fourth assignment of error alleges:
    “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO AWARD ADEQUATE DAMAGES
    TO REPRESENT THE AMOUNT OF MONEY THE APPELLANT WAS FORCED TO
    LOSE AS A RESULT OF ALL OF APPELLEE’S ACTIONS.”
    {¶95} To the contrary, Wilkinson’s second assignment of error in his cross-appeal
    alleges:
    “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN AWARDING SPECULATIVE DAMAGES TO THE
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT WHERE THE COURT OPINED TWICE THAT IT DID NOT
    ‘HAVE EVIDENCE OF AN EXACT AMOUNT OF COMPENSATORY DAMAGE.’ “
    {¶96} “Money damages awarded in a breach of contract action are designed to
    place the aggrieved party in the same position it would have been in had the contract not
    been violated.” State ex rel. Stacy v. Batavia Local School Dist. Bd. of Edn., 
    105 Ohio St.3d 476
    , 
    2005-Ohio-2974
    , 
    829 N.E.2d 298
    , ¶ 26.            As Appellants recognize, this
    represents their expectation interest and allows the recovery of lost profits.
    {¶97} “Lost profits may be recovered by the plaintiff in a breach of contract action
    if: (1) profits were within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was
    made, (2) the loss of profits is the probable result of the breach of contract, and (3) the
    profits are not remote and speculative and may be shown with reasonable certainty.” City
    of Gahanna v. Eastgate Props. Inc., 
    36 Ohio St.3d 65
    , 68, 
    521 N.E.2d 814
     (1988). Under
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 28 –
    the third prong, “the amount of the lost profits, as well as their existence, must be
    demonstrated with reasonable certainty.” Eastgate Props., 36 Ohio St.3d at 68.
    {¶98} In proving lost profits, the plaintiff must show “(a) what he would have
    received from the performance so prevented” and “(b) what such performance would have
    cost him (or the value to him of relief therefrom).” Digital & Analog Design Corp. v. North
    Supply Co., 
    44 Ohio St.3d 36
    , 40, 
    540 N.E.2d 1358
     (1989). “Unless he proves both of
    those facts, he cannot recover as damages the profits he would have earned from full
    performance of the contract.”     
    Id.
       Still, in some cases, the plaintiff may show the
    performance would not have resulted in any expenses or he was not relieved from
    expenses. 
    Id.
    {¶99} In general, the reviewing court “will not disturb a decision of the trial court
    as to a determination of damages absent an abuse of discretion.” Roberts v. United
    States Fid. & Guar. Co., 
    75 Ohio St.3d 630
    , 634, 
    665 N.E.2d 664
     (1996), citing Blakemore
    v. Blakemore, 
    5 Ohio St.3d 217
    , 219, 
    450 N.E.2d 1140
     (1983). The trial court abuses its
    discretion if the decision is unreasonable, arbitrary, or unconscionable. Blakemore, 5
    Ohio St.3d at 219. The Supreme Court has cautioned, however, that speculative
    evidence, including evidence which does not meet the lost profit thresholds demonstrating
    lost receipts and costs saved, would be considered insufficient. Digital & Analog, 44 Ohio
    St.3d at 40.
    {¶100} The parties discuss the damages for both breaches together. However,
    the trial court separated the discussion on the two breaches, both when ruling on liability
    for each breach and when awarding damages of $20,000 for the non-compete clause
    breach and $15,000 for the dissociation clause breach. Each breach occurred at different
    times, and the evidence as to damages for each breach was distinct.
    $15,000 for Breach of Dissociation Clause
    {¶101} The court found Wilkinson intentionally resigned without advance notice
    while the company was active and breached the dissociation clause in Section 13.04 of
    the Operating Agreement, which provided for liability for any damages resulting from
    wrongful dissociation. This holding is not challenged by Wilkinson on appeal; nor does
    he contest the initial premise that damages could be recovered for his quitting and the
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 29 –
    loss of his labor (if evidence supported the loss and amount). In awarding $15,000 in
    damages for breach of the dissociation clause, the trial court said:
    The damages for this breach are not clear cut. Wallace testified at trial that
    she had to hire a sub-contractor for an approximate total of $43,000, to
    perform the work that Wilkinson would have performed if he had not
    disassociated.   However, there was no reliable testimony given as to
    CCL[D]’s    other   expenses     related   to   Wilkinson’s     disassociation.
    Furthermore, there was no testimony or evidence given to show CCL[D]’s
    income during the time that the third-party subcontractor performed
    Wilkinson’s duties. While the Court does not have evidence of an exact
    amount of compensatory damages, the Court is convinced that Plaintiffs did
    suffer compensatory damages as a result of the breach.
    (Elsewhere, the judgment used the contractual term “dissociate”.)
    {¶102} Appellants say they established lost profits with reasonable certainty as
    CCLD lost its customers in the two weeks after Wilkinson quit.            They claim these
    customers would have provided them with profits of over $150,000. They point to the
    cost of DD’s labor to replace the labor Wilkinson was to provide. They also suggest they
    were entitled to the cost of supplies (such as salt), equipment (such as a skid loader and
    the converted plow), and all the money Wallace spent financing the company.
