Critzos, II v. Marquis ( 2023 )


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  • John Critzos, II v. David Marquis, et al., No. 293, Sept. Term 2022. Opinion filed on
    January 3, 2023, by Berger, J.
    FRUSTRATION OF PURPOSE - COMMERCIAL LEASE - COVID-19 PANDEMIC -
    EXECUTIVE ORDERS LIMITING BUSINESS OPERATIONS - BREACH OF LEASE
    - TENANTS’ FAILURE TO PERFORM
    The principle underlying the frustration of purpose doctrine is that where the purpose of a
    contract is completely frustrated and rendered impossible of performance by a supervening
    event or circumstance, the contract will be discharged. There are three factors that courts
    should consider when determining whether the frustration of purpose doctrine applies: (1)
    whether the intervening act was reasonably foreseeable; (2) whether the act was an exercise
    of sovereign power; and (3) whether the parties were instrumental in bringing about the
    intervening event. The Appellate Court of Maryland reasoned that the level of disruption
    caused by the COVID-19 pandemic was not reasonably foreseeable. The Court further
    observed that it was not disputed by the parties that the COVID-19 related executive orders
    restricting business operations were an exercise of sovereign power and that the parties
    were not instrumental in bringing about the COVID-19 pandemic and associated
    shutdowns. Therefore, the determination of whether performance under a commercial
    lease was excused by the frustration of purpose doctrine turned on the determination of
    whether performance was rendered legally impossible.
    LEGAL IMPOSSIBILITY - COMMERCIAL LEASE - COVID-19 PANDEMIC -
    EXECUTIVE ORDERS LIMITING BUSINESS OPERATIONS - BREACH OF LEASE -
    TENANTS’ FAILURE TO PERFORM
    The determination of whether performance under a commercial lease was rendered legally
    impossible by the COVID-19 emergency and associated shutdowns businesses is
    necessarily fact specific and dependent upon expressly what is permitted by the terms of
    the lease. When a commercial lease did not limit the tenants to operating an indoor,
    in-person restaurant and brewery, nor did the lease prohibit carry-out or delivery service,
    the lease was not rendered legally impossible. The Governor’s executive orders limited
    the tenants’ business operations, but they did not render the sole purpose of the lease illegal.
    Economic challenges do not themselves establish the affirmative defenses of frustration of
    purpose or legal impossibility. Because the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions did not order
    a complete shutdown of the tenants’ business, the evidence presented to the circuit court
    was insufficient to establish the affirmative defenses of frustration of purpose and legal
    impossibility.
    Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County
    Case No. C-02-CV-20-1265
    REPORTED
    IN THE APPELLATE COURT
    OF MARYLAND*
    No. 293
    September Term, 2022
    ______________________________________
    JOHN CRITZOS, II
    v.
    DAVID MARQUIS, ET AL.
    ______________________________________
    Kehoe,
    Berger,
    Arthur,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Berger, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: January 3, 2023
    Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials
    Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this
    document is authentic.                                          * Ripken, J., did not participate in the Court’s
    decision to designate this opinion for publication
    2023-01-04 11:41-05:00
    pursuant to Md. Rule 8-605.1.
    Gregory Hilton, Clerk
    * At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a
    constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Special Appeals of
    Maryland to the Appellate Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on
    December 14, 2022.
    This case presents the issue of whether the COVID-19 pandemic and associated
    executive orders limiting business operations throughout the State of Maryland rendered
    performance under a commercial lease for a brewery/pub legally impossible or so
    frustrated the purpose of the contract as to excuse the tenant’s performance. Commercial
    landlord John Critzos, II appeals an order of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County
    granting judgment in favor of his former tenants, David and Carolyn Marquis, appellees.
    The Marquises conceded that they did not make rent payments as required by the
    commercial lease, but the circuit court determined that the Marquises’ failure to satisfy
    their obligations under the commercial lease at issue was excused by the legal doctrines of
    frustration of purpose and impossibility. Critzos contends that the Marquises failed to
    establish the affirmative defenses of frustration of purpose and/or legal impossibility, and,
    therefore, the circuit court erred in entering judgment in favor of the Marquises. For the
    reasons explained herein, we shall reverse.
    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    The facts underlying this appeal are largely not in dispute. On September 21, 2015,
    the parties signed a lease for a property located at 114 West Street in Annapolis, Maryland
    for the establishment of a “brewery/pub.” The lease was for the period of January 1, 2016
    through December 31, 2020.         The Marquises operated a restaurant/pub known as
    Chesapeake Brewing Company without substantial difficulties until the arrival of the
    COVID-19 pandemic.
