         [Cite as Madeira Crossing, Ltd. v. Milgo Madeira Properties, Ltd., 2014-Ohio-4179.]
                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
             FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
                  HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO



MADEIRA CROSSING LIMITED,                         :          APPEAL NO. C-130524
                                                             TRIAL NO. A-1203805
        Plaintiff-Appellee,                       :

                                                  :              O P I N I O N.
  vs.
                                                  :
MILGO MADEIRA PROPERTIES,
LTD.,                                             :

    Defendant-Appellant.                          :




Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas

Judgment Appealed from is: Affirmed

Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: September 24, 2014


Keating Muething & Klekamp PPL, William A. Posey and Charles M. Miller, for
Plaintiff-Appellee,

Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, Stephen M. Griffith, Jr., and Beth A. Bryan, for
Defendant-Appellant.




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




C UNNINGHAM , Presiding Judge.

       {¶1}   The action below was brought by plaintiff-appellee Madeira Crossing

Limited (“Madeira Crossing”) for the correction of a ground lease on the basis that,

by the mutual mistake of the original lessor and lessee, the lease included a rent-

adjustment provision that did not reflect the true intention of the contracting parties.

According to Madeira Crossing, the contracting parties had intended that the lessee’s

rent would not increase until the lessee received a 25 percent increase in rent from

the principal tenant.

       {¶2}   Defendant-appellant Milgo Madeira Properties, Ltd., (“Milgo”)

conceded that there was a mistake in the lease, but in its counterclaim contended

that the mistake was only in the rent-adjustment formula. According to Milgo, the

unambiguous intent of the contracting parties with respect to the formula was set

forth elsewhere in the rent-adjustment provision, which contained language for an

adjustment in rent proportionate to the changes in the rent due to the lessee from the

principal tenant, but no language about a 25 percent cushion.

       {¶3}   After denying a motion for summary judgment filed by Milgo, the trial

court held a trial on the claims. Over Milgo’s objection, the trial court admitted parol

evidence from Madeira Crossing to demonstrate that the lease did not reflect the true

agreement of the parties. The trial court found in favor of Madeira Crossing, and

reformed the lease to include a rent-adjustment provision that provided for the 25

percent cushion. The court accomplished this by changing the word “by” in the

original lease to the word “to” in the reformed lease. Milgo now appeals, raising two

assignments of error. We affirm.




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                                I. Background Facts

       {¶4}     In the fall of 1987, Milgo Realty, Inc., (“Milgo Realty”) a predecessor-

in-interest to Milgo, leased the land, now a small shopping center, to H.A.I., Inc.,

(“H.A.I.”) the predecessor-in-interest to Madeira Crossing. Mildred Konnersman

was Milgo Realty’s only shareholder and its president.          Henry H. Hersch, the

attorney for and the secretary of Milgo Realty, had negotiated the lease on behalf of

Milgo Realty.

       {¶5}     David Meyers and Larry Hilton were the owners of H.A.I. J. Neil

Gardner, the attorney for and assistant secretary of H.A.I., had negotiated on behalf

of H.A.I.

       {¶6}     The lease provided for an initial term of 30 years and six months, with

four successive renewal terms of five years each. Base rent was set at $60,000 for

the first year. At the time that Milgo Realty and H.A.I. entered into the lease, they

contemplated that H.A.I. would develop the property and sublease part of the

property to a principal tenant that would be a drug store.

       {¶7}     At issue in this case is the meaning of the rent-adjustment provision

set forth in Article III, paragraph four of the lease, which provided:

                Commencing with the second anniversary of the execution of

       this Lease and annually thereafter, the base rent due Lessor from

       Lessee shall be adjusted by an amount equal to said base rent

       multiplied by 80% of the ratio of “Tenant Rent A” to “Tenant Rent B”

       where: Tenant Rent A is the monthly average of total rent due Lessee

       from the principal Tenant occupying the Demised Premises for each

       month of such occupancy during the 12-month period ending on the

       most recent anniversary date of this Lease, and “Tenant Rent B” is the



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          monthly average of total rent due Lessee from the principal Tenant

          occupying the Demised Premises during the 12-month period

          immediately following the original principal Tenant’s opening for

          business at the Demised Premises.