    {¶103} The latter argument appears to be an attempt at seeking reimbursement
    for outlays allegedly made in anticipation of the breaching party’s performance under the
    contract (by not quitting). “[R]eliance damages reimburse the non-breaching party for
    expenditures made in performing the contract” and put the party in the position they were
    in before the contact was made. Averback v. Montrose Ford Inc., 9th Dist. No. 28875,
    
    2019-Ohio-373
    , 
    120 N.E.3d 125
    , ¶ 40. When the plaintiff is unable to prove expectation
    damages through lost profits, she can avoid enforcement of the contract and seek
    reliance damages. 
    Id.,
     citing Alternatives Unlimited-Special Inc. v. Ohio Dept. of Edn.,
    10th Dist. Franklin No. 12AP-647, 
    2013-Ohio-3890
    , ¶ 29 (explaining the fundamental
    difference in expectation damages, which affirm the existence of the contract and seek
    the benefit of the bargain, and reliance damages, which denies the contract).
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 30 –
    {¶104} However, reliance damages are an alternative theory of recovery to lost
    profits; not an additional right. Furthermore, reliance on Wilkinson never quitting was not
    specified.   Wallace allowed the third member to dissociate notwithstanding various
    outlays. As Wilkinson points out: Wallace’s expenditures were made in forming and
    running the company, items were not sold at loss, and the company still exists. For
    instance, Wallace failed to convincingly indicate purchased items were not useful in the
    business in order to show the detriment. There was no indication the entire loss (on a
    profit and loss statement for the year) was attributable to Wilkinson quitting. In any case,
    Appellants’ contractual recovery theory sought to enforce the contract and receive lost
    profits (due to lost customers) with consideration of the cost for effecting cover for a
    member’s labor for a reasonable time. And, the brief cites no law on reliance principles;
    rather, it cites to the standard principles of expectation, benefit of the bargain, or lost profit
    in addressing the right to damages.
    {¶105} As to the lost profits claim in Appellants’ brief, stating Wallace testified to
    $150,000 in lost profits from the loss of the customers they were plowing for at the time
    Wilkinson quit, we first point out her actual testimony was: “That winter would have
    probably profited around a hundred to a hundred fifty thousand dollars.” (Tr. 52). She
    said the figure was based on one month where they received $11,000. (Tr. 51). On
    questioning by the court, she later said she came up with the figure by taking the $30 per
    hour rate that CCLD charges at 40 hours per week, suggesting this should keep being
    tallied through the judgment. (Tr. 109). The trial court was not required to find her
    testimony realistic or her continuing time period reasonable under the circumstances, and
    the measure of damages is governed by law rather than a plaintiff’s demand at trial.
    {¶106} A plaintiff in a breach of contract action cannot just demand amounts
    because they seem fair to that party. For instance, Wallace asked for an additional
    $35,000 as punishment for quitting because she thought it was “fair” in addition to the
    other lost profits she tried to claim. (Tr. 127). As Wilkinson points out, there was no
    support for this demand. The contract did not provide for liquidated damages. Similarly,
    she cannot demand $100,000 because she thinks it is fair based on her estimate this
    would have been the revenue generated from customers lost as a result of Wilkinson’s
    dissociation.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 31 –
    {¶107} Although Wallace used the word profit, the estimated figure was actually
    the revenue as it did not account for various expenses the company would have
    encountered in generating the estimated figure had the customers not been lost. We note
    a company does not necessarily make profit because it has a revenue stream, especially
    a brand new company learning whether there are sufficient funds allocated to pay
    expenses, whether the expenses can be trimmed in places, whether the company could
    be run while one of its two members spends the winter in Florida, and whether the laboring
    member can survive with reduced and then late (or even eliminated) salary payments.
    {¶108} A plaintiff cannot simply demand what she would have received but must
    also show “what such performance would have cost him (or the value to him of relief
    therefrom).” Digital & Analog, 44 Ohio St.3d at 40. “Unless he proves both of those facts,
    he cannot recover as damages the profits he would have earned from full performance of
    the contract.” Id. “Evidence which does not meet these thresholds must be considered
    speculative and an insufficient basis for an award of damages.” Id.
    {¶109} Contrary to Wilkinson’s argument, however, Wallace’s testimony provided
    some evidence of past direct expenses for the lost contracts, such as salt and fuel. It was
    just a sampling of charges and would be dependent on snowfall. Wallace also said she
    relied on a one-month statement in which Wilkinson’s wife set forth amounts for revenue
    and expenses, showing a balance of over $5,000 for the month. Additionally, there was
    testimony on the cost of Wilkinson’s labor and the cost of replacement labor.