    On March 5, 2020, as COVID-19 began to spread throughout the United States,
    Governor Larry Hogan declared a “State of Emergency and Existence of Catastrophic
    Health Emergency” in the State of Maryland. On March 12, 2020, the Governor issued an
    executive order requiring that bars and restaurants close by 5:00 p.m. on March 16, 2020.
    Restaurants and bars were permitted to sell food and beverages for carry-out, drive-
    through, or delivery if they operated “in accordance with any social-distancing
    recommendations of the Maryland Department of Health.”1 As of May 29, 2020, the
    statewide restrictions were relaxed to allow restaurants to serve food and beverages to
    customers for consumption in outdoor seating areas, and, on June 12, 2020, restaurants
    were permitted to serve food indoors at fifty percent of their maximum capacity.
    In April 2020, the Marquises asked Critzos to abate the April rent in light of the
    COVID-19 health emergency and the Marquises’ inability to operate the brewery and
    restaurant as usual. Critzos and the Marquises attempted to negotiate but were unable to
    reach an agreement. Critzos’s property manager set a deadline for the Marquises to pay
    the overdue April rent. The Marquises did not pay the rent and, instead, they provided
    written notice to Critzos on April 23, 2020 that they wished to terminate the lease. The
    circuit court found that the Marquises were unable to pay the rent, crediting Carolyn
    Marquis’s testimony that they had no source of income other than revenue from the
    brewery and David Marquis’s military pension. On May 3, 2020, the Marquises vacated
    the premises and returned the keys to Critzos.
    1
    The circuit court observed that carry-out food service was not permitted until May
    6, 2020. Other dates referenced in the circuit court’s opinion appear to not precisely match
    the dates set forth in the Governor’s executive orders. For example, the circuit court
    observed that outdoor dining was permitted on June 3, 2020, while the executive order
    issued by Governor Hogan on May 27, 2020 allowed for outdoor restaurant service to begin
    on May 29, 2020. These date discrepancies appear to be an oversight by the circuit court.
    2
    On May 27, 2020, Critzos filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel
    County alleging that the Marquises had breached their lease. Critzos sought damages in
    the amount of $80,200.62 for unpaid rent and common area maintenance.                Critzos
    ultimately withdrew the claim for common area maintenance and sought a judgment in the
    amount of $79,533.45 plus attorney’s fees in the amount of $4,340.22.
    The case came before the circuit court for a bench trial on July 28, 2021. At trial,
    Critzos presented evidence establishing the existence of a contract, breach of said contract,
    and damages. The Marquises presented the affirmative defenses of frustration of purpose
    and legal impossibility. The court heard testimony from the parties. The Marquises
    testified that they were unable to operate their restaurant and brewery in light of the
    COVID-19 related closures. The Marquises argued that their inability to operate their
    restaurant should excuse their nonpayment of rent to Critzos.
    On the day of trial, Critzos presented the court with a bench memorandum citing
    various out-of-state cases.   At the Marquises’ request, the circuit court granted the
    Marquises thirty days to file a response to Critzos’s bench memorandum. Critzos was
    provided time to respond to any response filed by the Marquises.
    On September 20, 2021, the circuit court issued a memorandum opinion and order
    entering judgment in favor of the Marquises. The court found that “the COVID-19
    pandemic itself and the ensuing statewide shutdown of all restaurants and similar
    establishments constitute[d] unforeseen circumstances, especially at the time of the parties
    contracting.” The circuit court further found that the Governor’s “executive orders, by
    undisputed testimony of the [Marquises], had made the sole purpose of their lease an illegal
    3
    activity -- frustrating this purpose in a legal sense.” The circuit court further found that the
    Marquises “decision to seek termination after more than 30 days after the Governor’s
    March 16, 2020 executive order (declaring the lease’s purpose to be illegal) was a
    reasonable decision based on commercial frustration and impossibility, and that it was
    taken after passage of a reasonable amount of time.”
    Critzos filed a motion for reconsideration on September 29, 2021, as well as a
    supplement to the motion for reconsideration on October 18, 2021. A hearing was held on
    the motion on February 28, 2022, after which the circuit court issued an amended opinion
    on April 7, 2022. The amended opinion reiterated the court’s earlier ruling and included
    additional reasoning. The circuit court discussed, inter alia, its findings regarding steps
    taken by the Marquises to try to stay in business and emphasized the information known to
    the Marquises at the time they provided notice seeking termination of the lease. The circuit
    court also issued a separate order denying the motion for reconsideration.
