Court Opinion

ID: 4879020
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-26 16:24:14.303876+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:37.680410
License: Public Domain

[Cite as Westlake v
                 Cleveland, 2021-Ohio-2929.]
                          COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

                         EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
                            COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

CITY OF WESTLAKE,                              :

            Plaintiff-Appellee,                :
                                                             No. 109894
            v.                                 :

CITY OF CLEVELAND,                             :

            Defendant-Appellant.               :

                           JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION

            JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED
            RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: August 26, 2021

         Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
                             Case No. CV-12-782910

                                       Appearances:

            Michael P. Maloney, Westlake Director of Law, Robin R.
            Leasure, Assistant Director of Law; O’Toole, McLaughlin,
            Dooley & Pecora, L.P.A., Dennis M. O’Toole, Matthew A.
            Dooley and Stephen M. Bosak, Jr., for appellee.

            Barbara A. Langhenry, Cleveland Director of Law; Tucker
            Ellis, L.L.P., and Susan M. Audey, Robert J. Hanna and
            Karl A. Bekeny, for appellant.

EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, P.J.:

             Appellant city of Cleveland (“Cleveland”) appeals from the judgment

of the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas finding that the reasonable period
for notice of cancellation under the Water Services Agreement (“WSA”) is one year.

We overrule appellant’s sole assignment of error and affirm because the trial court

correctly applied this court’s previous opinion.

I.   Factual and Procedural History

              This case arises from a WSA between the city of Westlake

(“Westlake”) and Cleveland under which Cleveland would provide water to the

residents of Westlake. This case has an extensive history but, due to the previous

opinions of this court and the decisions of the trial court, the issues raised in the

present appeal are quite narrow.

              On May 18, 2012, Westlake filed an action in the Cuyahoga County

Court of Common Pleas. This action requested both declaratory judgment and

injunctive relief. Westlake requested a judgment which would declare:

      1. That Westlake has the right to obtain a secondary source of potable
      water without being in breach of the WSA;

      2. That the WSA does not require the purchase of any definable amount
      of water during the five-year notice period contained in Article 23 of
      the WSA;

      3. That the WSA’s provision automatically extending the term of the
      WSA following the first ten (10) year term to perpetual annual terms,
      but requiring a five (5) year notice to terminate is unenforceable;

      4. That the WSA is unenforceable beyond twenty-five (25) years from
      its effective date;

      5. That Cleveland may not require “stranded costs” or other additional
      costs to “mitigate reliability impacts” on neighbors by unilaterally
      adjusting customer rates during the notice period as described in
      Cleveland’s December 14, 2011 letter.
               The complaint further requested that the court issue a permanent

injunction restraining Cleveland from:

      1. Increasing its water rates in order to recover “stranded costs” or other
      additional costs to “mitigate reliability impacts” as described in
      Cleveland’s December 14, 2011 letter;

      2. Taking any action detrimental to the interests of the consumers of
      water within Westlake, which are inconsistent with the obligations of
      Cleveland under the WSA.

               After substantial litigation, the trial court issued a decision that

determined that the WSA had terminated on March 19, 2015, that it was no longer

enforceable and that the provision requiring five-years notice of intent to terminate

was no longer applicable. The trial court further ruled that Westlake could obtain

water from a secondary source without violating the agreement. Finally, the court

ruled that Cleveland was not entitled to recover stranded costs.

               Cleveland appealed this judgment and this court reversed and

remanded the case. However, the opinion was split leading to some difficulty in its

application by the trial court. Of the three-judge panel, one judge wrote the majority

opinion, another concurred in judgment only and a third concurred in part and

dissented in part. Westlake v. Cleveland, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 104282, 2017-

Ohio-4064 (“Westlake I”). In material part, this court held that “the five-year notice

provision would be unenforceable — it is irreconcilable to require that notice be

given five years in advance of an intent to terminate a one-year contract.” Id. at ¶ 40

and the case was remanded to the trial court for a determination as to how much
notice should be provided under the WSA because the “the five-year notice of

termination [was] inapplicable to a yearly agreement[.]” Id. at ¶ 54.

               After the reversal, the trial court proceeded to decide the issue of what

notice would be reasonable under the contract. Following the testimony of a single

witness, Westlake filed a notice of dismissal under Civ.R. 41(A)(1)(a). Cleveland

challenged that dismissal in this court via both a direct appeal and a petition for an

extraordinary writ.

               This court granted the extraordinary writ and determined that the

swearing in of the witness commenced the trial which prevented the plaintiff from

noticing the dismissal of the action. In granting the writ, this court stated that:

“[t]his court [in its prior opinion] determined that a single question of fact remained

outstanding in the underlying case between Cleveland and Westlake — what

constituted reasonable notice under the terms of the contract given that it continued

to renew on a year-to-year basis.” State ex rel. Cleveland v. Shaughnessy, 8th Dist.

Cuyahoga No. 107403, 2018-Ohio-4797, ¶ 10 (“Westlake II”). Another panel of this

court followed the reasoning laid out in Westlake II by reversing the decision of the

trial court in the direct appeal. Westlake v. Cleveland, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No.

