Yousef v. Yousef , 2019 Ohio 3656 ( 2019 )


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  • [Cite as Yousef v. Yousef, 2019-Ohio-3656.]
    COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    MAAN YOUSEF,                                        :
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                :
    No. 107453
    v.                                  :
    AMID YOUSEF, ET AL.,                                :
    Defendants-Appellees.               :
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: September 12, 2019
    Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
    Case Nos. CV-15-846717 and CV-17-875614
    Appearances:
    Patrick J. Milligan Co., L.P.A., and Patrick J. Milligan, for
    appellant.
    Costanzo & Lazzaro, P.L.L., and Raymond J. Costanzo, for
    appellees.
    SEAN C. GALLAGHER, J.:
    Maan Yousef appeals from the judgment entered in his favor against
    the Yousef Living Trust in the amount of $500 and the judgment entered against
    Maan on the claim for forcible entry and detainer. There are two actions that were
    consolidated for trial. A forcible entry and detainer action was filed on behalf of the
    Yousef Living Trust by Amid Yousef as trustee, against Maan’s corporation, JoJo’s
    Smokeless World, Inc. (“JoJo’s”). Maan filed a tort and breach-of-contract action
    against his brother Amid, Diane Yousef (Amid’s wife), the Yousef Living Trust, and
    kaboompages.com, an internet advertising entity owned by Amid. For the following
    reasons, we affirm.
    Amid and Maan have a history of joint business ventures. Diane and
    Amid are co-trustees of the Yousef Living Trust (“the Trust”). Maan worked for
    Amid in an automotive accessories business during the late 1980s. By the mid-
    1990s, the business included 12 retail stores in the Northeast Ohio area. Maan spent
    some time in prison in the 1980s, and after being released, Maan agreed to manage
    one of the stores. According to Maan, he was to receive half the profits from the
    store for compensation and was promised a 50 percent ownership interest in the
    company as a whole. The agreement was never memorialized by a writing. Maan
    left Amid’s business and struck out on his own in 1991 to operate a competing
    business. By 1994, Maan was arrested for drug-related charges and sentenced to 19
    years in federal prison. Amid’s corporation for the automotive accessories business
    ceased operations and dissolved while Maan was serving the prison sentence.
    Maan was released from prison in 2012, and the brothers discussed
    another business venture.     It was then that Maan also claimed a right to
    compensation for Maan’s half-ownership interest in Amid’s closed business, with
    Maan claiming the business took in over $9 million in profits before closing.
    Maan and Amid agreed to open a smokeless tobacco shop (“vape
    shop”) in a North Olmsted building owned by the Trust. Maan and Amid met to
    discuss the matter in the early part of 2014, and according to Maan, Amid agreed to
    transfer the North Olmsted property to Maan in exchange for Maan releasing his
    claim against Amid based on the 1980s business venture. There is conflicting
    testimony with respect to the existence of this arrangement. Nevertheless, Amid
    was taking a one-fifth ownership interest in the soon-to-be-formed vape shop and
    he also agreed to provide the marketing for the startup through Amid’s other
    business venture, kaboompages.com. In August 2014, the brothers discussed a lease
    arrangement for the North Olmsted property. Nothing came of that discussion.
    During the first half of 2014, Maan began renovating the building and
    he personally financed the repairs. The repairs were extensive and ultimately
    increased the value of the property by $50,000. The vape shop opened for business
    in July 2014 under the name JoJo’s. But by August, the brothers’ relationship had
    soured. In January 2015, Amid renounced his ownership interest in JoJo’s but
    continued to insist on Maan signing a lease for the building. The lease agreement
    never materialized, and the brothers’ disagreement turned litigious.