    This appeal followed. Additional facts shall be set forth as necessitated by our
    discussion of the issues on appeal.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    On appeal, Critzos asks us to review (1) the sufficiency of the evidence to support
    a judgment in the Marquises’ favor; and (2) whether the circuit court correctly applied the
    related doctrines of frustration of purpose and legal impossibility to this case. Appellate
    review of a bench trial is governed by Rule 8-131(c), which provides:
    When an action has been tried without a jury, the appellate
    court will review the case on both the law and the evidence. It
    will not set aside the judgment of the trial court on the evidence
    4
    unless clearly erroneous, and will give due regard to the
    opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the
    witness.
    The clearly erroneous standard does not apply, however, when we are reviewing the circuit
    court’s legal conclusions. Turner v. Bouchard, 
    202 Md. App. 428
    , 442 (2011). We “accord
    no deference” to the circuit court’s legal conclusions but instead our review is for legal
    correctness. 
    Id.
     (quoting Cattail Assocs. v. Sass, 
    170 Md. App. 474
    , 486 (2006)). When
    evaluating whether a circuit court’s decision was legally correct, “we give no deference to
    the trial court findings and review the decision under a de novo standard of review.”
    Lamson v. Montgomery County, 
    460 Md. 349
    , 360 (2018).
    DISCUSSION
    The narrow issue before us in this appeal is whether the Marquises presented
    sufficient evidence to establish the affirmative defenses of frustration of purpose and legal
    impossibility. “The principle underlying the frustration of purpose doctrine ‘is that where
    the purpose of a contract is completely frustrated and rendered impossible of performance
    by a supervening event or circumstance, the contract will be discharged.’” Panitz v. Panitz,
    
    144 Md. App. 627
    , 639 (quoting Harford Cnty. v. Town of Bel Air, 
    348 Md. 363
    , 384
    (1998) (quoting Montauk Corp. v. Seeds, 
    215 Md. 491
    , 499 (1958))). In Montauk, the
    Supreme Court of Maryland (at the time named the Court of Appeals of Maryland)2
    2
    At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a
    constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Appeals of Maryland to the
    Supreme Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022. See also
    Md. Rule 1-101.1(a) (“From and after December 14, 2022, any reference in these Rules or,
    in any proceedings before any court of the Maryland Judiciary, any reference in any statute,
    5
    outlined three factors that courts should consider when determining whether the frustration
    of purpose doctrine applies: “(1) whether the intervening act was reasonably foreseeable;
    (2) whether the act was an exercise of sovereign power; and (3) whether the parties were
    instrumental in bringing about the intervening event.” 
    215 Md. at 499
    .
    The doctrine of frustration of purpose was first recognized in the early twentieth
    century in the English case of Krell v. Henry, 2 K.B. 740 (C.A. 1903). Henry had entered
    into a contract with Krell to rent Krell’s apartment during the daytime hours of June 26 and
    27, 1902 to observe the coronation procession of King Edward VII. 
    Id.
     After King Edward
    fell ill, the coronation was postponed, and Henry refused to pay for the rental. Krell sued,
    and the court was tasked with determining whether Henry was obligated to pay the rent
    despite the fact that the coronation did not take place as planned. 
    Id.
     The court held that
    Henry’s performance under the contract was excused, holding that the “coronation
    procession was the foundation of this contract” and that “the object of the contract was
    frustrated by the non-happening of the coronation and its procession on the days
    proclaimed.” Id. at 751, 754. The court reached a contrary conclusion, however, in the
    case of Herne Bay Steam Boat Co. v. Hutton, 2 K.B. 683 (1903), holding that a renter who
    contracted to hire a steamship “for the purpose of viewing the naval review and for a day’s
    cruise round the fleet” was not excused from payment following the cancellation of the
    coronation because the “voyage was not limited to the naval review, but also extend[ed] to
    a cruise round the fleet.”
    ordinance, or regulation applicable in Maryland to the Court of Appeals of Maryland shall
    be deemed to refer to the Supreme Court of Maryland . . . .”).
