Thiel's Wheels, Inc. v. State Route 30, Ltd.
2022 Ohio 2093
Ohio Ct. App.2022Background
- Thiel's Wheels sold its Harley-Davidson dealership assets to State Route 30, Ltd. under an Asset Purchase Agreement (closing Aug 2018) that included paragraph 6: a three‑year, $50,000/year racing sponsorship (paid monthly) and a five‑year rent‑free lease of the 'race shop' during the sponsorship period.
- Thiel's sued (breach of contract, promissory estoppel) after Route 30 stopped making sponsorship payments; Route 30 counterclaimed for breach and unjust enrichment. Thiel's also filed a separate action to recover a metal lathe that Route 30 retained; the cases were consolidated.
- At trial before a magistrate, parties stipulated Route 30 made five monthly sponsorship payments (total $20,833.35) and Thiel's occupied the race shop 17 months. The magistrate found Route 30 breached and retained the lathe wrongfully; awarded Thiel's damages.
- The trial court overruled Route 30's objections, adopted the magistrate's decision, entered judgment for breach of contract in favor of Thiel's ($129,166.65) plus $2,950 for the lathe, and dismissed Route 30's counterclaims.
- Route 30 appealed, arguing (1) the sponsorship clause was unenforceable (illusory / lack of consideration) or that Thiel's failed to perform; and (2) the lathe was part of the sold assets so Route 30 did not wrongfully retain it.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enforceability and breach of the paragraph 6 'Racing Sponsorship' (consideration and performance) | Sponsorship was bargained consideration integral to the sale; Route 30 failed to make required monthly payments, so Thiel's is owed damages | Clause is illusory (Thiel's had no binding obligations; Thiel's also failed to acknowledge or promote Route 30 as sponsor), so no enforceable obligation or Route 30 is excused | Court: Sponsorship clause is supported by consideration and not illusory; record supports finding Route 30 breached by failing to make payments after Dec 2018; judgment for Thiel's affirmed (sponsorship damages awarded) |
| Ownership of the metal lathe (included in sale or excluded) | Lathe was crossed out on the Bill of Sale asset list (Exhibit A) and the math of the list shows the lathe's exclusion; Thiel's entitled to $2,950 | Lathe is machinery and falls within FF&E/machinery definitions in the sale, so it was included in the sale and Route 30 did not breach | Court: Evidence (asset list markings, testimony, arithmetic reconciliation) supports lathe was excluded from sale; award of $2,950 for lathe affirmed |
Key Cases Cited
- Kostelnik v. Helper, 96 Ohio St.3d 1 (contract elements and general contract law)
- Lutz v. Chesapeake Appalachia, L.L.C., 148 Ohio St.3d 524 (plain‑meaning rule for contract interpretation)
- Skivolocki v. E. Ohio Gas Co., 38 Ohio St.2d 244 (contract interpretation principles)
- Beverage Holdings, L.L.C. v. 5701 Lombardo, L.L.C., 159 Ohio St.3d 194 (if contract language is plain and unambiguous, enforce as written)
- Alexander v. Buckeye Pipe Line Co., 53 Ohio St.2d 241 (ordinary meaning for common words in contracts)
- Williams v. Ormsby, 131 Ohio St.3d 427 (consideration defined as detriment to promisee or benefit to promisor)