    {¶110} Wallace essentially asked the court to assume all lost customers were a
    result of Wilkinson’s dissociation. She said they had back-up plowers, and she paid one
    of them (DD) $44,000.      The court was convinced she suffered damages from his
    dissociation and thus found at least some of the lost customers were caused by
    Wilkinson’s January 13, 2018 breach of contact.        Nevertheless, her testimony also
    indicated they obtained replacement customers (considering these payments for labor
    and her statement that DD was able to “make up” some of the loss). (Tr. 127). The trial
    court pointed out the issue with Wallace failing to disclose the income from these
    customers. Notably, the testimony indicated the company could not have handled any
    additional customers before Wilkinson quit.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 32 –
    {¶111} The trial court could reasonably find, with the exception of any reasonable
    amounts paid to DD to provide services as Wilkinson’s substitute for a reasonable time,
    “there was no reliable testimony” on expenses or on income after Wilkinson left.
    Wilkinson’s cross-appeal points to this observation and to the trial court’s statements that
    damages for the dissociation claim were “not clear cut” and the record lacked evidence
    “of an exact amount of compensatory damages.” Wilkinson concludes this shows the
    $15,000 damage award was based on speculation. However, these observations by the
    trial court referred to Wallace’s total amount requested (lost revenue plus other amounts
    she opined were fair); the court was explaining why it did not adopt the amounts scattered
    about Wallace’s testimony. Although the damages must be shown with reasonable
    certainty, exact mathematical precision is not required.
    {¶112} Although the trial court noted the lack of evidence on projected profit
    (based on past profit) versus actual profit after the breach, it is reasonable to recognize
    that Wallace essentially testified they did not make more money after Wilkinson quit.
    Even rejecting Wallace’s suggestion of decreased customers and assuming the revenue
    and expenses stayed the same, there was an additional cost flowing from Wilkinson’s
    breach. The cost of cover in some circumstances is considered incidental damage which
    is added to the revenue in the lost profits formula before subtracting costs; or, it can be
    seen as an expense in generating the replacement profit. See generally Top Notch
    Excavating L.L.C. v. Peterman, 6th Dist. Erie No. E-11-073, 
    2012-Ohio-5266
    , ¶ 12. Either
    way, the court could consider this reduction in receipts or additional loss due to this
    expense.
    {¶113} Appellants’ brief emphasizes the $44,000 paid to DD to cover Wilkinson’s
    labor after he wrongfully dissociated. (Tr. 125). The trial court awarded $15,000 for
    compensatory damages for the wrongful dissociation breach. Appellants suggest they
    were entitled to the full amount of the cost to replace the labor Wilkinson was to “donate.”
    However, multiple reasonable considerations would support the trial court exercising its
    discretion as trier of fact in rejecting this assertion.
    {¶114} Wallace testified DD provided some of the services prior to Wilkinson’s
    dissociation. (Tr. 19-20). Moreover, Wallace suggested she was stuck with DD and his
    rates due to an agreement DD said he entered with CCLD. (Tr. 20, 75). She also
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 33 –
    indicated a belief DD’s services were not worth this much, but she had no choice. (Tr.
    75, 77). Yet: she complained Wilkinson did not use two other people instead of DD; she
    never obtained evidence of an agreement; and she presented only alleged hearsay from
    DD as to the agreement. The trial court could also consider recovery for the replacement
    was only warranted for a reasonable time period after dissociation under the totality of the
    circumstances.
    {¶115} Furthermore, Appellants’ use of the word “donate” ignores the evidence of
    what Wilkinson’s performance would have cost Appellants.             In another part of the
    judgment entry, the trial court recognized Wallace’s agreement to pay Wilkinson $1,000
    per week for labor which was reduced to $750 per week in December 2017. At trial,
    Wallace specifically testified that although the written contract did not mention a salary
    for Wilkinson, she “felt he needed something” for his labor. She identified $1,000 per
    week in payments she made to him for his labor and said this was later reduced to $750
    per week “[b]ecause we had discussed after uh…the contract that I could take it down to
    seven-fifty, he was fine with that but that” and identified an example of “12-17, another
    two weeks of pay. Fifteen hundred.”        (Tr. 51). She later reiterated, “at first it was a
    thousand dollars a week, that [the member whom she allowed to dissociate], George
    [Wilkinson] and I, all decided on for the company. Then um...I asked him if it was alright,
    and this was after [the other member] left, if it was alright, if I could cut it down to seven-
    fifty a week. [Wilkinson] said, yes, it was.” (Tr. 102). This testimony indicated the salary
    was pursuant to an agreement as she twice said she asked his permission to lower the
    amount. In any case, she was paying Wilkinson for his labor.
    {¶116} Contrary to Wilkinson’s contention, the award for the dissociation breach
    of contract allegation was not based on legally insufficient evidence of damages or on
    mere speculation, and there is no indication the court abused its discretion in weighing
    the evidence as $15,000 was not an excessive amount under the totality of the
    circumstances. Contrary to Appellants’ opposing position, the award was not inadequate
    as the trial court could weigh the evidence and find $15,000 was the most it could award
    with reasonable certainty.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 34 –
    $20,000 for Breach of Non-Compete Clause
    {¶117} The court found Wilkinson breached the non-compete clause in Section
    19.07 of the Operating Agreement, wherein it was promised that for two years after
    dissociation, a member “will not contact or provide services for Company’s customers
    during this non-compete period through any form of communication nor disclose
    Company’s customer list to any person or entity.” Wilkinson acknowledged he was the
    one who requested the clause in the contract.        The court found the clause was
    reasonable, noting it was limited and only applied to existing customers. The court said
    Cornerstone was a customer and Wilkinson breached this clause by going to work for
    Cornerstone within the two-year period. (The court found no breach from his subsequent
    employment with G&T as there was no testimony this work involved customers of CCLD.)
