As we march through our lives, folks shove documents under our nose for signature all the time.  In reality, we should carefully, very carefully, read them and consider their implications before signing any of them.

After all, there are charlatans and fraudsters standing eager to take advantage of us at every turn.  And even if other parties don’t start out as such, life events can put people in default or desperate straits – and then “desperate people do desperate things” as they say.

Still, certain documents bear significant additional risk or have a history of resulting in litigation or economic calamity for the signer.

Here, we take a serious look at six transactional documents that frequently result in legal or financial problems:

  • Personal guarantee for debts of another. Your daughter and son-in-law are buying a house, but have bad credit, or you are starting a business and need to guarantee the lease or franchise agreement to provide the fiscal backing for the undertaking.  A personal guarantee is fine and in some instances both called for and reasonable.  But think it through:

–>  Am I financially capable of fulfilling this guarantee if the underlying obligation falls into default?

–>  Would the other party accept a guarantee limited in time, amount or some other cutoff?  Or proceed with no guarantee?

–>  If there are multiple guarantors, would the lender be satisfied with me just paying my pro-rata share of the underlying debt?

–>  Is there some other way that the transaction can proceed without my guarantee?  Can someone offer security for the loan instead?

  • Non-Compete agreements. More and more employers are asking new employees to sign non-compete agreements or agreements wherein the employee agrees not to solicit customers, employees or vendors of the enterprise.  Employers are entirely within their rights to demand such agreements (the question of whether they are enforceable is addressed here).  But should an employee agree to restrict his future earnings potential and career path based upon this job opportunity?  If you really think it through, many time the answer is “No thanks, I’ll take a pass.”
  • Agreements with attorneys. We really hate to say this, but one of our clients was a seller under a land installment contract for the sale and purchase of real estate.  The buyer was an attorney.  After repeatedly falling into default, our client initiated a forfeiture action against the attorney.  He countered with a blistering series of arguments that were all untrue or frivolous.  Confronted with withering legal bills to prove their case, they quickly settled on relatively unfavorable terms.  Lesson learned.
  • Businesses with 50/50 ownership. It seems to make sense: Two partners throwing in equal shares of cash and effort to start a business; they should own it 50/50.  And in decision-making, decisions are 50/50, meaning it requires the consent of both parties to move forward with anything.  However, after years of addressing business disputes, it has become clear that these ownership structures – with no one in charge and everyone’s cooperation required to make decisions – are the source of operational and legal gridlock, resulting in painful, expensive and endless litigation.  I have even seen very difficult dispute resolution between former (or soon-to-be-former) spouses in a 50/50 ownership structure.  Indeed, getting into business with any third party can be the source of conflict, monetary losses and litigation.
  • Agreements you are not prepared to litigation to conclusion. If you think about it, in an instance in which you are investing time or money, you have two essential choices: Either be prepared to “eat” these investments by walking away or be prepared to litigate your claims to conclusion to defend your investment.  Is the person you are contracting with someone you are prepared to sue to enforce your rights?  Is the transaction structured and documented in such a way that you could prevail in that litigation? Will the cost of enforcing these agreements (or defending against a suit from the other party) of such magnitude that it will be worth litigating?
  • Indemnity and “hold harmless” clauses in leases and other contracts. It’s easy to sign a 50-page legal document that satisfies the major business terms you have negotiated.  But what about the fine print?  Buried deeply within a lease, loan documents, or asset purchase contracts can be all sorts of warranties, indemnities, and “hold harmless” provisions.  It seems simple that a seller or borrower should stand behind his obligations, but do you really want to give an open-ended contractual indemnity or warranty in this specific instance?  It is, as is addressed here, a potential blank check, open-ended access to your checkbook.

We are not saying that you should never sign any of the foregoing instruments.  What we are saying is that experientially these undertakings result in much conflict, legal fees and emotional angst, and should be undertaken only with great caution.

