[Cite as N. Face Properties, Inc. v. Lin, 2013-Ohio-2281.]



                                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                            TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

                                            WARREN COUNTY




NORTH FACE PROPERTIES, INC.,                             :

        Plaintiff-Appellant,                             :   CASE NO. CA2012-09-083

                                                         :        OPINION
    - vs -                                                         6/3/2013
                                                         :

DONG LIN,                                                :

        Defendant-Appellee.                              :



         CIVIL APPEAL FROM WARREN COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
                            Case No. 11 CV 80556



David M. Pixley, 2160 Kettering Tower, Dayton, Ohio 45423, for plaintiff-appellant

John (Hui) Li, 6195 Lakota Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio 45243, for defendant-appellee



        PIPER, J.

        {¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, North Face Properties, Inc. (North Face), appeals a decision

of the Warren County Court of Common Pleas, dismissing its action for forcible entry and

detainer (FED).

        {¶ 2} North Face owns a shopping mall located in Franklin, Ohio. One of its tenants

is the Fu Lin Chinese Restaurant, owned and operated by defendant-appellee, Dong Lin.

North Face and Lin entered into a commercial lease, which set forth the terms of the rental
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agreement and required Lin to abide by the rules and regulations of North Face's property

agreement. These requirements included Lin's duty to schedule timely trash removal, proper

storage and disposal of cooking grease, and proper maintenance and usage of an overhead

exhaust fan system in the kitchen.

      {¶ 3} Problems began to arise between Lin and the neighboring businesses,

including a pizza restaurant and a laundromat. The businesses complained to North Face

that Lin was not disposing of cooking grease properly, did not have trash removed in a timely

manner, and was not properly removing kitchen exhaust fumes from the restaurant so that

the other establishments began to smell like the Chinese restaurant. Lin and his wife were

also combative with the other business owners, including an incident where Lin's wife spit on

the owner of the pizza restaurant during a disagreement in the parking lot.

      {¶ 4} According to the terms of the lease, North Face was required to serve Lin with a

30-day notice to apprise Lin of breach of lease issues, or other demands for remediation or

cure. North Face served Lin with a 30-day notice on July 11, 2011, and demanded that Lin

cure defaults regarding his wife's treatment of the pizza restaurant owner, the exhaust

system in the kitchen, disposing of grease in a proper manner, scheduling trash pickup to

occur at least three times a week, as well as to pay past-due rents and fees of $409.50. Lin

paid the $409.50 soon after receiving the 30-day notice. However, on August 26, 2011,

North Face served Lin with a three-day notice of eviction, and then filed its FED action when

Lin did not vacate the premises according to North Face's three-day notice.

      {¶ 5} The matter proceeded to a hearing in front of the magistrate on January 11,

2012. Between the time of North Face's three-day notice on August 26, 2011 and the

magistrate's hearing on January 11, 2012, Lin submitted checks to North Face to pay rent for

September, October, November, December, and January. North Face held Lin's checks and

did not cash them until January 12, 2012, the day after the hearing before the magistrate.
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The magistrate found in favor of North Face and recommended the issuance of a writ of

restitution.

       {¶ 6} In response to the magistrate's decision, Lin filed objections and leave to

submit additional evidence to the trial court for its consideration. The trial court granted Lin

leave to submit evidence that North Face cashed Lin's rent checks on the day after the

magistrate's hearing. The trial court found that North Face waived its three-day notice by

accepting future rents from Lin, and dismissed the FED action for lack of jurisdiction. North

Face now appeals the trial court's dismissal of its FED action, raising the following

assignment of error.

       {¶ 7} THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY DISMISSING THE APPELLANT'S

COMPLAINT FOR WANT OF SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION.

       {¶ 8} North Face argues that the trial court erred by dismissing its FED action

because it did not waive its three-day notice by accepting rent from Lin.

       {¶ 9} According to R.C. 1923.04, "a party desiring to commence an action under this

chapter shall notify the adverse party to leave the premises, for the possession of which the

action is about to be brought, three or more days before beginning the action * * *." "After

serving a notice to vacate, it is inconsistent for a landlord to accept and retain rent payments

in advance * * *. Under these circumstances, the landlord must be deemed to have waived

the notice to vacate as a matter of law." (Emphasis sic.) Graham v. Pavarini, 9 Ohio App.3d

89, 92 (8th Dist.1983), quoting Presidential Park Apartments v. Colston, 10th Dist. No. 79AP-

604, 1980 WL 353341 (Mar. 20, 1980); see also Morrow v. Gates, 12th Dist. No. CA91-11-

021, 1992 WL 156116 (June 29, 1992).

       {¶ 10} A landlord may accept rent payments that were due and owing, or "obligations

already incurred," at the time of the three-day notice without waiving such. King v. Dolton,

9th Dist. No. 02CA0041, 2003-Ohio-2423, ¶ 12, citing Sholiton Indus, Inc. v. Royal Arms,
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Ltd., 2d Dist. No. 17480, 1999 WL 355898 (June 4, 1999). However, acceptance of future

rent payments following service of the statutory three-day notice "waives or invalidates the

service of the statutory notice, and the landlord may therefore not proceed with a forcible

entry and detainer action." Bristol Court v. Jones, 4th Dist. No. 93-CA-520, 1994 WL

534920, *1 (Sept. 29, 1994).

        {¶ 11} Pertinent to whether a landlord waives a three-day notice, a landlord "accepts"

future rent by cashing a check for future rent after a three-day notice has been issued or

holds payment without informing the tenant that "the checks were not accepted as payment

of rent or that the checks were being held for evidentiary purposes." King v. Dolton, 9th Dist.