                 The foregoing notwithstanding, no adjustment shall be made to

          reduce the rent due Lessor from Lessee below the Base Rent set forth

          above nor shall the amount of Tenant Rent B used in the calculation

          set forth above exceed $11.50 per square foot occupied. Adjustments

          may be down as well as up, but not below Base Rent.

                 It is the intent of this adjustment to adjust the rent due Lessor

          from Lessee in proportion to the changes in rent due Lessee from the

          principal tenant for reasons other than changes in the amount of

          space occupied by the principal tenant or the principal tenants [sic]

          obligations    with   respect   to   taxes,   insurance,   utilities   and

          maintenance. Therefore, modifications to the calculations set forth

          above shall be made when required to equitably reflect the changes in

          the amount of space occupied by the principal tenant or changes in

          the obligations of the principal tenant to pay taxes, utilities or

          maintenance.

(Emphasis added.)

          {¶8}   When the formula set forth in this provision is applied as written, it

results in an automatic and almost double yearly rent increase that is in no way

proportionate to the change in rent due to Madeira Crossing from the principal

tenant.




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         {¶9}   Milgo Realty was first succeeded in interest by Milgo Realty

Partnership.    Neither entity sought to adjust the lessee’s rent during the first five

years of the lease. At some point before Mildred Konnersman’s passing in 1998, she

gifted the property to her daughter and her son, Paul Konnersman (“Konnersman”),

who are the principals of Milgo.

         {¶10} Beginning in 1992, Konnersman, on behalf of Milgo Realty

Partnership, and later on behalf of Milgo, periodically asked the lessee about the

lessee’s increased rental payments from the principal tenant in an effort to determine

whether the lessee owed additional rent under the rent-adjustment provision of the

lease.

         {¶11} In 2007, Konnersman began to more fully pursue the issue of a rent

adjustment with Madeira Crossing, which had become H.A.I.’s successor-in-interest

under the lease. Madeira Crossing was owned in part by Gardner, who informed

Konnersman that the rent-adjustment provision was intended to be applied as a rent

calculation provision with a 25 percent cushion. Madeira Crossing eventually filed

an action for a declaratory judgment, which evolved to include competing claims for

reformation.

                               II. Evidence at Trial

         {¶12} During a two-day bench trial, Madeira Crossing presented the in-court

testimony of Gardner and the deposition testimony of Meyers. Gardner testified to

the lease negotiations between Milgo Realty and H.A.I. in 1987, and he presented

draft versions of the lease. He testified that Hersch had told him that he had full

authority from Mildred Konnersman to negotiate the lease.

         {¶13} According to Gardner, Meyers and Hilton had balked at any rent

adjustment because they believed that the base rent was higher than the market rate



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for the property, and because the ground lease was an absolute net lease and placed

the risk of repairs and vacancies on the lessee. Therefore, they had rejected two draft

proposals from Hersch on the issue. One draft, dated August 26, 1987, provided that

the rent adjustment would be based on increases in the consumer price index

(“CPI”).     The CPI methodology was rejected by H.A.I., and the negotiations

continued.    The following draft, dated September 15, 1987, indicated that the base

rent would be “increased by an amount equal to [] 80% of the relative percentage

increase in” the principal tenant’s rent. The draft specified that, by example, if the

principal tenant’s rent increased by 10 percent, the base rent payable to the lessor

would increase by 8 percent. Gardner testified that his clients also rejected that rent-

adjustment provision.

       {¶14} Subsequently, on September 17, 1987, Gardner met with Meyers,

Hilton, and Hersch to work out the outstanding issues regarding the lease. At this

meeting, the representatives of H.A.I. had believed that Milgo Realty had accepted

the lease without a rent-adjustment provision, but Hersch brought up the issue at the

end of the day. Meyers and Hilton became frustrated. Hersch then left the room and

returned with a handwritten “compromise” rent-adjustment provision.            Gardner

testified that when he read the draft compromise provision, he thought it was unclear

and told Hersch so. Hersch then explained to Meyers, Hilton and Gardner that “ ‘by

using a ratio—and the ratio being the current rent to the initial rent and applying 80

percent of the factor to that, that the new rent or current rent had to exceed 125

percent before the rent under land lease would increase.’ ” Hersch further explained

that the formula provided that at “125 percent times 80 [percent], that’s only 1.00,

and so there would be no increase, and anything over that there would be an

increase.”