    {¶118} In discussing the rationale on the amount of damages awarded for breach
    of the non-compete clause, the court stated:
    The damages presented at trial concerning this breach were purely
    speculative.    Plaintiff contends she lost two contracts to Cornerstone
    Landscaping, however there was no proof given to show this. While the
    court does not have evidence of an exact amount of compensatory
    damages, the court is convinced that Plaintiffs did suffer compensatory
    damages as a result of the breach.
    From this, the court awarded $20,000 as compensatory damages for this breach.
    {¶119} Appellants generally say they proved lost profits with reasonable certainty
    and point out that an expert was not required. In claiming the $20,000 damage award for
    breach of the non-compete clause was inadequate to account for lost profits, Appellants’
    brief says Wallace testified the company lost two jobs to Cornerstone which exceeded
    $100,000. In support, they cite a range of ten pages of the transcript during Wallace’s
    cross-examination, but there was no testimony on Cornerstone in that section.
    {¶120} Wilkinson’s cross-appeal argues the figures presented by Wallace at trial
    on lost profits were unexplained, conclusory, and not proven to the requisite degree of
    reasonable certainty. He says only the right to nominal damages was established,
    pointing out the trial court called the evidence on damages for breach of the non-compete
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 35 –
    clause “purely speculative.” He concludes the court should not have just estimated
    $20,000 in damages for this claim.
    {¶121} Wallace testified that after Wilkinson started working at Cornerstone, this
    company advertised its services in a publication specific to the Lake Mohawk community
    where she and Wilkinson lived; she said in the six years she lived at the lake, Cornerstone
    had never before advertised there.       (Tr. 30).   Wallace thereafter saw Cornerstone
    performing work for customers at the lake by building retaining walls in the $10,000 to
    $60,000 range and “possibly outside patios with kitchens. Um…high dollar stuff.” She
    claimed, “There was one that I would have probably bid about a hundred and twenty
    thousand for.” (Tr. 31).
    {¶122} “It has been consistently held in Ohio that in a breach of a covenant not to
    compete, the usual measure of damages is lost profits.” Briggs v. GLA Water Mgt., 6th
    Dist. Wood No. WD-12-062, 
    2014-Ohio-1551
    , ¶ 30. See also Yardmaster Inc. v. Orris,
    11th Dist. Lake No. 9-305 (June 29, 1984). And, the measure of damages Appellants
    sought on this contract claim was lost profits. As noted, lost profits for breach of contract
    require a showing that profits were within the parties’ contemplation when the contract
    was made, the loss of profits was the probable result of the breach, and the lost profits
    were not remote or speculative but shown with reasonable certainty. Eastgate Props., 36
    Ohio St.3d at 68.
    {¶123} The trial court rejected the contention CCLD “lost two contracts to
    Cornerstone.” The trial court was entitled to find Wallace’s testimony lacked credibility.
    The trial court judge was in the best position to weigh the evidence and judge Wallace’s
    credibility as she testified at the bench trial. See Seasons Coal, 10 Ohio St.3d at 80 (first-
    hand observation of gestures, voice inflections, and demeanor). The court may have
    found Wallace’s claim was unrealistic as to “high dollar” jobs, considering CCLD was a
    new business and there was no evidence its members or employees had prior experience
    in major projects including those involving “possibly outside patios with kitchens.”
    {¶124} Still, the court said it was “convinced” Wilkinson’s employment at
    Cornerstone caused some damages. At the same time, the trial court described the
    evidence on the damages for breach of the non-compete clause as “purely speculative.”
    As Wilkinson observes, it is not just the existence of lost profits that must be established
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 36 –
    with reasonable certainty: “the amount of the lost profits, as well as their existence, must
    be demonstrated with reasonable certainty.” (Emphasis added.) Eastgate Props., 36
    Ohio St.3d at 68 (therefore, the amount of lost profits cannot be speculative).
    {¶125} Even as to more realistic retaining wall jobs, Wallace did not testify to the
    number of retaining wall projects she believed CCLD lost due to Cornerstone’s
    competition. She believed she lost jobs to Cornerstone, generally saying she saw work
    being performed at Lake Mohawk without providing specific locations for these projects.
    Such generality would preclude the defense from providing rebuttal evidence (for
    instance, to show these were Cornerstone’s prior customers). She presumed she could
    have obtained the jobs at the lake just because she lived at the lake. Furthermore,
    Wallace gave a large range of estimates on what she would have bid. Her testimony
    sounded unstudied. And, as Wilkinson points out, lost profits must be based on net profit;
    reasonably anticipated costs of performing must be deducted from anticipated revenue.