 

Tax bills just hit the mailboxes of Hamilton County taxpayers this week, and our phone is ringing with questions about our Ohio property tax valuation reduction services.

Sample calls:

Many of the cases have merit, and we are aiding those taxpayers in getting their taxes reduced.  Others, not so much.  Here’s a sample call:

Client: “Hey, I just got my tax bill and my valuation just went up by 40%.  Can I challenge it?”

Attorney: “It depends.  How does the Auditor’s new valuation of your property compare to the property’s true value?”

Client: “What do you mean ‘true value?'”

Attorney: “I mean, if you put the property on the market and offered it for sale, is the Auditor’s valuation lower than or higher than that value?.”

Client: “Oh, I would never sell it for that number.  I mean, my property is worth a whole lot more than that.”

Attorney:  “Then, don’t bring the case.  The Board of Revision compares the Auditor’s valuation to the true value and adjusts the valuation accordingly.  For single family homes, they use comparable sales of other properties.  Actual sales.”

Client: “But my valuation went up by 40%!  I mean there is no way my property increased in value 40% in three years.”

Attorney: “Well, that may be true, but how do we know the Auditor had not undervalued your property three years ago, and is just getting it right now?”

Client: “But the Auditor has my neighbor’s property valued for less than mine and the houses are the same.”

Attorney: “None of those things matter.  They really don’t.  The Board of Revision can’t even consider those things.  The only question is the comparison of your home’s true worth versus how the Auditor has assessed it and that comparison hinges off of comparable sales in your neighborhood.”

Some basic concepts:

The concepts are hard to swallow sometimes:

  1. The Board of Revision takes a fresh look at valuation when a  challenge is brought.
  2. How the Auditor’s current value compares to the true value of the property (typically as established by comparable sales in your neighborhood) is the only yardstick of value in the current cycle.
  3. The percentage increase of your property valuation from the prior cycle is completely irrelevant to that analysis.  Completely.
  4. The Auditor’s opinion of the value of your neighbor’s property also is completely irrelevant to that question
  5. Both data and arguments relating to those issues are inadmissible before the Board of Revision.  If you try to talk about those things at your hearing, you will be shot down by the panel.  Period.  Just don’t go there.
  6. The Auditor does not have to justify how he came up with his valuation of your property.  In fact, he is completely within his rights and authority under Ohio law to choose any value he wants for your property for absolutely no justification at all.  That’s simply how the law is written.  It is the statutory prerogative of the Auditor.  If you don’t like it, then YOU can run for Auditor.
  7. At a hearing, it is the taxpayer’s burden to prove the correct valuation. The Auditor does not have to prove anything.
  8. NOTE: The result of a Board of Revision challenge to your property’s valuation could well be an increase, rather than a reduction.  Be forewarned.
  9. From 2008 to 2015 — throughout the real estate recession (some would say depression) — it was relatively easy to get valuations reduced for many properties.  However, with the rising tide of real estate prices, those hoping for quick and easy savings should think twice.  They may well get a surprise — an increase rather than a reduction.
  10. If you don’t like the law, don’t be mad at us.  We are not legislators or judges.  We didn’t make these rules.

Free how-to video:

Here is a complete videotaped seminar presented by attorney Christopher P. Finney on property tax valuation reduction with step-by-step instructions.

More help:

For questions (other than those in the sample call, above!), feel free to contact Christopher P. Finney (513-943-6655).

Tonight, Hamilton County Auditor Dusty Rhodes and attorney Chris Finney presented to the Greater Cincinnati Real Estate Investors Association on the topic of “Property Tax Reduction.”

The presentation went in-depth in instructing property owners on the procedure to reduce the Auditor’s valuation of real property in Ohio to achieve tax savings.

We thank the County Auditor for appearing with us in this important public service!  And we thank REIA founder Vena Jones-Cox and REIA President Scott Ellsworth for making this presentation possible.

Property owners are reminded that March 31 of each year is the deadline in Ohio for tax challenges.  You may call Chris Finney (943-6655) for more information.