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       {¶15} The handwritten proposal also included language that is similar to the

end paragraph in the rent-adjustment provision, which provides for proportionality.

Gardner testified that he had suggested that the language added to the confusion, but

Hersch had retorted that the proposed formula did provide for an increase in

proportion to the rents, but that because of the formula, that increase would not

occur until the lessee obtained at least a 25 percent increase in the rent from the

principal tenant.

       {¶16} Gardner said his clients, who were anxious to end the meeting,

accepted the proposal.       Subsequently, Hersch added the compromise rent-

adjustment provision to the final lease, which was duly executed on October 13, 1987,

by Hersch and Mildred Konnersman on behalf of Milgo Realty and Gardner and

Hilton on behalf of H.A.I.

       {¶17} Gardner explained to the court that the formula as drafted by Hersch

and as adopted in the lease does not provide for the intended 25 percent cushion

unless the provision is treated as one calculating the amount of the new rent, as

opposed to one calculating the additional rent to be added to the base rent. Gardner

demonstrated that this result is accomplished by replacing the word “by” with “to” in

the third line of the first paragraph of the rent-adjustment provision.

       {¶18} Gardner also explained that making that proposed change was

consistent with the remainder of the provision because, unlike the other draft

provisions, the compromise provision included a $60,000 floor below which rent

could not decrease, a term which would not be necessary if the provision had truly

been intended to be one calculating the amount to add to the base rent of $5,000 per

month. Moreover, Gardner demonstrated by use of a graph that by changing the

word “by” to “to” in the rent-adjustment provision and applying the formula, once



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the 25 percent cushion is exceeded, the rent owed by the lessee increases in

proportion to the additional dollars received from the principal tenant.

       {¶19} Meyers’s testimony confirmed that H.A.I. had entered into a ground

lease for the to-be-built strip center. He recalled that Hersch had negotiated on

behalf of the lessor, and that Hersch had proposed a formula that the parties

subsequently adopted in the final lease concerning the rent adjustment. Meyers said

that he agreed to the formula because Hersch had explained that it provided a 25

percent cushion. Meyers also testified, however, that he believed that after the

threshold was met, the lessor would receive 80 percent of the increase in the

principal tenant’s rent.

       {¶20} Konnersman, testifying on behalf of Milgo, acknowledged that he had

not been a principal of Milgo Realty during the lease negotiations, he had not

participated in the negotiations, including the meeting with Gardner, Meyers, Hilton,

and Hersch, and that he had not spoken to Hersch or his mother, both of whom were

deceased, about the intent of the provision at issue.   But Konnersman agreed that

the rent-adjustment formula contained in the lease did not reflect the agreement of

the parties because it did not calculate adjusted rent based on the proportionate

increase in the principal tenant’s rent.

       {¶21} Konnersman proposed that the lease be reformed to include one of two

alternative formulas to calculate adjusted rent.      The first formula provided as

follows: Adjusted Rent = [((Tenant A – Tenant B) / Tenant B) x .80 x $60,000] +

$60,000, where Tenant A was equal to the new rent for the principal tenant and

Tenant B was equal to the original rent for the principal tenant. Under this formula,

the rent owed Milgo would increase by an amount equal to 80 percent of the

percentage increase in rent due from the principal tenant. And Milgo would not be



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entitled to the automatic and large increases due under the formula as written, but

would become entitled to rent increases only after the principal tenant’s rent

increased.

       {¶22} Alternatively, Konnersman asked that the court reform the rent

adjustment provision of the lease to provide that Milgo receive from Madeira

Crossing the base rent plus an amount equal to 80 percent of the dollar amount of

the rent increase received from the principal tenant. This was set forth by the

following formula: Adjusted Rent = .80 (Tenant A-Tenant B) + $60,000.

       {¶23} The trial court adopted Madeira Crossing’s position and reformed the

lease accordingly by changing the word “by” to “to” in the rent-adjustment provision.

