Summary
Judgment affirmed. Banke, P. J., and Pope, J., concur.
Summary
Judgment affirmed. Banke, P. J., and Pope, J., concur.
Text
Gershon, Olim, Katz & Loeb, Max Olim, for appellant.
Age, Ltd. brought a dispossessory action against Scott Price d/b/a United Fitness Center. Walter Kwon was added as a third party defendant. After a bench trial the court found in favor of Age, Ltd. for $25,961.57 for past due rents and attorney fees under the lease contract and found Kwon liable to Price for that sum, with an additional award of attorney fees in Price's favor against Kwon based on bad faith. Price alone appeals from the judgment in favor of Age, Ltd.
Appellant and appellee executed a lease contract in November 1983 whereby appellant leased premises for his exercise business. In December 1985 appellant sold his exercise business to Kwon. Although appellant and Kwon executed an assignment of the lease, it is uncontroverted that Kwon failed to execute a separate assignment presented to him by appellee. Kwon apparently vacated the leased premises in July 1986 and paid no rent thereafter. On August 5, 1986, appellee notified appellant of his default under the contract terms for failure to pay rent, and on August 7 appellee filed the subject dispossessory.
1. Appellant contends the trial court erred by not finding that appellee failed to comply with the condition precedent in Section 12.1 of the lease contract. That provision states "[i]t is mutually agreed that in the event [appellant] shall default in the payment of rent, . . . or other sums herein reserved when due or defaults in the delivery to [appellee of certain reports]; or, unless otherwise provided in this Lease, [appellant] shall be in default in performing any of the terms or provisions of this Lease other than those above in this Section 13.1 [sic] and fails to cure such default within ten (10) days after written notice of default from [appellee]; or [upon appellant's bankruptcy or other matters not in issue here]; then, and in any of said events, [appellee] has the following options: (i) [appellee] may, during the continuance of such default or condition, immediately terminate this Lease upon written notice to [appellant], whereupon this Lease shall end." (Emphasis supplied.) Appellant argues that he was entitled to written notice ten days after he failed to cure the default, i.e., failure to pay the rent, and thus the written notice provided by appellee to him two days before filing the dispossessory warrant failed to meet the contractual conditions precedent.
" 'The construction of a contract is a question of law for the court.' OCGA
2. Appellant contends the trial court erred by finding he was obligated to pay appellee those rents accruing after August 5, 1986, the date appellee terminated the lease, until December 5, 1986, the date appellee assumed possession of the lease premises. Appellant relies on Section 12.1 (i) of the lease, which provides that "[u]pon such termination [of the lease contract] by [appellee], [appellant] will at once peaceably surrender possession of the Demised Premises to [appellee] and remove all of [appellant's] effects therefrom, and [appellee] may forthwith reenter the Demised Premises and repossess himself thereof and remove all persons and effects therefrom, using such force as may be necessary without being guilty of trespass, forcible entry or other tort and take such other action or actions as [appellee], in its discretion, deems necessary to secure, preserve and protect the Demised Premises." Appellant argues that under this language, appellee was entitled to take possession of the premises as of the date of termination without instituting any dispossessory proceedings, and thus appellant was not responsible for the rent during the four months it took appellee to process its dispossessory proceedings.
We do not agree with appellant that appellee could not institute dispossessory proceedings under OCGA
Appellant contends there was evidence that the leased premises had been vacated by Kwon by July 1986. Even if appellant's version of the facts were correct in Veazey v. Sinclair Refining Co.,
3. We find no merit in appellant's contention that the trial court erred by awarding appellee the rent installments which accrued after appellee filed the dispossessory warrant. Appellant cites Nickerson v. Candler Bldg.,
4. Appellant asserts error in the trial court's failure to admit evidence regarding a collateral agreement between him and appellee. The trial court granted appellee's motion in limine prohibiting reference to that agreement on the basis that the evidence was barred by the parol evidence rule. The evidence appellant sought to introduce consisted of a letter appellant wrote appellee in March 1985 and appellant's testimony regarding the damages he suffered as a result of appellee's breach of the collateral agreement. The March 1985 letter stated that at the time the initial lease contract was executed in January 1984, appellant entered the lease with "the full understanding that my [appellant's] premises were to be remodeled before the increase in rent began in February of '85. . . . I was assured by February 1985, my facility would be remodeled and you have already redone one location and started on another. This is hurting my sales. . . ."
The trial court held that appellant's evidence contradicted the language in Section 6.2 of the lease contract, which provided that "[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this Lease, [appellee] shall not be obligated to perform any maintenance or to make any repairs, modifications or replacements of any kind upon the Demised Premises or to or upon any equipment, facilities, systems or fixtures therein contained." "Under OCGA
Welch, Blender & Goodman, Michael D. Goodman, W. Jason Uchitel, for appellees.
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