Elderberry of Weber City, LLC v. Living Centers-Southeast, Inc. ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                               PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 13-2176
    ELDERBERRY OF WEBER CITY, LLC, a Virginia limited liability
    company,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    LIVING CENTERS – SOUTHEAST, INCORPORATED, a North Carolina
    corporation; FMSC WEBER CITY OPERATING COMPANY, LLC, a
    Delaware limited liability company; CONTINIUMCARE OF WEBER
    CITY, LLC, a Florida limited liability company; MARINER HEALTH
    CARE, INCORPORATED, a Delaware corporation,
    Defendants - Appellants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western
    District of Virginia, at Lynchburg.     Norman K. Moon, Senior
    District Judge. (6:12-cv-00052-NKM-RSB)
    Argued:   January 28, 2015                 Decided:   July 21, 2015
    Before MOTZ, GREGORY, and WYNN, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded with instructions
    by published opinion. Judge Gregory wrote the opinion, in which
    Judge Motz and Judge Wynn joined.
    ARGUED:    James F. Segroves, HOOPER, LUNDY & BOOKMAN, PC,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellants. James Strother Crockett, Jr.,
    SPILMAN THOMAS & BATTLE, PLLC, Charleston, West Virginia, for
    Appellee.     ON BRIEF: Lori D. Thompson, LECLAIRRYAN, PC,
    Roanoke,   Virginia,  for   Appellants.    Travis  A.   Knobbe,
    M. Mallory Mantiply, SPILMAN THOMAS & BATTLE, PLLC, Roanoke,
    Virginia, for Appellee.
    GREGORY, Circuit Judge:
    Plaintiff-appellee           Elderberry        of      Weber     City,      LLC
    (“Elderberry”) filed this civil action in the Western District of
    Virginia alleging breach of a lease for a skilled nursing facility
    against defendants-appellants Living Centers – Southeast, Inc.
    (“Living    Centers”),     FMSC    Weber     City    Operating       Company,    LLC
    (“FMSC”),    and   ContiniumCare      of    Weber    City    (“Continium”),      and
    breach of a guaranty contract against defendant-appellant Mariner
    Health    Care,    Inc.   (“Mariner”).        Separately,      in    the   Northern
    District of Georgia, Mariner filed a declaratory judgment action
    against     Elderberry,     seeking    a     declaration      that    it   had   no
    obligations under the guaranty.            The two actions were consolidated
    in the Western District of Virginia.                The district court denied
    the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment but held that the
    guaranty was enforceable against Mariner. Following a bench trial,
    the district court entered judgment in favor of Elderberry on all
    counts, and found the appellants jointly and severally liable for
    accrued and future damages amounting to $2,742,029.50, plus pre-
    and post-judgment interest at the rate of 0.13%.                      Because the
    district court erred in awarding damages that accrued after the
    termination of the lease, we vacate in part and remand for the
    district court to recalculate damages for the appropriate time
    period.
    2
    I.
    At the center of this lease and contract dispute is a skilled
    nursing facility located in Weber City, Virginia.               Elderberry
    leased the facility to Living Centers in November 2000 for a 10-
    year term.     Initially, Living Centers was not permitted to assign
    the   lease    without   prior   written   permission   from   Elderberry.
    However, in 2006, the lease was amended to allow Living Centers to
    assign the lease to FMSC or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates
    without prior approval from Elderberry so long as Living Centers
    first obtained a guaranty from Mariner. 1        In accordance with the
    amendment, the lease reset for a new 10-year term commencing at
    the completion of certain construction and improvements to the
    facility, and thus a new lease expiration date was set for April
    2017.     The required guaranty was attached as Exhibit E to the lease
    amendment, and was signed by then Executive Vice President and
    Chief Financial Officer of Mariner, Boyd P. Gentry.
    On January 18, 2007, Living Centers assigned the lease to
    FMSC.     FMSC, in turn, reassigned it to Continium in November 2011. 2
    In the midst of the assignments and amendments, the facility was
    1Living Centers is a wholly owned subsidiary of Mariner,
    while FMSC is 75% owned by Mariner through subsidiaries.
    2Continium is owned and controlled by Avi Klein who was at
    the time a manager of FMSC.
    3
    subject to numerous problems, including being listed as a “Special
    Focus Facility,” 3 nonpayment of utility vendors, and interruptions
    of gas and phone service.