    Wallace did not mention expenses for the projects she saw Cornerstone completing. As
    explained supra, the amount a contractor would have bid on a job or would have received
    as payment from the customer does not equate to lost profits, i.e., gross revenue is not
    profit.
    {¶126} If the evidence on the amount of lost profit damages is considered
    speculative by the trial court, the trial court should not just come up with an estimated
    amount lower than a plaintiff seeks because it is convinced lost profits were incurred even
    though the plaintiff did not sufficiently establish various aspects relevant to the amount of
    loss profits. See Digital & Analog, 44 Ohio St.3d at 40; Eastgate Props., 36 Ohio St.3d
    at 68. Without this data, economic loss for breach of this clause could not be calculated
    with reasonable certainty. The Supreme Court has cautioned that a plaintiff seeking lost
    profits must show two items: (1) she must show what she would have received if she did
    not lose the job and (2) she must show what the job would have cost her. Digital & Analog,
    44 Ohio St.3d at 40. “Unless [the plaintiff] proves both of those facts, [s]he cannot recover
    as damages the profits [s]he would have earned from full performance of the contract.”
    Id. “Evidence which does not meet these thresholds must be considered speculative and
    an insufficient basis for an award of damages.” Id. As can be seen, the failure to satisfy
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 37 –
    these elements is an issue of sufficiency.4 We cannot avoid the lack of data and uphold
    the trial court’s judgment.
    {¶127} Although the weighing of the evidence was questionable, we need not
    reach the topic of weight because the trial court specifically said the damages presented
    at trial on this breach were purely speculative and the evidence was insufficient as the
    anticipated revenue was not itemized or certain and the cost to perform was not provided.
    Since the trial court entered a damage award based on insufficient evidence of the
    elements of lost profits, Wilkinson correctly argues the trial court’s decision to award
    $20,000 for breach of non-compete clause was based on speculation (and therefore an
    unreasonable and arbitrary abuse of discretion).
    {¶128} Where a breach of contract was proven at trial, but the evidence fails to
    sufficiently establish actual damages or fails to sufficiently establish the extent of the
    plaintiff’s loss, the court may award nominal damages. DeCastro v. Wellston Cty. Sch.
    Dist. Bd. of Edn., 
    94 Ohio St.3d 197
    , 199, 
    761 N.E.2d 612
     (2002). Likewise, where the
    plaintiff alleges lost profits as a result of a non-compete clause violation but the amount
    of profits lost was not demonstrated due to the lack of proof on the elements set forth by
    the Ohio Supreme Court, then a small sum can be awarded as nominal damages. See
    id. at 199, quoting 3 Restatement of the Law 2d, Contracts, Section 346 (1981). Of
    course, $20,000 is not nominal damages.5
    {¶129} In sum, Appellants’ fourth assignment of error on inadequate damages is
    overruled, while Wilkinson’s second assignment of error in his cross-appeal has merit in
    part.   The $20,000 damage award for breach of the non-compete clause requires
    reversal, but we will remand for the trial court to issue a nominal damage award.
    CONVERSION
    {¶130} Wilkinson’s first assignment of error set forth in his cross-appeal alleges:
    4 A sufficiency challenge is a question of law reviewed de novo. Eastley, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 328
     at ¶ 11,
    quoting Thompkins, 78 Ohio St.3d at 386. As in criminal cases, civil cases also utilize the distinct concepts
    of sufficiency of the evidence and weight of the evidence. Id. at ¶ 23.
    5Nominal damages are often $10 or $100, with amounts as high as $300 being upheld in past Ohio cases.
    See Cambridge Co. v. Telsat Inc., 9th Dist. Summit No. 23935, 
    2008-Ohio-1056
    , ¶ 10 (approving $300 in
    nominal damages); Bunte v. Talbott, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 76AP-300 (Sep. 14, 1976) (reducing a $500
    award to $300 in nominal damages). See also N.J. Rev.Stat. § 2A:15-5.10 (statutorily defining nominal
    damages as those “that are not designed to compensate a plaintiff and are less than $500”).
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 38 –
    “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT DEFENDANT HAD
    CONVERTED A SNOW PLOW BELONGING TO THE PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS.”
    {¶131} “[C]onversion is the wrongful exercise of dominion over property to the
    exclusion of the rights of the owner, or withholding it from his possession under a claim
    inconsistent with his rights.” State ex rel. Toma v. Corrigan, 
    92 Ohio St.3d 589
    , 592, 
    752 N.E.2d 281
     (2001), quoting Joyce v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    49 Ohio St.3d 93
    , 96, 
    551 N.E.2d 172
     (1990). The parties agree that if a defendant came into possession of the property
    lawfully and thus the allegation is unlawful retention, the defendant must have refused to
    deliver the property upon the rightful owner’s demand for the return of the property.
    Washington v. JP Morgan Chase Bank N.A., 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 17 MA 0115, 2018-
    Ohio-986, ¶ 21.
    {¶132} The demand and refusal elements change an otherwise lawful possession
    into an unlawful conversion.      
    Id.