    Maan was the first to file a lawsuit. In that complaint (“tort action”),
    drafted pro se, Mann advanced several tort, breach-of-contract, or equitable claims
    against Amid, Diane, the Trust, and kaboompages.com in the Cuyahoga County
    Court of Common Pleas. Maan claimed that the defendants breached a contract to
    transfer the North Olmsted property free and clear to Maan and also breached a
    contract to provide Maan a 50 percent stake in the 1980s business venture, that
    defendants were liable for quantum meruit and unjust enrichment based on Maan’s
    personal investment in the renovations to the property before JoJo’s was
    incorporated and opened its doors, and that the defendants were liable on a claim
    for fraud and tortious interference and other claims irrelevant to this appeal.
    Amid, as trustee of the Trust, responded in kind, and filed a forcible
    entry and detainer action (“eviction action”) in Rocky River Municipal Court against
    JoJo’s. The eviction action spent time ping-ponging from the municipal court to the
    common pleas court.          Originally, JoJo’s filed a counterclaim asserting claims
    mirroring those advanced by Maan in the tort action. The counterclaim exceeded
    the municipal court’s statutory jurisdiction, so the court certified the entire case to
    common pleas court under Civ.R. 13(J). State ex rel. El Turk v. Comstock, 2018-
    Ohio-2125, 
    113 N.E.3d 1122
    , ¶ 11 (8th Dist.); Bohinc v. Stafford, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
    No. 52335, 1987 Ohio App. LEXIS 6928, 1 (Mar. 19, 1987). At this time, a case
    management conference was held in the tort action, and according to Maan, the
    parties agreed to delay the filing of an answer in anticipation that the eviction action
    would be consolidated into the tort action and an amended complaint filed.
    Instead of the eviction action proceeding in the common pleas court,
    the trial court in the eviction action1 dismissed the counterclaim advanced by JoJo’s
    as duplicative of the claims Maan asserted in the tort action (despite the fact that the
    1   The eviction action was initially assigned to a different judge.
    named parties were independent of each other such that, at best, the claims merely
    echoed those advanced in the tort action). After dismissing the counterclaim, the
    trial court sua sponte transferred the eviction case back to municipal court claiming
    that absent the counterclaim, the matter was within the jurisdictional limits of the
    municipal court.
    The trial court in the eviction action, however, lacked authority to
    transfer the case back to the municipal court. The parties have not assigned error
    with this procedural irregularity. We simply note that “after a case is transferred
    from municipal court to a court of common pleas, ‘the case shall then proceed as if
    it had been commenced originally in the court of common pleas.’”             Liberty
    Retirement Community of Middletown, Inc. v. Hurston, 12th Dist. Butler No.
    CA2013-01-006, 2013-Ohio-4979, ¶ 13, citing R.C. 1901.22(G).           There is no
    procedural mechanism for the common pleas court to reject or return the case to a
    municipal court following the municipal court’s reliance on Civ.R. 13(J). See, e.g.,
    Stockton Sales, Inc. v. Scott, 2d Dist. Greene No. 89 CA 30, 1989 Ohio App. LEXIS
    4799, 7 (Dec. 20, 1989). Once the municipal court certified the action to the
    common pleas court, under R.C. 1901.22(G), the action was to be treated as if it were
    originally filed in that court. As a general principle, a common pleas court lacks
    authority to transfer a case to municipal court even if the amount in controversy is
    within the concurrent jurisdiction of both courts. There is no exception for cases
    that are certified under Civ.R. 13(J).
    The municipal court nonetheless proceeded to address the merits of
    the eviction action, but before entering a final judgment, the court ordered the case
    to be transferred to the common pleas court to be consolidated with the tort action.
    By this time, there was no counterclaim that exceeded the municipal court’s
    jurisdiction, so that action was also improper although it seemed judicially
    expedient. Civ.R. 13(J). During this time, the tort action was set for trial. On the
    morning of trial, the parties notified the trial court of the procedural issues and the
    municipal court’s order. Upon agreement of all parties, the trial court ordered the
    eviction action to be consolidated for trial with the tort action and trial commenced.