No. 02CA0041, 2003-Ohio-2423, ¶ 15.

        {¶ 12} The record indicates that North Face served Lin with the three-day notice on

August 26, 2011. At that time, Lin was current on his rent obligation, and had cured the

$409.50 deficit as instructed in North Face's 30-day notice letter. After being served the

three-day notice, Lin then sent North Face rent checks for September, October, November,

December, and January.1

        {¶ 13} North Face held the checks, the "future rent," without telling Lin that it was

holding the checks for evidentiary purposes and was not otherwise accepting the checks as

payment of rent. Instead of refusing the checks, or returning the checks to Lin after the

hearing, North Face cashed the checks and thereby waived the three-day notice it had

provided. See Associated Estates Corp. v. Bartell, 24 Ohio App.3d 6 (8th Dist.1985) (noting

that a while a landlord accepts a check by cashing it, a landlord does not accept a check by

retaining it for evidentiary purposes and then tendering it back to the tenant on the day of the




1. Even if we were to disregard the checks for September through December, the fact remains that North Face
cashed the check for January, which included rent paid for days that Lin had not yet used the premises, including
January 13 through the end of the month.
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trial); and Juergens v. Strileckyj, 2d Dist. No. 2010 CA 36, 2010-Ohio-5159, ¶ 25 (finding that

landlord did not accept tenant's checks were the landlord's "decision to hold the checks

without cashing them did not constitute an acceptance" of the rent payments). (Emphasis

added.)

       {¶ 14} North Face argues that it was permitted to cash the checks without waiving the

three-day notice because the hearing had already occurred. We disagree. North Face

cashed the checks after the magistrate held the hearing, but the magistrate had not issued a

ruling, Lin had not been afforded his rights to object to the decision, nor had the trial court

made a final judgment in the case. Therefore, the FED action was still pending at the time

North Face accepted the checks by cashing them, and North Face could not take action

adverse to its notice to vacate. While the law may, at first blush, seem to limit a landlord's

chance to recover, such is not the case.

       {¶ 15} Ohio courts have recognized that landlords have the right to collect past rents,

and that landlords also have statutory means for protecting themselves against tenants who

continue to reside in the premises during the FED proceeding. For example, R.C. 1923.08

permits a trial court to require a tenant to post a bond, and a landlord has a legal right to seek

damages once awarded FED. Dennis v. Morgan, 89 Ohio St.3d 417 (2000). In Dennis v.

Morgan, the Ohio Supreme Court stated,

              We find that Ohio's statutory scheme does not force a landlord
              to choose between eviction and a claim for damages for breach
              of contract. Rather, R.C. 1923.03 states, "Judgments under this
              chapter [regarding forcible entry and detainer actions] are not a
              bar to a later action brought by either party." Thus, R.C. Chapter
              1923, by its own terms, does not limit landlords' remedies upon a
              breach merely to securing their property through eviction.
              Lessors may also bring a separate suit for damages brought
              about by the lessee's breach.

Id. at 419. While accepting past due rents or seeking damages after a FED action has been

successful are within a landlord's rights, accepting future rent from a tenant when that tenant
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has been given notice of eviction is inconsistent with a landlord's intent that the tenant be

forcibly removed from the premises.

       {¶ 16} North Face also argues that it did not waive the three-day notice by cashing

Lin's checks because it was evicting Lin for breach of lease terms rather than for non-

payment of rent. Again, we disagree. The theory remains the same, whether based upon

non-payment of rent or breach of lease; a landlord who accepts future rental payments is

acting inconsistently with a three-day notice to vacate the premises. "A lessor on condition

broken by lessee may elect to forfeit the lease, or to waive the forfeiture. * * * If after

knowledge of the breach, the lessor, prior to taking any action to forfeit the lease, accepts

rent from the lessee, or his assignee, which rent accrued after the breach, he waives the right

of forfeiture." Petropoulos v. Clinical Pathology Facility, Inc., 10th Dist. No. 87AP-685, 1988

WL 24397, *4 (Feb. 18, 1988); see also Presidential Park Apartments v. Colston, 1980 WL

353341 (finding that landlord waived three-day notice after instituting FED action for breach

of lease terms, rather than failure to pay rent, where the landlord accepted future rent

payments after issuing the three-day notice).

       {¶ 17} The only difference created by eviction based upon breach instead of non-

payment of rent essentially is that North Face has waived its three-day notice but may re-file

its FED action after providing Lin with another three-day notice, assuming of course, that

North Face does not accept any future rents upon its issuance of a new three-day notice.

Moran v. Gaskella, 5th Dist. No. 2011-CA-21, 2012-Ohio-1158; see also Morrow v. Gates,

12th Dist. No. CA91-11-021, 1992 WL 156116, (June 29, 1992) (finding waiver of three-day

notice was cured by issuance of second three-day notice and subsequent motion for FED).

       {¶ 18} North Face also argues that the trial court erred by staying the judgment of the

magistrate. However, as discussed above, the trial court lacked jurisdiction to proceed on

North Face's FED action because North Face waived the three-day statutory requirement.
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As such, the trial court did not err in not granting North Face restitution of the property as

recommended by the magistrate.

       {¶ 19} Having found that North Face waived its three-day notice, the trial court did not

err in dismissing the FED action for lack of jurisdiction. North Face's sole assignment of error

is therefore overruled.

       {¶ 20} Judgment affirmed.


       RINGLAND, P.J., and M. POWELL, J., concur.




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