 

Tonight, Hamilton County Auditor Emerson “Dusty” Rhodes and Finney Law Firm attorney Chris Finney present on “Property Tax Reduction” at the Greater Cincinnati Real Estate Investors Association (REIA) at 6 PM at the Ramada Plaza at 11320 Chester Rd., Cincinnati, OH 45246 on Thursday, January 4 at 6 PM.

A dinner is served beforehand at 5:30 PM.

The meeting is open for free to REIA members and first-time attendees can obtain a free guest pass here.  REIA’s program announcement is here.  REIA’s web site is here.

Please join us!

 

We have a critical federal income tax issue of note for consideration by our clients:

>>> You may benefit from pre-paying your 2017 real estate/property tax bill(s) before year’s end.

>>> County Treasurers in Hamilton County, Butler County, Clermont County and Warren County have confirmed that you can determine and pay your entire 2018 real estate tax liability (both halves) before December 31, 2017.

  1. The just-passed federal tax bill caps deductibility of combined state and local income and property taxes at $10,000 per individual or married couple (the cap is the same regardless) for tax year 2018 and going forward, but that cap does not apply in 2017.
  2. Thus, if your state and local income and real estate tax liability is expected to exceed $10,000 in 2018, you may strongly benefit from pre-paying property taxes due in 2018 right now.
  3. We have checked with Hamilton County, Clermont County, Butler County and Warren County.  Each County allows the prepayment of your entire 2018 property tax bills (technically the 2017 bills payable in 2018) before year’s end.
  4. That means you may have the ability to pre-pay both halves before December 31, 2017 and obtain that deduction for the 2017 tax year.
  5. The 2017 tax year property values have only been calculated for Hamilton County, and those values may be ascertained by going to this link.
  6. For those remaining counties, your 2017 tax year payment may be based on the amount you paid for the 2016 tax year payment.
  7. For more information on how to pay, please click on the relevant link(s) below.

In Ohio:

  • For Hamilton County  … Click Here and Here
  • For Clermont County … Click Here and Here
  • For Warren County … Click Here and Here
  • For Butler County … Click Here, Here, and Here

In Kentucky:

  • Property taxes are due in September (City) and October (County) and therefore they cannot be pre-paid.

Your specific situation may differ.  If you are subject to an Alternative Minimum Tax, for example, this pre-payment may not benefit you.

For more information on this and other federal income tax questions, contact Isaac T. Heintz at (513) 943-6654 or Eli Kraft-Jacobs at (513)797-2853.

An issue that manifests itself in any number of scenarios is the seemingly odd question: Can a seller contract to sell something that he does not own.

Somewhat surprisingly, the answer can be “yes.”

Hypothetical sale of stock

Let’s take a theoretical situation in which a seller promises to sell to a buyer 1,000 shares of the Procter & Gamble Corporation for $100 per share on the 2nd of January, 2018 (a date that as of this writing has not yet come), but the seller does not own any Procter and Gamble at the time of making such agreement.  Is that contract enforceable against the buyer?  As against the seller?

Sure.  If the seller does not own 1,000 shares of Procter & Gamble Corporation at the time of the contract, he had better make arrangements to get that stock under his ownership or to find a party who does own those shares who will fulfill the seller’s promises.

OK, but what about real property?

But come on, that’s perfectly fine as to a publicly-traded stock, but what about property that is entirely unique, not replaceable with “equal or like-kind” property, and under the control of a third party?

Well, the same principle applies.  If the seller is going to make a binding promise to sell that asset, and he wants to avoid being sued for breach of contract, he had better figure out how to either get title to the property before the promised closing date, or otherwise arrange for the cooperation of the property owner.

The basis for fraud?

The story is as old as the bridge.  A gullible tourist goes to New York City and a local shyster sells them the Brooklyn Bridge.  The seller does not own the bridge at the time of the contract, so it’s an enforceable contract, right?