    Continium    ceased     making     rent    payments    after     March    2012.
    Although   Elderberry        and    Continium        thereafter     attempted    to
    negotiate rent reductions, Continium indicated in May 2012 that it
    was no longer able to make rent payments.                Elderberry’s attempts
    to locate a new tenant were initially unsuccessful because of,
    among other problems, the facility’s placement on the Special Focus
    Facility list.
    Eventually,       Elderberry      hired    Smith/Packett       Med-Com,    LLC
    (“Smith/Packett”)       to    locate     a     new    tenant,     conduct      lease
    negotiations, and provide asset management services.                      The two
    entities signed an August 8, 2012 asset management agreement, under
    which Elderberry agreed to pay Smith/Packett a $150,000 signing
    fee for securing a new tenant, a $375,000 value fee on June 1,
    2015, so long as the new tenant was not then in default under the
    new lease, and a monthly management fee of 10% of the new tenant’s
    rent payable.
    Subsequent to signing the asset management agreement, on
    August   15,   2015,    Elderberry      sent    Living     Centers,    Continium,
    3 Special Focus Facilities are “subject to more frequent
    health and safety inspections.” J.A. 781.
    4
    Mariner, and their attorneys at the Bernstein Law Firm a letter
    demanding immediate payment of past due rent. The letter indicated
    that if the payments were not made, Elderberry would “be entitled
    to proceed with pursuit of its remedies under the Lease, including,
    but not limited to, seeking damages in court, termination of the
    Lease, and/or taking possession of the Property.”               J.A. 201-02.
    The requested past due rent payments were not made.                Rather, on
    August 17, 2012, Continium discharged the remaining residents and
    abandoned the facility.
    On August 24, 2012, Elderberry mailed the appellants a letter
    bearing the subject line, “LEASE TERMINATION NOTICE.”               J.A. 607.
    The letter stated:     “this letter shall serve as notice that the
    Lease is hereby terminated, effective 12:00 midnight EST on August
    24, 2012.    [Elderberry] reserves all rights and remedies related
    to Tenant’s default whether under the Lease, at law or in equity.”
    J.A. 607.
    Elderberry   rehabilitated         the   nursing     facility       with
    Smith/Packett’s help and eventually entered into a new lease with
    Nova   Healthcare   Group,   LLC     (“Nova”)   for   a   new   10-year    term
    beginning    January   1,    2013.        During   the    course   of     lease
    negotiations, Nova secured from Elderberry a renovation budget and
    working capital totaling $1.25 million.
    One week after Elderberry sent the termination letter to the
    appellants, Mariner filed suit against Elderberry in the Northern
    5
    District of Georgia, seeking a declaration that the guaranty was
    unenforceable.    Thereafter, Elderberry filed a breach of lease and
    breach of contract action against the appellants in the Western
    District of Virginia.    Elderberry sought damages for accrued and
    future rent, as well as “costs, fees and expenses incurred by
    Elderberry to preserve and rehabilitate the property; fees and
    expenses incurred by Elderberry in hiring [Smith/Packett] . . . to
    locate a replacement tenant; sums expended by Elderberry to pay
    utilities,   insurance   premiums,       and   real   property   taxes;   and
    attorney’s fees and expenses.”       J.A. 7.      This consolidated civil
    action followed.
    The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment on
    Elderberry’s breach of lease and breach of contract claims, and on
    Mariner’s claim that the guaranty issued in connection with the
    lease assignments to FMSC and Continium was void under the Georgia
    statute of frauds. Although the district court denied both summary
    judgment motions, it held that the guaranty was valid.            After the
    subsequent bench trial, the district court ruled in favor of
    Elderberry on all claims, and concluded that Elderberry is entitled
    to damages in the amount of $2,742,029.50, plus pre- and post-
    judgment interest at the rate of 0.13%.         J.A. 803-06.     The damages
    award includes:
    (1) unpaid rent for the period from April 2012 through
    August 2012 . . . ; (2) unpaid rent from the period
    September 2012 though February 2013 . . . ; (3) a rent
    6
    shortfall from March 2013 though April 2017; (4) unpaid
    taxes, utilities, and insurance premiums for the period
    from August 2012 through February 2013 . . . ; (5)
    maintenance fees paid during that same period . . . ;
    (6)   payments  for   architectural    and  construction
    services. . . to bring the Facility up to the fire code
    standards required by the fire marshal; (7). . . payments
    to Nova [for renovations and working capital] . . . ;
    (8) [the signing fee to Smith/Packett] . . . ; and (9)
    [the value fee to Smith/Packett].