       Where the defendant’s initial possession was
    permissible, demand and refusal establish the act of exclusion by the dominion exercised
    or the act of withholding possession inconsistent with the owner’s claim.
    {¶133} The trial court found all items of property rightfully owned by CCLD or
    Wallace were returned by Wilkinson except a snow plow he still possessed at the time of
    trial. The court concluded Wilkinson’s failure to return the plow constituted conversion.
    {¶134} Wilkinson states the trial court’s decision was against the manifest weight
    of the evidence. He says it was undisputed the plow came into his possession lawfully
    and claims there was no evidence he refused to return the snow plow. He recognizes
    there was testimony on a demand: the sheriff went to Wilkinson’s house and retrieved
    some items, but Wilkinson said it was too wet to move the plow from his back yard. (Tr.
    25). Wilkinson claims this was not a refusal and a subsequent demand was required. He
    believes two non-binding cases support his argument.
    {¶135} In one case, a chattel owner sued a metal recycler in conversion after the
    owner’s employees stole metal and sold it to the recycler.        The trial court granted
    summary judgment where the metal lawfully came into the recycler’s possession, the
    owner admitted no demand was made on the recycler, and no refusal therefore occurred.
    On appeal, the owner claimed a demand would have been futile. The Third District
    concluded there was no conversion without a demand and refusal. Semco Inc. v. Sims
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 39 –
    Bros., 3d Dist. Marion No. 9-12-62, 
    2013-Ohio-4109
    , ¶ 36. The case is not analogous as
    it was based on a lack of demand, but there was a demand in the case at bar.
    {¶136} Wilkinson also says his case is analogous to a Tenth District case where
    the plaintiff demanded the landlord return a tenant’s phone system (and showed him a
    copy of a judgment ordering the tenant to return the system). The appellate court held
    the landlord had no dominion over the items in the leased space and was not withholding
    possession of the plaintiff’s items before the landlord evicted the tenant. Ohio Telephone
    Equip. & Sales Inc. v. Hadler Realty Co., 
    24 Ohio App.3d 91
    , 93, 
    493 N.E.2d 289
     (10th
    Dist.1985). Demands to a person at a time when he had no dominion or possession were
    ineffective, and thus, a new demand was required after he later gained dominion or
    possession. Id. at 94. Dissimilarly, Wilkinson did not lack dominion or possession at the
    time of the demand when the item was in his own backyard.
    {¶137} Contrary to a suggestion in Wilkinson’s brief, the issue in Ohio Telephone
    was not about disputed ownership of items but was about the fact the landlord had no
    right to enter a tenant’s leased space at the time of the plaintiff’s demands. Wilkinson
    does not contest the court’s finding on Appellants’ ownership of the plow but suggests a
    prior dispute on ownership was the motive behind his earlier failure to return it. Yet, there
    was no evidence showing he was contesting ownership at the time of the demand; such
    a defense was not raised at trial. In addition, conversion requires intent to exercise
    dominion over or withhold possession of the property but does not require intent to
    interfere with known rights; a defendant can be liable for conversion even if acting under
    a misapprehension of rights. Gevedon v. Decker, 2d Dist. Clark No. 2020-CA-21, 2021-
    Ohio-77, ¶ 30; Manshadi v. Bleggi, 
    2019-Ohio-1228
    , 
    134 N.E.3d 695
    , ¶ 37 (7th Dist.) (lack
    of motive or claim of mistake will not defeat a claim of conversion); DeLorean Cadillac
    Inc. v. Weaver, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 71827 (Oct. 2, 1997).
    {¶138} Next, it is recognized the appellate court in Ohio Telephone made a
    statement about the lack of a duty to affirmatively act to deliver the property. Yet, this
    direct holding was made when discussing the arguments about the landlord’s duty before
    the eviction, when the court found the landlord had no duty to evict the tenant earlier just
    because a chattel owner wanted items from inside the leased space. Ohio Telephone,
    24 Ohio App.3d at 93. After observing a new demand was required after the eviction and
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 40 –
    no demand occurred, the Tenth District did observe:           “Even with a new demand,
    defendant was, at the most, only required to provide plaintiff with the opportunity to enter
    the office and remove the equipment itself.” Id. at 94.
    {¶139} However, this was dicta as the court already found no effective demand
    occurred. The statement was also made contemporaneously with the court’s observation
    that the plaintiff installed the phone system in its customer office. The defendant-landlord
    in that case had no relation to the equipment’s arrival at his realty, unlike the snow plow
    in Wilkinson’s own yard. We also note after the landlord in Ohio Telephone gained
    possession of the leased space through eviction and even though no demand was then
    made, the landlord made it known to the plaintiff the phones were available, but the
    plaintiff did not respond. Id. at 92 (then, six months after retaking control of the leased
    space, he placed the phones in storage). Lastly, the Tenth District case is non-binding.