107222, 2019-Ohio-1435, ¶ 12 (“Westlake III”).

               Thus, the only issue before the trial court was what constituted

reasonable notice to cancel under the terms of the contract after the initial ten-year

period. The court below issued an opinion and entry that provided as follows:
      The court recognizes the complexity of water systems, and
      acknowledges Cleveland’s position that dismantling a water source
      requires a series of projects, the completion of which could far exceed
      one year * * *. [A] fact finder, based on the testimony, could find that
      a significant period of time, exceeding one year, would be required to
      fully disconnect from a water source, the court is constrained by the
      law. This court, having no precedent as guidance, follows previous case
      law and historical rulings, understanding that a one-year contract
      cannot contain a termination provision that exceeds the terms therein.

      ***

      Despite the complex nature of separating water systems, the court is
      bound by contract law principles that mandate that a one-year contract
      cannot contain a provision that extends beyond its very terms. In
      accordance with aforementioned, this court holds that reasonable
      termination is one year.

               In context, the trial court determined that this court’s opinion

established that the term of the WSA, after the initial ten-year period, was renewable

in one-year terms and that no cancellation notice requirement could exceed the

renewable term.

II. Standard of Review

               The decision of the trial court declared the obligations of the parties

to a contract pursuant to R.C. 2721.04. “In reviewing a declaratory judgment case,

legal questions are subject to de novo review whereby no deference is given to the

trial court’s decision * * *. Where the final decision involves factual issues, however,

a manifest weight of the evidence standard applies.” Gill v. Guru Gobind Sikh Soc.

of Cleveland, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 104634, 2017-Ohio-7163, ¶ 29 (citations

omitted). Here, the appellant challenges the trial court’s determination that it could
not establish a notice period under the WSA longer than a year. Thus, we are

presented solely with a question of law.

III. Argument and Analysis

              Appellant appeals and assigns one error for our review:

      The trial court erred in concluding that it was “constrained by the law”
      to find that reasonable notice to terminate the parties’ Water Service
      Agreement (WSA) is one year, despite acknowledging that
      transitioning water supply “could far exceed one year” and knowing
      that the WSA would automatically renew from year to year — and thus
      not terminate in one year — as long as appellant city of Cleveland is
      supplying water to appellee city of Westlake and would be doing so
      during any period of the acknowledged multi-year transition.

              Appellant contends that this court rendered its previous opinions

“without the benefit of legal argument on the WSA’s automatic-renewal provision

term, without a factual record on reasonableness of a five-year notice period, and

without considering the intent of the parties in agreeing to the notice provision.”

              With respect to this issue, appellant argues that “[t]he WSA is not a

fixed, one-year contract but, instead, it is a contract that renews automatically in

one-year increments as long as Cleveland is supplying water to Westlake.” However,

this court determined that “the parties operat[ed] under a year-to-year agreement,

[and] a new agreement arose every year[.]” Westlake v. Cleveland, 8th Dist.

Cuyahoga No. 104282, 2017-Ohio-4064, ¶ 40. “[T]he initial contract term was ten

years followed by a series of self-renewing year-to-year contracts[.]” Id. at ¶ 61.

Thus, the prior panel in this case determined that each renewal of the annual

contract resulted in a new contract. As a corollary, this means that each year the

prior contract lapses at the end of the annual term. The obligations under the five-
year notice provision would exceed the remaining term of the contract. This

inconsistency is the basis for the conclusion that the annual renewal term is in

conflict with the five-year notice provision.

               Appellant further argues that the trial court erred in determining that

the “WSA is a fixed, one-year contract such that notice to terminate cannot exceed

one year.” Notwithstanding some window dressing, appellant is asking this court to

reject the reasoning of the first appellate opinion in this action. Appellant points to

no intervening decision or any other exception that would prevent the application of

the law-of-the-case doctrine. This court has already determined that its prior

opinions in this matter are law-of-the-case. Westlake II, 2018-Ohio-4797, at ¶ 27;

Westlake III, 2019-Ohio-1435, at ¶ 11.

               The trial court considered testimony from both Westlake and

Cleveland witnesses who testified concerning the practical requirements of

disconnecting Cleveland’s provision of water to the residents of Westlake. The court

below was focused on the reasonableness of the notice period. The record makes it

fairly clear that the trial court credited Cleveland’s witnesses. The trial court

specifically noted that it was “constrained” to set the notice period at no longer than

the end of the contract term period.

               Cleveland credibly argues that disconnecting Westlake’s water supply

from Cleveland’s will take much longer than the single year set by the trial court but

this court previously found that the five-year period of cancellation was an

“irreconcilable [conflict] to require that notice be given five years in advance of an
intent to terminate a one-year contract.”      Westlake I, 2017-Ohio-4064, ¶ 40.

Appellant may well be correct that a one-year cancellation period is impractical.

However, within the constraints of the original panel’s decision, the trial court is

correct that no longer period could have been set.

              Judgment affirmed.

      It is ordered that appellee 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.

EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, PRESIDING JUDGE

EILEEN T. GALLAGHER, J., and
EMANUELLA D. GROVES, J., CONCUR