    J.A. 793 (footnote omitted).
    The appellants timely appealed.
    II.
    Our review of a district court’s grant of summary judgment is
    de novo.     French v. Assurance Co. of Am., 
    448 F.3d 693
    , 700 (4th
    Cir. 2006).     “Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no
    genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.”        
    Id.
             And, “[w]e review a district
    court’s    judgment    entered   after       a   bench   trial   under   a   ‘mixed
    standard of review.’      Under this standard, we review the district
    court’s findings of fact for clear error and conclusions of law de
    novo.”    Perez v. Montaire Farms, Inc., 
    650 F.3d 350
    , 363 (4th Cir.
    2011) (citation omitted).         Our review of the district court’s
    conclusions of law extends to its interpretations of written
    contracts.       See    FindWhere    Holdings,           Inc.    v.   Sys.   Env’t
    Optimization, LLC, 
    626 F.3d 752
    , 755 (4th Cir. 2010).
    7
    The appellants make three arguments.   First, they argue that
    the district court erred in awarding damages that accrued after
    Elderberry terminated the Lease. 4     Second,   they   contend that
    Virginia law precludes awards for speculative damages, and thus
    the district court’s inclusion of the $375,000 value fee in the
    damage award was erroneous.   Finally, the appellants challenge the
    district court’s legal conclusion that the guaranty satisfies the
    Georgia statute of frauds.
    III.
    The lease states, and the parties agree, that it is governed
    by Virginia law.   We thus look to Virginia law to construe the
    lease.   In doing so, we consider two broad categories of damages
    flowing from the lease:   rent, and non-rent damages.
    A.
    We first address what portion of accrued or future rent
    Elderberry is entitled to receive as part of its damages award.
    This Circuit has previously observed that
    when a tenant abandons leased property during the term,
    the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia has held that
    the landlord is permitted, at his option, either (1) to
    refuse to accept the tenant’s surrender, do nothing and
    sue for accrued rents, or (2) to re-enter the premises
    and accept the tenant’s surrender, thereby terminating
    4 “[Appellants] concede that Living Centers is liable for
    unpaid rent for the period from April 2012 though August 24, 2012.”
    J.A. 794 n.14.
    8
    the lease and releasing          the     tenant   from   further
    liability on the lease.
    tenBraak v. Waffle Shops, Inc., 
    542 F.2d 919
    , 924 (4th Cir. 1976)
    (footnote omitted) (citing Crowder v. Virginian Bank of Commerce,
    
    103 S.E. 578
     (Va. 1920)).   In other words, when a tenant abandons
    a lease, a landlord may sue for rent due on the balance of the
    lease term only if the landlord does not terminate the lease.           See
    id.; Crowder, 103 S.E. at 579.   The choice belongs to the landlord.
    Crowder, 103 S.E. at 579 (“The landlord [is] under no obligation
    to resume possession of the premises which ha[ve] been wrongfully
    abandoned, and ha[s] the right to refuse such possession and to
    hold the tenant liable under the contract.”).
    Although Virginia law “thus does not provide for recovery of
    future damages for the lessor’s losses arising from the abandonment
    of a contract of lease, . . . the parties are not barred from
    providing for such a recovery through forfeiture provisions in the
    lease.”   tenBraak, 
    542 F.2d at 924-25
    .        Any such provisions “must
    be strictly construed.”   
    Id. at 925
    .       As the Virginia Supreme Court
    has stated, “[t]he prevailing rule is that parties to a contract
    may provide the remedy that will be available to them in case a
    breach occurs so long as the remedy provided is not contrary to
    the law or against public policy.”      Bender-Miller Co. v. Thomwood
    Farms, Inc., 
    179 S.E.2d 636
    , 638 (Va. 1971).             And “the remedy
    provided will be exclusive of other possible remedies only where
    9
    the language employed in the contract clearly shows an intent that
    the remedy be exclusive.”    
    Id.
        Additionally, “the intent of the
    parties as expressed in their contract controls,” and “[i]t is the
    court’s responsibility to determine the intent of the parties from
    the language they employ.”   
    Id. at 639
    .