Well, in that classic case, and in the case of other instances of fraud, selling property that the seller does not own could well be a badge of fraud.  If he knew at the time of contracting that he did not have title, and could not obtain title to the property in question, then the promise to sell that asset clearly would be fraud.

What if the seller claims that he thought he would be able to obtain the asset before the promised closing date, but was just unsuccessful.  Depending on his intentions, and the affirmative representations made by seller in conjunction with the sale, the failure of performance could be simple breach of contract, or it could be actionable fraud.

The peril for the seller

The peril for the seller who does not own the asset he promises to sell is that in order to avoid claims both for breach of contract and fraud, he will need to “pay the price” to get that asset into his name before the date of his performance.  In the case of Procter and Gamble Stock, if the price on the NYSE rises of $150 per share before the first of the year, he may just need to take a loss at $50 per share to assure fulfillment of his contractual obligations.  In the case of unique property owned or controlled by a third party, the seller may be in great peril as he will be under the mercy of that seller to “name his price” and terms to transfer the asset to the seller who has promised it any a date certain to a certain buyer.

Conclusion

This concept comes into play in various scenarios.  And the first instinct of parties — and attorneys — is to think you can’t promise to sell that which you don’t own.  A seller can.  But he should carefully consider the consequences of that decision.

Attorney Casey A. Taylor

 

We have previously written on the different types of deeds (Real Estate 101: Different Types of Deeds in Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana), as well as how costly it can be to breach your covenants under a general warranty deed (Real Estate 101: Breach of General Warranty Covenants Can Be Costly Mistake).  Perhaps the most common breach occurs when you transfer property that is encumbered in some way, such as by an easement or lien, and that easement or lien is not excepted from the deed. However, one of the less discussed components of a general warranty deed is the covenant to defend. Whether you are the grantor or grantee with respect to a general warranty deed, you should be aware of when this duty arises, and what it means, in order to protect yourself, your rights, and your checkbook.

Statutory duty to defend in “short form” general warranty deeds

R.C. 5302.06 states:

In a conveyance of real estate, or any interest therein, the words “general warranty covenants” have the full force, meaning, and effect of the following words: “The grantor covenants with the grantee, his heirs, assigns, and successors, that he is lawfully seized in fee simple of the granted premises; that they are free from all encumbrances; that he has good right to sell and convey the same, and that he does warrant and will defend the same to the grantee and his heirs, assigns, and successors, forever, against the lawful claims and demands of all persons.

(Emphasis added). This means that a grantor who conveys property under a general warranty deed promises to defend the grantee and the grantee’s title against all “lawful claims and demands” of others.

What are “lawful claims and demands”?

Unfortunately, Ohio law does not provide much guidance as to what “lawful claims and demands” encompasses – this is not a defined term under the statute, nor have the courts ventured to define it in this context. A lawsuit is generally defined to be “the lawful demand of one’s right.” Ludlow’s Heirs v. Culbertson Park, 4 OHIO 5 (1829).

Additionally, in various contexts, Ohio courts have provided the following guidance as to each of the terms separately:

  • State ex rel. Grant v. Brown, 39 Ohio St. 2d 112, 116 (1974) (“To say of an act that it is ‘lawful’ implies that it is authorized, sanctioned, or at any rate not forbidden, by law.”);
  • La Fon v. City Nat’l Bank & Trust Co., 3 Ohio App. 3d 221, 223 (10th Dist. 1981) (adopting the definition of “claim” as “to assert . . . to state; to urge; to insist . . . a right or title.”);
  • Crozier, v. First National Bank of Akron, 9th Dist. Summit No. 10140, 1981 Ohio App. LEXIS 13717, *6-7 (defining “claim” as “a ‘broad comprehensive word’ that includes ‘an assertion’ and ‘a cause of suit or cause of action.’”); and
  • Eighth Floor Promotions v. Cincinnati Ins. Cos., 3d Dist. Mercer No. 10-15-19, 2016-Ohio-7259, ¶ 26 (“‘Demand’ is defined as ‘the assertion of a legal right or procedural right.”).