    Although procedurally this achieved what could have been done earlier, it deprived
    the trial court of the ability to review the file and the pleadings in the eviction action
    before trial. Essentially, the trial court was limited to considering the claims in the
    eviction action as the parties presented them because of the last-minute procedural
    maneuver. During the trial, the distinction between Maan and his corporate entity
    JoJo’s was, at best, muddled — for the most part, both sides treated Maan as the
    party in possession of the property. In part, this had to be so because of Maan’s
    personal claim for damages on the breach-of-contract and unjust enrichment counts
    that in part depended on his personal possession of and the financing of the
    renovations to the retail space.
    The trial court issued a detailed opinion resolving the parties’ dispute.
    Although the trial court discussed and resolved the eviction action at trial, during
    the pendency of this appeal, JoJo’s and Maan vacated the premises. Any assigned
    error (more specifically, the first and the second assigned errors in this appeal) or
    discussion of the eviction issue with respect to Maan has been rendered irrelevant
    and is therefore moot. Cleveland v. Spears, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 107841, 2019-
    Ohio-3041, ¶ 7 (settling the case and controversy through satisfaction of judgment
    renders appeal from that judgment moot).2 On the remaining issues for this appeal,
    the trial court concluded that Maan’s claim for ownership of the North Olmsted
    property failed because the Trust, the only party in a position to deed the property
    to Maan, did not receive any consideration, and therefore, any contract would be
    unenforceable. Judgment was also rendered in favor of the remaining defendants
    because only the Trust could have entered an agreement with Maan for the property.
    Further, the trial court concluded that Maan’s claims, both for breach of contract
    and for promissory estoppel, were not supported by a preponderance of credible
    evidence.
    With respect to Maan’s unjust enrichment claim, which was based on
    Maan’s personal expenditure to renovate the North Olmsted property before JoJo’s
    took possession, the trial court concluded that Maan was entitled to $50,000, which
    represented the increased value of the building following Maan’s efforts. According
    to the trial court, Maan conferred a benefit on the building’s owner, the Trust, in the
    amount of $50,000 based on the renovations performed and financed by Maan, and
    2  A motion to supplement the record was filed that included information
    suggesting that Maan and JoJo’s had vacated the property and requested this court to
    deem the assigned errors pertaining to the eviction to be moot. Neither Maan nor JoJo’s
    objected to such a course of action.
    the Trust’s retention would be unjust under the circumstances because the trustee,
    Amid, knew that an enforceable contract did not exist between the Trust and Maan
    and Amid took no steps to promote clarity in the dealings. Lycan v. Cleveland, 8th
    Dist. Cuyahoga No. 94353, 2010-Ohio-6021, ¶ 5.
    In addressing the final prong of the unjust enrichment analysis,
    however, the trial court concluded that it would not be inequitable for the Trust to
    retain a portion of the $50,000 benefit because Maan was not paying rent during
    the time he occupied the North Olmsted property. The trial court determined that
    Maan benefited from the nonpayment of rent because he would have had to pay
    $1,500 a month from the time JoJo’s opened its doors in July 2014 through trial.
    That amount totaled $49,500. The trial court then concluded that Maan was
    entitled to a judgment of $500 for the unjust enrichment claim, which represented
    the net amount of benefit conferred upon the trust for Maan’s efforts, and judgment
    in that amount was entered on the record. Maan timely appealed.
    In this appeal, Maan claims that the trial court erred by dismissing
    JoJo’s counterclaims in the eviction action, by awarding the Trust legal setoff
    relative to the unjust enrichment damages, and by granting a motion for leave to file
    an answer instead of granting Maan a default judgment. In addition, Maan argues
    that the trial court’s final judgment on the breach-of-contact claim was against the
    weight of the evidence. Finding no merit to any of the assigned errors, we affirm.
    In the dismissed counterclaim, JoJo’s asserted claims on its behalf
    mirroring those that Maan asserted in the tort action. The trial court incorrectly
    dismissed the counterclaims as duplicative of Maan’s claims in the tort action.