    Here, the relevant provision of the lease, ¶ 7(3), reads as
    follows:
    7.    RIGHTS IN DEFAULT.
    . . . .
    (3) The remedies of the Lessor for any Default by
    the Lessee shall include the following:
    (a) Upon any Default by the Lessee and at any
    time thereafter, the Lessor may give written notice to
    the Lessee that the Lessor elects to terminate this Lease
    upon a specific date not less than thirty (30) days after
    mailing of such notice.      This Lease shall then be
    terminated on the date so specified.
    (b) Upon an uncured Default by the Lessee,
    and notice from the Lessor, the Lessor may reenter the
    and resume possession of the Property. The Lessor, at
    the Lessor’s option, may remove persons and property
    from the Property and may store the property in a public
    warehouse or elsewhere at the expense or for the account
    of the Lessee without liability for any damage on such
    removal. The Lessor’s reentry shall not be deemed either
    an acceptance or a surrender of this Lease or a
    termination thereof.    It is expressly understood and
    agreed that in the event of the reentry by the Lessor by
    reason of a default of the Lessee, the Lessee shall
    nevertheless remain liable for the Rent and also for the
    taxes and insurance premiums payable by the Lessee as
    provided in this Lease, for the balance of the term
    herein originally demised.
    . . . .
    (d) The rights given to the Lessor herein are
    in addition to any rights which may be given to the
    Lessor by statute or otherwise.
    10
    J.A. 172.     Elderberry urges us to conclude that its rights under
    the above provision are cumulative and that it thus had the right
    to simultaneously (1) reenter and relet the facility, and (2)
    terminate the lease and seek from the appellants rent due for the
    balance of the term.     To be sure, the above excerpt provides that
    Elderberry’s rights in the event of a default “shall include the
    following.”    
    Id.
        There is no language suggesting that Elderberry
    must choose either to terminate the lease as provided by ¶ 7(3)(a),
    or to reenter the premises and hold the tenant liable for future
    rent and other fees as provided by ¶ 7(3)(b).        Nor are the various
    subparagraphs under lease ¶ 7 separated by the disjunctive word
    “or.”
    That     said,   Elderberry’s    reading   of   the   lease   is   not
    convincing.     First, remedy provisions providing for future rent
    “must be strictly construed.”        tenBraak, 
    542 F.2d at 925
    .     And in
    construing remedy provisions, courts must have “due regard for the
    rule that [the lease] must be construed most strongly against the
    lessor.”    Va. Lumber & Extract Co. v. O.D. McHenry Lumber Co., 
    94 S.E. 173
    , 174 (Va. 1917).       Here, ¶ 7(3) of the lease does not
    affirmatively state that the remedial provisions are cumulative.
    Rather, ¶ 7(3)(b) explicitly provides: “The Lessor’s reentry shall
    not be deemed . . . a termination” of the lease. J.A. 172 (emphasis
    supplied).     And it is only under ¶ 7(3)(b), “in the event of the
    reentry,” that the lessee remains liable for future rent and fees.
    11
    This language puts ¶ 7(3)(a) and ¶ 7(3)(b) in tension with one
    another.         Whereas    ¶    7(3)(a)     explicitly    terminates       the    lease
    contract, ¶ 7(3)(b) explicitly leaves the terms of the lease
    contract and the possibility of receiving future rent and fees in
    place.      It    does     not    make     sense   to   allow   simultaneously       the
    termination of the lease and continued application of the lease.
    The better reading, and the one we adopt here, is that upon
    exercising       its     right        to   terminate     the    lease,      Elderberry
    extinguished any right that it had to future rent.
    Elderberry argues that we should follow the Virginia rule
    that a remedy provided for breach of a contract “will be exclusive
    of other possible remedies only where the language employed in the
    contract clearly shows an intent that the remedy be exclusive.”