                                    III. Analysis

       {¶24} In its first assignment of error, Milgo argues that the trial court erred

by considering parol evidence to determine the intent of the parties. In its second

assignment of error, Milgo argues that the trial court’s judgment was against the

manifest weight of the evidence. Ultimately, Milgo asks this court to reverse the trial

court’s judgment and to enter a judgment reforming the original lease by substituting

one of its two proposed alternative formulas that do not provide for a 25 percent

cushion.

       {¶25} The equitable remedy of reformation allows a court to change the

language of the contract where the contracting parties’ true intentions have not been

expressed due to a mistake by both parties. Wagner v. Natl. Fire Ins. Co., 132 Ohio

St. 405, 412-413, 8 N.E.2d 144 (1937), cited in Huber v. Knock, 1st Dist. Hamilton

No. C-080071, 2008-Ohio-5900, ¶ 6.         The proponent of the reformation must

demonstrate the mutual mistake by clear and convincing evidence. Wagner at 413,

citing Stewart v. Gordon, 60 Ohio St. 170, 53 N.E. 797 (1899). Clear and convincing



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evidence is the degree of proof necessary to “produce in the mind of the trier of facts

a firm belief or conviction as to the facts sought to be established.” Cross v. Ledford,

161 Ohio St. 469, 120 N.E.2d 118 (1954), paragraph three of the syllabus, quoted in

Huber at ¶ 6.

                             A. Parol Evidence Rule

       {¶26} Milgo argues that the trial court erred by considering parol evidence

on the issue of the parties’ actual agreement with respect to the rent-adjustment

formula. It claims that the court was not allowed to consider extrinsic evidence of

the contracting parties’ agreement because the rent-adjustment provision contained

an “intent provision” that provided that “[i]t is the intent of this adjustment to adjust

the rent due Lessor from Lessee in proportion to the changes in the rent due Lessee

from the principal tenant * * *.”

       {¶27} The parol evidence rule generally prohibits the contradiction or

supplementation of final written integrated agreements by evidence of prior or

contemporaneous oral agreements or prior written agreements. See Galmish v.

Cicchini, 90 Ohio St.3d 22, 27, 734 N.E.2d 782 (2000). The rule, however, does not

apply to a claim for reformation based on mutual mistake. See id.

       {¶28} Thus, when a party requests a reformation based on mutual mistake,

the court may admit parol evidence to show the actual agreement of the parties.

Wagner, 132 Ohio St. at 412, 8 N.E.2d 144; Mason v. Swartz, 76 Ohio App.3d 43, 50,

600 N.E.2d 1121 (6th Dist.1991), citing Clayton v. Freet, 10 Ohio St. 544, 546 (1860).

This evidence includes “credible testimony concerning the conduct of the parties, any

course of dealing between them, and the method of handling the specific transaction

in question.” Castle v. Daniels, 16 Ohio App.3d 209, 212, 475 N.E.2d 149 (2d

Dist.1984). The verbal representations of the parties are generally the “principal



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evidence” in proving the mutual mistake. Harris v. Columbiana Cty. Mut. Ins. Co.,

18 Ohio 116, 120 (1849).

       {¶29} Although a trial court is not required to rely on the parol evidence

when determining the agreement that the parties intended, see Triangle Properties,

Inc. v. Homewood Corp., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 12AP-933, 2013-Ohio-3926, ¶ 61,

in this case, the trial court needed the parol evidence to discern the actual agreement

of the contracting parties. The “intent provision” that Milgo relied upon did not

provide a formula for calculating any adjustment in rent.        Further, the “intent

provision” when read in full provided that the parties intended that the rent be

adjusted in proportion to the changes in the rent due to the lessee from the principal

tenant “for reasons other than changes in the amount of space occupied by the

principal tenant or the principal tenants [sic] obligations with respect to taxes,

insurance, utilities, and maintenance.” As the trial court noted, the language in the

final paragraph of the rent-adjustment provision had to be considered in resolving

the claim for reformation, but the trial court simply could not determine the true

agreement of the parties based on the language of the “intent provision.”

       {¶30} Because Milgo failed to demonstrate error in the trial court’s

consideration of parol evidence to determine the allegation of a mutual mistake of

the parties, we overrule the first assignment of error.