    6
    “Pursuant to the doctrine of legal impossibility, ‘[i]f a contract is legal when made,
    and no fault on the part of the promisor exists, the promisor has no liability for failing to
    perform the promised act, after the law itself subsequently forbids or prevents the
    performance of the promise.’”       Harford Cnty., supra, 
    348 Md. at 384-85
     (citations
    omitted). “In order to succeed under this theory, however, performance under the contract
    must be objectively impossible.” 
    Id. at 385
     (citations omitted) (emphasis supplied). “The
    fact that the promised performance of a contractual obligation may be more difficult than
    was expected at the time the promise was made does not discharge the promisor from his
    duty to perform.” Brohawn v. Transamerica Ins. Co., 
    276 Md. 396
    , 410 (1975).3
    The circuit court found that the parties to the lease at issue in this case could not
    have reasonably contemplated a pandemic resulting in a government closure of all
    businesses. Critzos argues that the potential of a global infectious disease event was known
    in 2015 at the time the lease was made, and, therefore, the circuit court erred in determining
    that the COVID-19 related executive orders were not reasonably foreseeable. Critzos
    points to the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic as well as more recent epidemic/pandemic events
    3
    The cases addressing the defenses of frustration of purpose and legal impossibility
    do not always clearly delineate between the two. Indeed, they are very similar and related
    defenses. Frustration of purpose applies “where the purpose of a contract is completely
    frustrated and rendered impossible of performance by a supervening event or
    circumstance,” and legal impossibility applies when, by no fault of the promisor, the “law
    itself subsequently forbids or prevents the performance of the promise.” Harford Cnty.,
    supra, 
    348 Md. at 384-85
     (quotations and citations omitted). In this case, where the
    supervening event at issue is the COVID-19 pandemic and associated executive orders
    prohibiting businesses from operating as usual, the two defenses are inextricably linked
    and lend themselves to the same analysis, i.e., whether the COVID-19 executive orders
    rendered the Marquises’ performance under the terms of the lease legally impossible to
    perform.
    7
    stemming from avian flu, swine flu, and SARS. We are not persuaded, however, that it
    was reasonably foreseeable that an infectious disease could cause the level of disruption
    experienced worldwide beginning in March of 2020.
    Indeed, the Supreme Court of Maryland has described “the COVID-19 pandemic”
    as “the worst public health crisis in a century . . . that suddenly and pervasively altered life
    worldwide” beginning in early 2020. Murphy v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    478 Md. 333
    , 351
    (2022). As is well known to nearly “[e]veryone above a very young age,” the COVID-19
    “pandemic upended the patterns, rituals, and timelines of daily life - how one worked,
    shopped, played, and prayed; where one went; when and how one met with others; who
    was present for births, deaths, and the major life events in between.” Id. at 351-52.
    Although Critzos is correct that the general risk of global infectious disease outbreaks was
    well known at the time the parties entered into the lease, we agree with the circuit court
    that the level of disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic was not reasonably
    foreseeable. Furthermore, the remaining two Montauk factors -- that the COVID-19 related
    executive orders restricting business operations were an exercise of sovereign power, and
    that the parties were not instrumental in bringing about the COVID-19 pandemic -- are not
    disputed in this appeal.
    We turn, therefore, to whether the executive orders issued at the onset of the
    COVID-19 public health emergency rendered the Marquises’ performance under the terms
    of the commercial lease for a brewery/pub legally impossible or excused by the frustration
    of purpose doctrine. As the circuit court observed, as of the time this matter was before
    the circuit court in September 2021, the parties agreed “that they had found no reported
    8
    Maryland cases on point as to whether the impossibility and frustration defenses properly
    might be invoked in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.” To our knowledge, there
    remain no Maryland cases addressing this precise issue.
    Other courts have reached differing conclusions as to the applicability of the
    frustration of purpose/legal impossibility defense in this context. In the recent case of
    Firestone Fin., LLC v. WA Gym Naperville N., LLC, No. 21 C 1183, 
    2022 WL 4094161
    ,
    at *7 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 7, 2022), appeal filed, No. 22-2783 (October 6, 2022), the United
    States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois found that a frustration of purpose
    defense failed as a matter of law in the context of whether commercial tenant gyms were
    excused from paying rent to their commercial landlord during COVID-19 related
    shutdowns.4 The court found that the defendant gyms had “not alleged that they were
    completely prohibited from running their business after their payments became due.” Id.
    at *6. The court further noted that “on and after the end of the deferral period on August
    25, 2020, [the d]efendants could have opened . . . their doors to members at fifty-percent
    capacity and subject to social-distancing and masking requirements.” Id. The court
    4
    It is the policy of this Court to allow the citation of unreported opinions from
    federal courts and courts of other states as long as the jurisdiction where it was issued
    would allow its citation for persuasive value in its courts. Gambrill v. Bd. of Ed. Of
    Dorchester Cnty., 
    252 Md. App. 342
    , 352 n.6 (2021), rev’d on other grounds, No. 34, Sept.