    Bender-Miller, 179 S.E.2d at 638.                   In advancing its argument,
    Elderberry focuses on whether the remedies provided within the
    lease are exclusive of one another.                 Bender-Miller, by contrast,
    focuses    on     whether       the   remedies     provided     in   a   contract    are
    exclusive    of    extra-contractual           remedies.        In   that   case,    the
    Virginia Supreme Court addressed whether the parties “intended by
    virtue of” a certain contract provision “that the remedy provided
    therein be exclusive of other remedies allowed by law.”                           Id. at
    639 (emphasis added); see also Va. Dynamics Co. v. Payne, 
    421 S.E.2d 421
    , 423 (Va. 1992) (observing that even if a lessor could
    “contract[] away” a statutory right, “the lessor’s statutorily
    12
    created right . . . would have to be expressly waived”); Atlas
    Mach. & Iron Works, Inc. v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 
    986 F.2d 709
    ,
    713 (4th Cir. 1993) (permitting bankruptcy as a remedy to a breach
    of contract where the contract did not explicitly state that the
    remedy stated therein was exclusive).                    Our reading of Virginia
    case law suggests that there is a presumption against excluding
    statutory or legal rights absent a clear waiver of such rights,
    and    our    construction       of   the   lease    here    comports      with   that
    presumption.         Although our reading of the lease proscribes the
    collection      of    future     rent   and      other   fees   in   the    event   of
    termination, it does not proscribe the pursuit of any rights that
    Elderberry might have outside of those provided in the lease
    itself.      Indeed, as quoted above, ¶ 7(3)(d) provides that “[t]he
    rights given to the Lessor herein are in addition to any rights
    which may be given to the Lessor by statute or otherwise.”                        J.A.
    172.
    In light of the foregoing, we hold that Elderberry lost its
    right to rent that accrued after it terminated the lease on August
    24, 2012.       Elderberry is, however, entitled to any rent that
    accrued prior to termination of the lease.
    B.
    We    turn    next   to   non-rent     damages.      A   landlord     may,   as
    Elderberry does here, seek compensation for a tenant’s failure to
    return a leased facility in the required condition.                        See, e.g.,
    13
    Sharlin v. Neighborhood Theatre Inc., 
    167 S.E.2d 334
     (Va. 1969).
    And the Supreme Court of Virginia long ago stated that when an
    action for breach of lease covenant “is brought after the end of
    the term, the measure of damages is still held to be such a sum as
    will put the premises in the condition in which the tenant is bound
    to leave them.”      Vaughan v. Mayo Milling Co., 
    102 S.E. 597
    , 601
    (Va. 1920) (quoting Watriss v. First Nat’l Bank of Cambridge, 
    130 Mass. 343
    , 345 (1879)).      “[T]his is true even if the repairs have
    not been made by the landlord.”     Sharlin, 167 S.E.2d at 338 (citing
    Vaughan, 102 S.E. at 602).       Virginia’s rule is in line with the
    general rule that
    where a lease contains a provision or option giving the
    right or privilege of cancellation and the agreement is
    canceled in pursuance of the right or privilege thus
    given, such cancellation does not extinguish liabilities
    that have already accrued under the lease, regardless of
    whether the liability is that of the party who exercised
    the option to cancel the agreement or is the liability
    of the party against whom cancellation was made. Such
    cancellation of the lease does, however, terminate
    liabilities to accrue in the future, such as rent, except
    where by express provision in the lease termination is
    not to affect the accrual of such liabilities.
    49 Am. Jur. 2d Landlord and Tenant § 204 (emphasis added) (footnote
    omitted).    Accordingly, upon termination of a lease, a landlord is
    entitled    to   recover   liabilities   accrued   up   to   the   point   of
    termination.
    Aside from rent payments, the lease here includes covenants
    requiring the lessee to pay for utility services, sales and use
    14
    taxes, general real estate taxes and special assessments, and
    insurance premiums.      See J.A. 165 (Lease ¶ 3).        Moreover, the lease
    provides:
    Lessee will keep the Property and any and all buildings
    and improvements (including inside and outside) which
    are now or may be erected or placed on said Property, in
    good order and repair subject to reasonable wear and
    tear at its sole cost and expense.       All repairs and
    replacements shall be in quality and class at least equal
    to the original work. Lessee will pay when due all costs
    associated with any such repairs, replacements or other
    work undertaken by it, and will not suffer any mechanic’s
    and/or materialmen’s liens to be maintained against the
    Property.
    J.A. 166 (Lease ¶ 4(2)).      The lease additionally requires that the
    premises be returned to Elderberry “in the same condition as when
    demised to the Lessee, reasonable wear and tear and damage by fire
    or other casualty insured against being excepted.” J.A. 167 (Lease
    ¶ 4(5)).     Another provision states that the lessee “will comply
    with   all   lawful    requirements   of   the   Board    of     Health,   Police
    Department,     Fire    Department,    Municipal,        State     and     Federal
    authorities.”    J.A. 167 (Lease ¶ 4(6)).         Each of these covenants
    serves as a source of damages that potentially accrued prior to
    the termination of the lease.         Indeed, the district court relied
    on these provisions in determining several portions of the damages
    award.