    {¶140} CCLD and Wallace emphasize Wilkinson’s own argument saying there
    must be evidence the plaintiff made a demand and “the defendant refused to deliver the
    property to the plaintiff” (quoting from Wilkinson’s brief). They say Wilkinson has therefore
    admitted it is not the owner’s duty to enter the defendant’s real estate to retrieve the
    demanded chattel but is the defendant’s duty to deliver the property to the owner. And,
    they sent a person to his property to demand the plow only to be turned away by an
    assertion of wet grass.
    {¶141} Wilkinson’s reply brief claims Appellants’ response brief failed to address
    his argument that he was not refusing when the Sheriff came but was merely voicing an
    “impossibility.” However, Wilkinson’s initial brief did not specify an impossibility theory or
    cite the law stating a subsequent demand is required where a claimed condition makes
    return impracticable at the very moment of the demand.
    {¶142} A defendant’s claim on a wet yard is not the same as a landlord’s claim he
    is not legally permitted to enter a tenant’s leased space and remove items until after a
    lawful eviction. Unlike in Ohio Telephone, where the demand was ineffective due to the
    lack of dominion or possession at the time of demand, Wilkinson had dominion or
    possession at the time of the demand. The demand was therefore effective. In other
    words, a plaintiff’s demand is not ineffective or premature because the defendant finds a
    reason why return should be delayed. Accordingly, no subsequent demand was required.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 41 –
    {¶143} As to proof on Wilkinson’s refusal to return the property, the testimony
    showed he did not return it when the sheriff came to request its return during plow season
    and never returned it thereafter. A statement on a wet yard did not per se mean the return
    was impossible. Moreover, even where a qualified privilege allowing a delayed return is
    alleged, the need for delay must be asserted in good faith and under circumstances where
    it was reasonable to refuse at the moment because the item was inaccessible; plus, the
    defendant becomes liable after he has had a reasonable opportunity to obtain the chattel
    for delivery. Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts, Section 238, Comments a-c, and Section
    241 (1965). Wilkinson’s good faith at the moment of initial refusal based on a wet yard
    need not be presumed, and it was rational to conclude his “reasonable opportunity” to
    access the plow had passed. At the trial more than two years after the events, Wilkinson
    testified he still had the plow. (Tr. 143).
    {¶144} Finally, circumstantial evidence can be considered by the fact-finder in
    addition to the direct evidence. State v. Treesh, 
    90 Ohio St.3d 460
    , 485, 
    739 N.E.2d 749
    (2001) (circumstantial evidence has the same probative value as direct evidence). The
    trier of fact can make reasonable inferences one way or the other as it weighs the
    evidence, and there is no indication the trial court clearly lost its way in this case. See
    generally Eastley, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 328
     at ¶ 20. Under all of the circumstances existing in
    this case, the trial court’s decision on the conversion claim as to the snow plow was not
    against the manifest weight of the evidence. This assignment of error is overruled.
    CONVERSION DAMAGES
    {¶145} Wilkinson’s final assignment of error presented in his cross-appeal
    contends:
    “THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY AWARDING THE REPLACEMENT VALUE OF
    AN ITEM RATHER THAN THE VALUE OF THE ITEM THAT WAS JUDGED TO BE
    CONVERTED.”
    {¶146} The trial court awarded $13,948.50 in damages for conversion of the snow
    plow after stating, “This represents the only evidence offered in trial concerning the value
    of a like snow plow.” Wilkinson points out this was the value of the new plow Wallace
    purchased to replace the one he retained. He points out the legal test for conversion
    damages is based on the value of the retained plow at the time of conversion and does
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 42 –
    not call for the value of replacement with a new plow. In support, he says Wallace’s
    testimony did not indicate the converted plow was new. He alternatively says that even
    if it was newly purchased after the business formed in October 2017, it was used for
    plowing that winter and would have depreciated by mid-January 2018.
    {¶147} Appellants’ response brief notes: the court applied the test for “the value
    of a like snow plow”; this happened to correspond to the value of the new, replacement
    plow under the circumstances of this case; and Wilkinson did not respond with evidence
    showing depreciation would have decreased the value of a new plow in the short period
    of use. The response also cites law stating: if market value cannot be obtained, the court
    can apply a flexible standard which considers factors including replacement cost, original
    cost, salvage value, and value to the owner. Westfield Ins. Group v. Silco Fire & Sec.,
    5th Dist. Stark No. 2018CA00122, 
    2019-Ohio-2779
    , ¶ 64.
    {¶148} “[T]he general rule for the measure of damages is the value of the property
    at the time of the conversion.” Erie R. Co. v. Steinberg, 
    94 Ohio St. 189
    , 
    113 N.E. 814
    (1916), syllabus. See also R.G. Eng. & Mfg. v. Rance, 7th Dist. Columbiana No. 01-CO-
    12, 
    2002-Ohio-5218
    , ¶ 89 (the measure of damages in a conversion action is the value
    of the converted property at the time it was converted). “The rule that the market value
    is the measure of damages for the wrongful conversion of personal property is
    subordinate to the fundamental rule that the owner must be fully compensated.” Bishop
    v. East Ohio Gas Co., 
    143 Ohio St. 541
    , 546, 
    56 N.E.2d 164
    , 166 (1944). The owner of
    the chattel can provide an opinion on the value, and an expert is not required. 