Thus, read collectively, a “lawful claim or demand” can be defined as “an authorized or unforbidden assertion of a right.”

Do we first have to ascertain is a “claim or demand” is lawful before duty to defend arises?

However, courts have found that the term “lawful” does not require the “claim or demand” to be meritorious before the duty to defend is triggered since this would essentially render the covenant meaningless. See Sediqe v. I Make the Weather Prods., 6th Dist. Lucas No. L-15-1250, 2016-Ohio-4902, ¶ 29 (holding that the claim or demand as it relates to the underlying duty, e.g., that the property is not free from encumbrances as warranted, need not be proven or successful before the duty arises, as “such a rule would render the duty to defend ineffective and eliminate the grantor’s right to control the defense against the claim.”). Thus, for example, a party claiming to have a lien on conveyed property need not prove the validity of their lien before the grantor’s duty to defend the grantee against such claim arises. The idea is that the grantor will step in before it gets to that point in order to defend the grantee’s title against such claims.

Does a suit have to be filed to trigger a duty to defend?

Indeed, the party asserting the claim likely isn’t even required to file suit to trigger the grantor and grantee’s respective rights and obligations under the general warranty deed. As discussed (Here), the Court in Hollon v. Abner, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C960182, 1997 Ohio App. LEXIS 3814 (Aug. 29, 1997) did not require that the party asserting the adverse, “lawful claim or demand” bring suit before the grantor’s duties under the general warranty deed arose. In fact, the Court awarded the grantee attorney’s fees as damages in a suit initiated by the grantee because the grantee would not have incurred those fees had the grantor lived up to his obligations under the general warranty deed.

Conclusion

If you are a grantee under a general warranty deed and someone asserts a claim against your property (even if they haven’t yet filed suit), the first step to getting your grantor to defend your title as warranted is by informing the grantor that someone is asserting such a claim. As a grantor, if you receive notice that someone is asserting a claim against property that you conveyed by general warranty deed, proven or not, you will want to step up sooner rather than later. A delay in honoring your covenant to defend likely only exacerbates your grantee’s attorney’s fees (especially if your grantee has to file suit to defend his or her own title), for which you will ultimately be responsible.

Finney Law Firm and attorney Christopher Finney are proud to list FC Cincinnati soccer club among their prominent clients.

The Cincinnati Enquirer today, for the second time, addressed this representation that reflects the depth of our real estate practice for assistance with their new Major League Soccer stadium planned for Cincinnati or northern Kentucky.

Read more here.

What due diligence steps should a tenant undertake with respect to a commercial property before signing a lease?

Due diligence customary in a commercial real property purchase

Step back and consider for a moment that when we buy a piece of real property — for our home or for our business — it is prudent and customary by both the buyer and the lender to conduct due diligence investigations of the property:

  • title,
  • survey,
  • physical inspections of the structure and mechanical systems,
  • environmental, and
  • checks of governmental records for notices of liens for violations, zoning, traffic engineering, etc.

The list can seem endless.

Isn’t a commercial lease low-risk for the tenant?

But when simply signing a lease for a term of years, why should the tenant be concerned with these things?  After all, his upfront cash may not be significant (relative to a purchase) and if things don’t work out, the tenant can just leave, right?

Well, sometimes that is the case.  The cost and time needed for due diligence would outweigh the risk the tenant is undertaking by simply signing the lease and moving in.  If so, then by all means, proceed.

But, wait, consider this!

But consider these countervailing factors:

  • Tenant is spending significant monies on tenant buildout costs.
  • Tenant is spending significant monies to move, including moving of furniture, fixtures and equipment, the installation of computer and phone systems, and printing of letterhead, envelopes and business cards.
  • The disruption of your business arising from a move (and if things don’t work out a second move).
  • The image you are building at the new location.  What will be lost if a second move is necessary?  Think of a restaurant or bar, retail store,  or bank branch.  The location is intricately tied to a business’s identity in the mind of the consumer.  It may not be easy to just pick up and move.