    Curiously, the appellants do not directly address whether
    they challenge the district court’s inclusion of utility fees,
    maintenance fees, and the like in the damages award.                They merely
    15
    ask this Court to reduce the judgment to $220,576.94, the amount
    of unpaid rent that accrued prior to the termination of the lease.
    While this request could be seen as an indirect challenge to the
    award of damages flowing from their breach of the covenants listed
    above and their failure to return the nursing facility in the
    required conditions, the appellants did not set forth arguments
    challenging     the   district   court’s   factual   findings   or   legal
    conclusions concerning accrued non-rent damages.         They have thus
    waived any argument with respect to those non-rent damages.           See
    Carter v. Lee, 
    283 F.3d 240
    , 252 n.11 (4th Cir. 2002) (“[T]his
    Court normally views contentions not raised in an opening brief to
    be waived.”).
    In light of the foregoing, we hold that Elderberry is entitled
    to non-rent damages that accrued prior to termination of the lease.
    We therefore remand this case for the district court to recalculate
    rent and non-rent damages that accrued prior to August 24, 2012. 5
    IV.
    5 Because damages are restricted to those accruing prior to
    termination of the lease, we need not address the appellants’
    contention that the Smith/Packett $375,000 value fee is
    speculative. By its terms, that payment necessarily accrued after
    termination of the lease and therefore cannot be part of the
    damages award.   Indeed, Elderberry itself categorizes the value
    fee as future damages. See Resp. Br. of Appellee 25 n.9.
    16
    The appellants argue that the district court erred in finding
    that the guaranty satisfies the Georgia statute of frauds. 6    Under
    Georgia law, “[t]he statute of frauds requires that a promise to
    answer for another’s debt, to be binding on the promisor, ‘must be
    in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith.’”   John
    Deere Co. v. Haralson, 
    599 S.E.2d 164
    , 166 (Ga. 2004) (citation
    omitted).   “This requirement has been interpreted to mandate
    further that a guaranty identify the debt, the principal debtor,
    6 The choice of law provision in the guaranty at issue here
    is blank.   Because we are exercising diversity jurisdiction in
    this case, we must apply the choice of law principles of the state
    in which the case was filed.    Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg.
    Co., 
    313 U.S. 487
    , 496-97 (1941).     While Mariner’s declaratory
    judgment claims regarding the guaranty were filed in the Northern
    District of Georgia, those claims were transferred to the Western
    District of Virginia, and Elderberry’s claims concerning the
    guaranty were also filed in Virginia.        We need not concern
    ourselves with whether Virginia or Georgia choice of law rules
    apply, because under either analysis, we would conclude that
    Georgia law applies. This is because each state applies the rule
    of lex loci contractus.    See Seabulk Offshore Ltd. v. Am. Home
    Assurance Co., 
    377 F.3d 408
    , 419 (4th Cir. 2004) (observing that
    in Virginia, questions of “interpretation of a contract are
    resolved according to the law of the state where the contract was
    made”); Ferrero v. Associated Materials Inc., 
    923 F.2d 1441
    , 1444
    (11th Cir. 1991) (“[T]he Georgia conflict of laws rule for
    contracts . . . is lex loci contractus.”).      And the final act
    necessary to effectuate the guaranty under either state’s law, the
    signature by Mariner’s representative, took place in Georgia. See
    Seabulk Offshore, Ltd., 
    377 F.3d at 419
     (“Under Virginia law, a
    contract is made when the last act to complete it is performed.”);
    Christian v. Bullock, 
    205 S.E.2d 635
    , 638 (Va. 1974) (applying law
    of state in which contract was executed); Gen. Tel. Co. of the Se.
    v. Trimm, 
    311 S.E.2d 460
    , 461 (Ga. 1984) (“In order to determine
    where a contract was made, the court must determine where the last
    act essential to the completion of the contract was done.”).
    Neither party disputes the application of Georgia law.
    17
    the promisor, and the promisee.”       Id.; see also Lafarge Bldg.
    Materials, Inc. v. Thompson, 
    763 S.E.2d 444
    , 445 (Ga. 2014).    The
    guaranty here identifies and is signed by the promisor:   Mariner.
