A federal district judge has ruled a group of property owners in Columbus may collect rent based on the price of gold as part of a century-old agreement. The judge's ruling means rent paid by the company that leases the Commerce Building on East Gay Street could increase from 6 thousand to nearly 350 thousand dollars per year. At issue is the original 1919 lease, which included a so-called "gold clause," a provision common at the time that linked rent to the price of gold to account for inflation. Commonwealth Investments, the company paying the 6 thousand dollar annual rent, argued that a 1977 law rendered any previous gold clauses invalid. The ruling affects rent owed since August 2014, when the property owners sued.
Downtown Building Owners May Continue Collecting Rent Based On Gold Prices

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