    JoJo’s is a separate legal entity with the right to maintain its own claims, even if such
    claims are similar to Maan’s claims. It is well established that a “‘corporation is an
    entity separate and apart from the individuals who compose it; it is a legal fiction for
    the purpose of doing business.’” Chagrin Realty, Inc. v. Testa, 
    154 Ohio St. 3d 352
    ,
    2018-Ohio-4751, 
    114 N.E.3d 204
    , ¶ 17, quoting Agley v. Tracy, 
    87 Ohio St. 3d 265
    ,
    268, 1999-Ohio-61, 1999-Ohio-65, 
    719 N.E.2d 951
    . Corporations maintain the right
    to sue or be sued independent of the individuals who own the entity. The trial court
    erred in treating JoJo’s as synonymous with Maan. However, any error with the
    dismissal of the counterclaims was rendered harmless by the trial court’s reasoned
    verdict in the consolidated action.
    “In a civil action, ‘no error in * * * any ruling or order or in anything
    done * * * by the court * * * is grounds for * * * disturbing a judgment or order, unless
    refusal to take such action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial
    justice.’” (Ellipses sic.) Capital One Bank (USA) N.A. v. Ryan, 10th Dist. Franklin
    No. 14AP-102, 2014-Ohio-3932, ¶ 29, quoting Civ.R. 61. Because JoJo’s claims
    mirrored Maan’s claims, any error in failing to consider JoJo’s claims separately was
    harmless — those claims were inextricably tied to Maan’s claims. Importantly, the
    trial court addressed the claims on the merits and did not conclude that JoJo’s was
    the party in interest who lost solely on the basis of having failed to timely assert its
    claims — the only conclusion that would negate the harmless-error analysis.
    Further, Maan was awarded a judgment on the unjust enrichment claim, meaning
    that JoJo’s could not recover on the same claim. According to the judgment, Maan
    personally funded the renovations and personally took possession of the North
    Olmsted property before JoJo’s came into existence. If JoJo’s was the actual tenant
    or the party responsible for the renovations, upon which the judgment in Maan’s
    favor is based, the judgment in Maan’s favor would be legally erroneous. Akerstrom
    v. 635 W. Lakeside, Ltd., 2018-Ohio-98, 
    105 N.E.3d 440
    , ¶ 19 (8th Dist.). In light of
    the validity of the judgment, any error in dismissing JoJo’s claims is at best harmless
    error.
    With respect to the alleged setoff of damages on Maan’s unjust
    enrichment claim, there is no error. Although Maan claims that the unpaid rent
    constituted a setoff of the unjust enrichment damages, this is a misnomer. Unjust
    enrichment is an equitable claim. “Unjust enrichment is an alternative theory of
    recovery, which ‘operates in the absence of an express contract or a contract implied
    in fact to prevent a party from retaining money or benefits that in justice and equity
    belong to another.’” Cantlin v. Smythe Cramer Co., 2018-Ohio-4607, 
    114 N.E.3d 1260
    , ¶ 41 (8th Dist.), quoting Gallo v. Westfield Natl. Ins. Co., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
    No. 91893, 2009-Ohio-1094, ¶ 19. In resolving the final prong of the analysis, courts
    must consider whether the defendant is unjustly retaining a benefit. 
    Id. Maan’s characterization
    of the trial court’s determination as being a setoff is misplaced.
    Setoff, in the traditional sense, is a legal claim. “[S]etoff ‘is that right
    which exists between two parties, each of whom under an independent contract
    owes a definite amount to the other, to setoff their respective debts by way of mutual
    deduction.’” (Emphasis added.) Waverly City School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v. Triad AR,
    Inc., 4th Dist. Pike No. 17CA885, 2018-Ohio-4748, ¶ 40, quoting Lewis v. United
    Joint Venture, 
    691 F.3d 835
    , 839 (6th Cir.2012), and Witham v. S. Side Bldg. & Loan
    Assn. of Lima, Ohio, 
    133 Ohio St. 560
    , 562, 
    15 N.E.2d 149
    (1938). “Setoff is a
    doctrine that allows entities who owe money to each other to cancel out or apply
    their mutual debts against each other thereby avoiding the ‘absurdity of making A
    pay B when B owes A.’” In re U.S. Aeroteam, Inc., 
    327 B.R. 852
    , 861 (Bankr.S.D.