The reality is that if the tenant does not undertake the kinds of due diligence implemented for a property purchase, he could “lose” the property in many of the same ways as in a purchase — i.e., he could lose the out-of-pocket costs associated with the activities noted above and have the inconvenience and loss to reputation by relocating to a second location.

The types of risk potentially borne by a tenant that due diligence could avoid

Indeed, in certain circumstances the tenant could be obligated to pay rent throughout the lease term, but the property cannot be occupied for its intended purpose.  (Consider a situation where the property cannot be occupied but where the landlord does not appear technically in default of his obligations under the lease.)

  • When signing a significant lease for property, a title examination, possibly a survey, and assuring lender buy-in of the lease can be absolutely critical.
  • If, for example, the landlord has a mortgage against the property, and the mortgage is in default, that lender legally can extinguish a later–signed lease concurrent with the foreclosure.
    • To avoid this risk, one asks a landlord to execute a subordination, non–disturbance and attornment agreement agreeing that so long as tenant makes prompt and full payment of rent (to the landlord or– when in default of the mortgage — to the lender), the lender or a successor buyer will honor the lease.
    • A tenant’s policy of title insurance can be issued, transferring that risk to a title insurer.
  • If the property does not comply with the regulatory requirements, zoning for example, of the jurisdiction in which the property is located, the tenant could be required to make extensive property modifications or to move.
  • If the property has environmental problems, the cost of compliance — in an unlimited manner — could be transferred to the tenant.
  • If the property has structural problems or the HVAC system is old and inoperable, depending on the lease language (shifting repairs and replacement of the HVAC to the tenant), the burden of fixing the problem could fall to the tenant.

Conclusion

Many times tenants will assume these risks in smaller leases.  Negotiating with the landlord’s lender and conducting full-scale inspections and other due diligence may just not be practical.

But a tenant in a commercial setting should carefully consider the risk-benefit to foregoing certain due diligence steps to prudently protect their investment in their new premises.

Call Isaac Heintz (513-943-6654) or Eli Krafte-Jacobs (513-797-2853) to address your commercial leasing questions.

 

In a commercial lease than can run 15 to 25 pages (single spaced) or more, there can be trips and traps for both landlord and tenant.  Thus, both should carefully consider not just the major financial and business terms, but even “throw away” or boilerplate provisions.  In the alternative, each party should carefully perform his due diligence before undertaking lease obligations.

We recently represented a tenant in a commercial lease in which the lease — as is common in landlord-written leases — obligated the tenant to “comply with all laws throughout the term of the lease.”

In this instance, our client was a medical user.  The zoning jurisdiction of the property differentiated minimum parking requirements for medical office uses versus general office uses.  The consequence of that differentiation for our medical office client was that the space simply would not comply with zoning requirements for our client’s use.

In other words, he could not “comply with all laws.”

The problem was complicated and compounded because (a) the landlord applied for the building permit on which he represented to the zoning authority that the premises would be “general office” uses and (b) $75,000 in buildout work had been completed before the non-compliance was discovered.  Further, the landlord originally solicited tenant to occupy the premises and at least implicitly represented that it would comply with zoning requirements for the tenant’s use.

The zoning authority simply would not permit the occupancy contemplated by the lease.

In this circumstance, is the tenant in breach and therefore responsible for the tenant build-out costs and rent payments until the premises can be re-rented?  Is the landlord in breach of the lease and responsible for the damages the tenant suffered because he could not timely occupy the premises?

It candidly was vague.  There was no clear answer, and the problem was significant for the client and the landlord.  Ultimately, the parties agreed upon a fair settlement of the issues.

But the situation highlighted the critical importance of each and every provision of the lease, even “throw away” provisions.