    However, as noted by the appellants, the guaranty includes several
    blanks where the parties were to have identified the landlord,
    original tenant, tenant, and the lease:
    FOR VALUE RECEIVED, and in connection with the
    assignment and transfer of the rights of tenant under a
    certain Lease agreement, dated [_________], between
    [LANDLORD]   (“Landlord”)    and   [TENANT]   (“Original
    Tenant”), as the same was assigned by Original Tenant to
    [NEW TENANT] (“Tenant”), pursuant to an Assumption and
    Assignment Agreement, dated [__________] (as further
    amended, modified or assigned, the “Lease”), covering
    certain premises known as [FACILITY NAME AND ADDRESS],
    Mariner Health Care, Inc., a Delaware corporation, the
    undersigned (hereinafter referred to as “Guarantor,”
    whether one or more) hereby guarantees unto Landlord the
    full and prompt payment of the rent and all other sums
    and charges payable by Tenant under the Lease (hereafter
    collectively referred to as “Obligations”). Guarantor
    hereby covenants that if Tenant shall default in the
    payment of any of the Obligations, Guarantor shall pay
    the amount due to Landlord.
    J.A. 196 (emphasis and blanks in original).    The question is thus
    whether the guaranty nonetheless sufficiently identifies the debt,
    principal debtor, and promisee.
    The Supreme Court of Georgia’s recent decision in Lafarge
    Building Materials examined a situation in which a guaranty was
    “set off in a box at the bottom of the second page” of a credit
    application.   763 S.E.2d at 445.      The guaranty identified the
    principal debtor simply as “the Applicant identified on page 1 of
    18
    this       Application     for   Credit.”        Id.        The    guaranty,    however,
    incorporated         the   credit   application        by    reference.        Id.     In
    reversing      the    Georgia     Court   of     Appeals’         conclusion   that   the
    guaranty did not satisfy the statue of frauds, the Georgia Supreme
    Court read the guaranty “in conjunction with the incorporated
    application, and with the word ‘applicant’ bearing its usual and
    common meaning.”            Id. at 447.      While the court noted that “the
    better       practice      for   lenders—the     approach         that   can   forestall
    extended litigation like this case—is to simply name the principal
    debtor directly in the guaranty,” the court nonetheless concluded
    that the guaranty satisfied the statute of frauds.                       Id.
    In addition to approving the use of incorporated documents to
    sufficiently identify the terms of a guaranty, id. at 447, the
    Georgia Supreme Court has also recognized that § 24-3-3(a) of the
    Georgia code 7 “authorizes the use of contemporaneously executed
    writings to provide necessary terms not contained in the document
    at issue, or to correct obvious errors in the document at issue.”
    White House Inn & Suites, Inc. v. City of Warm Springs, 
    676 S.E.2d 178
    , 179 (Ga. 2009) (“[A] contemporaneously executed document can
    provide a property description missing from a contract for the
    sale of real property; establish the terms of a purportedly vague
    option agreement; establish and correct a misnomer; correct an
    7   Formerly 
    Ga. Code Ann. § 24-6-3
    .
    19
    ‘obvious error’; or establish that the acceptance of an offer was
    conditional.”       (citations      omitted)).       In     discussing     the
    contemporaneous writings rule, the White House Inn court cited
    with approval C.L.D.F., Inc. v. The Aramore, LLC, 
    659 S.E.2d 695
    (Ga. Ct. App. 2008).          
    Id.
       There, the Georgia Court of Appeals
    construed a lease and guaranty together to correct a scrivener’s
    error where “the Lease and the Guaranty were executed on the same
    date, at the same time, and at the same location” and “[t]he
    Guaranty was physically attached to the Lease and was identified
    as a ‘special provision[] . . . attached . . . as [an] exhibit and
    . . . made a part of th[e] Lease.’”         C.L.D.F., Inc., 
    659 S.E.2d at 696
    .