    Term 2021, ___ Md. ___, (2022) (filed Aug. 26, 2022); CX Reinsurance Co. Ltd. v.
    Johnson, 
    252 Md. App. 393
    , 414 n.7, 
    259 A.3d 174
     (2021), rev’d on other grounds, No.
    47, Sept. Term 2021, ___ Md. ___, (2022) (filed Aug. 29, 2022). Federal Rule of Appellate
    Procedure 32.1(a) provides that “[a] court may not prohibit or restrict the citation of federal
    judicial opinions, orders, judgments, or other written dispositions that have been: (i)
    designated as ‘unpublished,’ ‘not for publication,’ ‘non-precedential,’ ‘not precedent,’ or
    the like; and issued on or after January 1, 2007.” Accordingly, this Court may consider
    unpublished federal opinions for their persuasive value.
    9
    observed that the defendants claimed that the “restrictions made it impossible for them to
    make a profit,” but observed that “[w]hile unfortunate, that situation does not amount to
    frustration of purpose.” 
    Id.
    A Massachusetts trial court, however, found that executive orders closing
    Massachusetts businesses frustrated the purpose of a commercial lease when a lease
    specifically limited the use of the premises “solely” for “the operation of a Caffé Nero
    themed café under Tenant’s Trade Name and for no other purpose” and when the lease
    required the tenant to operate the café “in a manner consistent with other Caffé Nero
    locations in the Greater Boston area” and to serve food and beverages “of first-class
    quality.” UMNV 205-207 Newbury LLC v. Caffé Nero Americas, Inc., No. 2084CV01493-
    BLS2, 
    2021 WL 714016
     (Mass. Super. Ct. Feb. 8, 2021), at *2.5 Pursuant to the lease, the
    café could offer take-out sales only “from its regular sit-down restaurant menu.” 
    Id.
    When determining whether the frustration of purpose doctrine applied, the court
    emphasized “that Caffé Nero could use the leased premises only to operate a café with a
    sit-down restaurant menu ‘and for no other purpose.’” Id.at *5. The court found that “[t]he
    entire purpose of the [l]ease was” for the café to use the leased space “to serve high quality
    coffee, other drinks, and food to customers who could sit and consume them on the
    premises.” 
    Id.
     Notably, however, the Massachusetts court found that the tenant’s rent was
    5
    Massachusetts courts permit the citation of unreported summary decisions of the
    Appeals Court of Massachusetts for persuasive value but not for binding precedent. See
    Chace v. Curran, 
    71 Mass. App. Ct. 258
    , 260 n.4 (2008). We were unable to locate a case
    or rule specifically addressing the citation of unreported Massachusetts Superior Court
    opinions. To our knowledge, the citation of such cases is not prohibited.
    10
    only temporarily discharged by frustration of purpose for the approximately three-month
    period during which the Massachusetts Governor’s executive order prohibiting indoor
    seating was in effect. Id. at *8.
    The Supreme Court of Connecticut recently addressed a somewhat similar lease
    scenario in the case of AGW Sono Partners, LLC v. Downtown Soho, LLC, 
    343 Conn. 309
    ,
    
    273 A.3d 186
     (2022). Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the lessee defendants operated a
    fine-dining restaurant (the “bistro”) on the leased premises. 273 A.3d at 192. As in
    Maryland, Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont issued executive orders that affected the
    operation of bars and restaurants, closing all bars and restaurants for in-person dining on
    March 16, 2020. Id. Outdoor dining and on premises alcohol consumption was permitted
    beginning on May 20, 2020, and indoor dining resumed at fifty percent capacity on
    June 16, 2020. Id. at 192-93. The bistro was completely closed between March 11 and
    May 27, 2020, and “[a]lthough the lease agreement did not prohibit takeout or delivery
    dining or restrict the restaurant’s operation to dine in business only, [the restaurateur]
    testified that it was not profitable when the bistro attempted to do so.” Id. at 193. The
    tenants did not make any rental payments after March 2020, and the bistro ultimately
    vacated the premises by September 11, 2020. Id. at 194. The landlord subsequently filed
    an action seeking money damages for breach of the lease. Id.