    Ohio 2005). It is for this reason that Ohio courts require setoff to be affirmatively
    pleaded; the legal right to setoff stems from the parties’ contractual agreements,
    which can be waived if not timely asserted. In this respect, the affirmative defense
    of setoff could not have been properly pleaded — the parties had not entered any
    independent contracts upon which the defendants could have asserted a right to
    money damages.
    In awarding Maan damages on the unjust enrichment claim, the trial
    court was required, as the trier of fact, to determine whether the Trust’s retention of
    the $50,000 benefit conferred upon the Trust was inequitable under the
    circumstances. The trial court determined retention of a portion of the benefit
    would not be inequitable in light of the fact that Maan received use of the property
    rent-free for a significant period of time — thus Maan retained a benefit from the
    parties’ noncontractual dealings. Maan has not presented any argument that the
    trial court’s consideration of the rent-free tenancy as a matter of equity was in error.
    App.R. 16(A)(7). Maan’s arguments are overruled.
    In the final two arguments, Maan suggests that the trial court
    improperly permitted a belated answer and the trial court’s judgment in favor of the
    defendants on Maan’s breach-of-contract claim was against the weight of the
    evidence because there is “ample evidence of a promise made by Amid Yousef to
    Maan Yousef that he was giving [Maan] the building to put the past behind him.”
    We can summarily resolve both arguments.
    With respect to the latter argument, the trial court concluded that the
    Trust received no consideration for the North Olmsted property that Maan was
    claiming and, thus, there was no enforceable contract. Whether the evidence
    demonstrated a promise by Amid (in other words an offer and acceptance) is
    immaterial to the trial court’s conclusion that no consideration for the promise
    flowed to the real party in interest, the Trust. Kostelnik v. Helper, 
    96 Ohio St. 3d 1
    ,
    2002-Ohio-2985, 
    770 N.E.2d 58
    , ¶ 16, quoting Perlmuter Printing Co. v. Strome,
    Inc., 
    436 F. Supp. 409
    , 414 (N.D.Ohio 1976) (contract requires proof of a promise
    that includes offer, acceptance, and consideration to be enforceable). Maan did not
    present an argument to address the trial court’s conclusion. The judgment in favor
    of the defendants on the breach-of-contract claim is not against the weight of the
    evidence based on the arguments presented. App.R. 16(A)(7).
    With respect to the belated answer, a trial court’s decision on a
    motion for leave to file a late pleading is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Davis
    v. Immediate Med. Servs., Inc., 
    80 Ohio St. 3d 10
    , 14, 1997-Ohio-363, 
    684 N.E.2d 292
    . In Ohio, while not always dispositive, the prevailing view is in favor of deciding
    cases on their merits. Pinchak v. Prudhomme, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 94053, 2010-
    Ohio-3879, ¶ 10. In this case, the parties, through counsel, attended a pretrial
    conference immediately after service was perfected on the pro se complaint. A
    dispositive motion schedule was set. It was around this time that the eviction action
    was certified to the common pleas court, and the parties anticipated the matter being
    consolidated and an amended complaint forthcoming. It was agreed that the answer
    would be delayed to avoid unnecessary filings. Instead of the tort and eviction
    actions being consolidated as anticipated, the eviction action was returned to
    municipal court, derailing the parties’ plans.       Maan did not object to this
    characterization of the course of events. Although the answer was belatedly filed,
    we cannot say the trial court abused its discretion granting leave given the unique
    circumstances of this particular case.
    We affirm.
    It is ordered that appellees recover from appellant costs herein taxed.
    The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate be sent to said court to carry this judgment
    into execution.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27
    of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    SEAN C. GALLAGHER, JUDGE
    MARY EILEEN KILBANE, A.J., and
    PATRICIA ANN BLACKMON, J., CONCUR