    Id.
    {¶149} The cited exception to the general rule is a “more elastic standard” called
    the “value to the owner” standard, and it applies “in exceptional circumstances” if the
    “market value cannot be feasibly obtained.” Bishop, 
    143 Ohio St. at 546
    . See also Erie
    R. Co., 
    94 Ohio St. 189
     at syllabus (“where the property converted by the defendant to its
    use consists of articles for personal use, which have been used by the owner, and
    therefore have little or no market value, the measure of damages is the reasonable value
    to the owner at the time of conversion”).
    {¶150} Wilkinson points to one page in the transcript and says Wallace identified
    an invoice for a snow plow showing she paid $13,948.50 for a replacement plow. (Tr.
    40). However, there was additional relevant testimony. The company was formed on
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 43 –
    October 11, 2017. The testimony from Wallace indicated she subsequently paid to “put
    a new plow outfit on [Wilkinson’s] truck, that was supposed to be uh…turned over to the
    company.” (Tr. 23, 26). She testified she paid $12,000 for the plow (and approximately
    $12,000 for the salt box). (Tr. 23). She said the plow was at Wilkinson’s house and was
    not returned after the sheriff went there to demand it. (Tr. 25). Wilkinson acknowledged
    the plow was still in his possession at the time of trial. (Tr. 143). Wallace even presented
    a photograph of Wilkinson’s truck and testified that it showed the “brand new plow and
    salt box on it.” (Tr. 49-50). Accordingly, there was evidence showing the plow he
    converted was new and had just been purchased.
    {¶151} Contrary to Wilkinson’s alternative suggestion, a court need not refuse to
    award damages where a plaintiff does not mention depreciation on a plow that was
    purchased mere weeks before its conversion. Wilkinson could have presented testimony
    asserting depreciation of the new plow if he believed its value decreased because it was
    used intermittently for approximately two months. “In the absence of evidence indicating
    depreciation of the property, we cannot conclude that the trial court was precluded from
    making a reasonable inference that the value of the property, at the time of conversion,
    remained unchanged.” See, e.g., Richmond v. Gerard, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 95APE06-
    738 (Mar. 19, 1996) (the trial court can adopt the plaintiff’s value without speculating on
    depreciation), quoting Sullivan v. Morgan, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 93AP-747 (Mar. 24,
    1994) (rejecting a conversion defendant’s argument that the court cannot award the
    plaintiff the price she paid for the item six years earlier).
    {¶152} The trial court had evidence of the value of the actual converted item when
    it was purchased several weeks before the time of conversion. A fact-finder’s decision
    adopting this value for conversion damages would not have been unreasonable just
    because a plaintiff did not mention depreciation at trial.
    {¶153} However, the court failed to notice Wallace’s specific testimony declaring
    she paid $12,000 for the plow the court found Wilkinson converted. She paid more for
    the replacement plow than for the one converted even though only weeks had passed.
    Contrary to the position in the response brief seeking to uphold the trial court’s damage
    award, there were no circumstances justifying the use of a value which was more than
    the value paid for the item; and, this was not the trial court’s stated position. The trial
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    – 44 –
    court mistakenly believed there was no evidence besides the price Wilkinson paid for the
    replacement plow, failing to notice she specifically admitted the value of the converted
    plow was almost $2,000 less than the replacement plow.
    {¶154} Wilkinson’s conversion damages argument has merit in part; only in part
    because there was testimony indicating the converted plow was new and because the
    lack of evidence on depreciation did not preclude the court from using the value of the
    plow when it was purchased. Using the trial court’s own reasoning, the damage award
    for conversion is decreased from $13,948.50 to $12,000, as this was the evidence
    presented by Wallace on the value of this plow several weeks before the conversion when
    it was purchased new.
    CONCLUSION
    {¶155} For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s decisions on liability are
    affirmed, and the $15,000 damage award for breach of contract by wrongful dissociation
    is affirmed. But, the $20,000 damage award for breach of the non-compete clause is
    reversed, and the case is remanded for the issuance of a nominal damage award. The
    damage award for conversion is reversed and reduced to $12,000.
    Donofrio, P.J., concurs.
    D’Apolito, J., concurs.
    Case No. 20 CA 0946
    [Cite as Concrete Creations & Landscape Design L.L.C. v. Wilkinson, 
    2021-Ohio-2508
    .]
    For the reasons stated in the Opinion rendered herein, the final judgment and order
    of this Court is that the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Carroll County, Ohio,
    is affirmed in part and reversed in part. We hereby remand this matter to the trial court
    for the issuance of a nominal damage award for breach of non-compete clause. The
    damage award for conversion is reversed and reduced to $12,000 according to law and
    consistent with this Court’s Opinion. Costs to be taxed against the Appellee.
    A certified copy of this opinion and judgment entry shall constitute the mandate in
    this case pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure. It is ordered that a
    certified copy be sent by the clerk to the trial court to carry this judgment into execution.
    NOTICE TO COUNSEL
    This document constitutes a final judgment entry.