    These   cases    and   Georgia’s    contemporaneous    writings    rule
    suggest that omitting a required name or piece of information from
    a guaranty does not render the guaranty unenforceable if the
    omitted name or information can be readily ascertained when the
    guaranty is read in conjunction with documents incorporated by
    reference,     or      with   documents    physically     attached   to    and
    contemporaneously executed with the guaranty.               The guaranty in
    this case, though containing a significant number of blanks, is
    attached as Exhibit E to the lease amendment.                 Thus, we can
    construe the guaranty together with the lease amendment.              And in
    the lease amendment, the parties agreed that Living Centers would
    be permitted to assign the lease to “Family Senior Care Holdings
    20
    LLC or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates” without prior written
    permission from Elderberry so long as Mariner agreed to guarantee
    the lessee’s obligations.     J.A. 180.      Reading the blanks in the
    guaranty together with the lease and the lease amendment, and
    giving the terms landlord, original tenant, and tenant their usual
    and   common   meanings,   the    guaranty    sufficiently   identifies
    Elderberry as the landlord and Living Centers as the original
    tenant. 8   See Lafarge Bldg. Materials, 763 S.E.2d at 447.
    However, the blank in the guaranty representing the tenant
    (i.e., principal debtor) is not filled in with a specific entity,
    but rather with the descriptive phrase “Family Senior Care Holdings
    LLC or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates.”      Because the phrase
    “Family Senior Care Holdings LLC or any of its subsidiaries or
    affiliates” is, on its face, susceptible to more than one meaning,
    we find it to be ambiguous.      See Horwitz v. Weil, 
    569 S.E.2d 515
    ,
    516 (Ga. 2002) (“Ambiguity in a contract is defined as duplicity,
    indistinctness or an uncertainty of meaning or expression.”).      And
    under Georgia law, we are permitted to consult parol evidence “to
    explain ambiguities in descriptions.”        L. Henry Enters., Ltd. v.
    8
    We find it noteworthy that the appellants “volunteered or
    offered to provide a guaranty of Mariner Health” and wanted to
    “add that to the amendment in order to procure [Elderberry’s]
    agreement to the assignment.”    J.A. 660; see also J.A. 663 (“A
    guaranty was offered by Mr. Gentry.”). Not only that, but there
    is uncontradicted testimony in the record that the guaranty was
    actually “provided by Mr. Gentry” of Living Centers as part of the
    lease amendment negotiations. J.A. 663.
    21
    Verifone, Inc., 
    614 S.E.2d 841
    , 844 (Ga. Ct. App. 2005) (“[W]hile
    the Statute of Frauds prohibits using parol evidence to supply
    completely missing terms, it does not prohibit using parol evidence
    to explain ambiguities in descriptions.”).
    Using the parol evidence rule here to consult extrinsic
    evidence, it is clear that the principal debtor at the relevant
    time was Continium.        Living Centers first assigned the lease to
    FMSC, evidenced by a document entitled “Assignment and Assumption
    Agreement.”    J.A. 203.    A document cited and quoted by the district
    court    entitled   “Assignment     and       Assumption   of   Contracts”   then
    demonstrates that FMSC assigned the lease to Continium on November
    1, 2011. 9    Elderberry of Weber City, LLC v. Living Centers-Se.,
    Inc., 
    958 F. Supp. 2d 623
    , 633 (W.D. Va. 2013).                 As shown above,
    Continium stopped paying rent after March 2012 until Elderberry
    terminated the lease on August 24, 2012.              These are the relevant
    rent payments for which Continium was the principal debtor and for
    which Mariner guaranteed.         Indeed, a September 9, 2011 letter sent
    to Elderberry by the appellants’ attorneys reflects exactly that
    understanding.       See   J.A.    199    (“Notwithstanding      this   proposed
    9  We note that the parol evidence rule, unlike the
    contemporaneous writings rule, does not require the extrinsic
    evidence to have been prepared at the same time.       See, e.g.,
    McKinley v. Coliseum Health Grp., LLC, 
    708 S.E.2d 682
    , 684–85 (Ga.
    Ct. App. 2011) (affirming the trial judge’s use of parol evidence
    to grant summary judgment where parol evidence consisted of
    deposition testimony taken subsequent to the execution of the
    contract).
    22
    assignment [from FMSC to Continium], it is intended that the
    Mariner Health Care, Inc. Lease Guaranty executed in conjunction
    with the First Amendment to the Lease Agreement dated June 19,
    2006, shall remain in full force and effect to guaranty the
    obligations of assignee Continium[].”).
    Given the Georgia Supreme Court’s most recent pronouncement
    on that state’s statute of frauds, combined with Georgia’s parol
    evidence rule, we hold that the guaranty satisfies the Georgia
    statue of frauds.
    V.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court
    is
    AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND
    REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
    23