                     B. Manifest Weight of the Evidence

       {¶31} Next Milgo argues that the trial court’s reformation of the lease in the

manner consistent with Madeira Crossing’s proposed formula was against the

manifest weight of the evidence. In reviewing a claim that the judgment is against

the manifest weight of the evidence, we weigh the evidence and all reasonable

inferences, consider the credibility of the witnesses, and determine whether in



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resolving conflicts in the evidence, the finder of fact clearly lost its way and created

such a manifest miscarriage of justice that the judgment must be reversed and a new

trial ordered. Eastley v. Volkman, 132 Ohio St.3d 328, 2012-Ohio-2179, 972 N.E.2d

517, ¶ 19-20. And we must make every reasonable presumption that is consistent

with the trial court’s judgment. Id. at ¶ 21, citing Seasons Coal Co., Inc. v. Cleveland,

10 Ohio St.3d 77, 80, 461 N.E.2d 1273 (1984), fn. 3.

       {¶32} The issue before the trial court on Madeira Crossing’s claim was

whether the evidence established, clearly and convincingly, that the parties to the

lease had intended that the formula calculate adjusted rent with a 25 percent

cushion. In support of its claim that the trial court lost its way, Milgo emphasizes

that the 25 percent cushion that Gardner and Meyers had testified to was not

expressly documented in the lease or in any contemporaneous documents. However,

the 25 percent cushion is built into the formula when it is applied to calculate the

adjusted rent instead of calculating the adjustment in rent. And other language in

the rent-adjustment provision, which was drafted by the lessor, suggests that the

parties to the lease had intended for the formula to calculate the adjusted rent,

instead of the amount to add to the base rent. Specifically, the provision provides

that no adjustment could be made that would reduce the rent below the base rent.

This language would not be necessary if the formula calculated only an amount to be

added to the base rent.

       {¶33} Further, Milgo conceded that the provision as written did not reflect

the true agreement of the parties, and it did not refute Gardner’s and Meyers’s

testimony that H.A.I. would not have entered into the lease absent the 25 percent

cushion. Milgo presented no extrinsic evidence of its own on the actual agreement of

the original parties, and instead proposed two alternative formulas.            A court



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exercising its equitable powers in reformation can reform a contract so that it

comports with the original agreement, but it cannot make a new agreement. See

Stewart v. Gordon, 60 Ohio St. 170, 53 N.E. 797 (1899), paragraph two of the

syllabus.

          {¶34} We cannot say the trial court lost its way in evaluating the evidence.

The rent adjustment formula that appeared in the lease provided that Adjusted Rent

= B + [B * .80(A/99,499.92)], with B equal to the base rent of $60,000, and A equal

to the principal tenant’s rent for the previous year. This formula can be simplified as

Adjusted Rent = (.48 * A) + B,1 with the condition, set forth in the lease, that rent

cannot decrease below $60,000. The formula adopted by the trial court removes the

addition of the base rent to the formula, resulting in an equation of Adjusted Rent =

.48 *A, with the proviso of the $60,000 floor. This formula creates proportionality

because rents due under the lease would increase in proportion to the rents received

from the principal tenant, although the increase would be triggered only after the

principal tenant’s rent increased by 25 percent.

          {¶35} Admittedly, Madeira Crossing presented conflicting evidence on the

original contracting parties’ agreement concerning the amount of an adjustment due

the lessor after the 25 percent cushion was passed. Both Gardner and Meyers had, at

least at one time, believed that under the formula proposed by Hersch the lessor

would receive more than 48 percent of the increases in the principal tenant’s rent

after the 25 percent cushion was passed. But the amount of the adjustment after the

25 percent increase was not material to the agreement, and this recollection was not

based on either witness’s application of the formula.




1   $60,000 * .80 / $99,499.92 = 0.48.


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       {¶36} Ultimately, the greater amount of credible evidence clearly and

convincingly demonstrates that the parties had agreed to adjust rent in accordance

with the lease as reformed by the trial court. Therefore, we cannot say that the

decision is against the manifest weight of the evidence. Accordingly, we overrule the

second assignment of error.

                                  IV. Conclusion

       {¶37} The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

                                                                    Judgment affirmed.


HILDEBRANDT and DINKELACKER, JJ., concur.

Please note:

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




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