    The Connecticut Supreme Court determined that “the doctrine of impossibility or
    impracticability did not excuse the defendants from their obligations to the plaintiff under
    the lease agreement.” Id. at 200. The Court emphasized that “most significant[ly], as the
    trial court found, even under the most restrictive executive orders, use of the premises for
    11
    restaurant purposes was not rendered factually impossible insofar as restaurants were
    permitted to provide curbside or takeout service, and the lease agreement did not prohibit
    curbside or takeout service.” Id. The Court determined that the lease
    was not frustrated by the pandemic restrictions imposed by the
    executive orders, even those that barred indoor dining entirely.
    The language of the lease agreement was not limited to a
    certain type of dining and -- in contrast to the more restrictive
    language contained in the sister state cases on which the
    defendants rely -- did not preclude the takeout and subsequent
    outdoor dining that the defendants sought to provide.
    Id. at 204.
    What we glean from the above-cited out-of-state cases is that the focus necessarily
    must be upon what is expressly permitted by the terms of the lease. The lease at issue in
    this case provided that the Marquises “shall use the Leased Premises for Brewery/Pub only,
    and for related activities but for no other purposes unless written consent is provided by
    the Landlord.” (Emphasis in original.) Notably, the lease did not prohibit takeout dining --
    a factor that other courts have considered important in assessing frustration of purpose and
    legal impossibility claims. In our view, this case presents a situation substantially more
    akin to the bistro in AGW Sono Partners, LLC and the gyms in Firestone Fin., LLC than to
    the café in UMNV 205-207 Newbury LLC.6
    6
    Even in the case of UMNV 205-207 Newbury LLC, which involved a lease that
    limited the tenant’s activities on the premises more significantly than the lease at issue in
    this case, the Massachusetts Superior Court only excused the tenant’s nonpayment of rent
    during the limited time that restaurants were closed to in-person dining. 
    2021 WL 714016
    at *8. In the case at bar, the circuit court found that the tenants’ nonpayment of rent was
    excused for the full remainder of the lease term.
    12
    The case that the circuit court found to be the “most helpful” Maryland case is
    Wischhusen v. Am. Medicinal Spirits Co., 
    163 Md. 565
     (1933), a Prohibition-era case
    involving a whiskey distiller who had been hired to produce alcohol for medicinal purposes
    but was denied a federal permit to do so. The issue before the Court was whether the
    impossibility of performance defense excused the distiller from performance under his
    employment contract. 
    Id. at 572-73
    . The Court held that because there was no way for the
    distiller to fulfill his duties under the contract without violating the law, his performance
    was excused. 
    Id. at 573
    . The Court emphasized that the distiller’s “whole service was
    confined to the manufacture of whiskey,” but, “[u]nder such circumstances, the
    performance of the contract would be criminal, and so legally impossible, by reason of the
    refusal of constituted authority to grant the requested permit to manufacture.” 
    Id.
    The circuit court reasoned that the operation of the brewery/restaurant by the
    Marquises would have been similarly criminal after the issuance of the Governor’s
    executive orders. We disagree. The whiskey distiller in Wischhusen was completely
    prohibited from working in the role for which he had been hired. In contrast, the Marquises
    were prohibited from serving customers indoors in their restaurant for almost three months,
    but they were permitted to operate on a carry-out basis or delivery basis throughout the
    pandemic, and the restaurant was permitted to operate at fifty percent capacity beginning
    in June of 2020. The restriction in Wischhusen served to prohibit the whiskey distiller from
    performing any and all of the services required under his employment contract, while the
    executive orders at issue in this case presented far narrower restrictions. The circuit court
    found that the Governor’s executive orders “made the sole purpose of the[] lease an illegal
    13
    activity -- frustrating this purpose in a legal sense,” but, in our view, this was too narrow a
    reading of the lease. The lease did not limit the Marquises to operating an indoor, in-person
    restaurant and brewery, nor did the lease prohibit carry-out or delivery service. The
    executive orders certainly limited the Marquises’ business operations, but they did not
    render the sole purpose of the lease illegal.
    When determining that the Marquises’ decision to vacate the property and seek the
    termination of the lease was reasonable, the circuit court focused upon the thirty-day period
    set forth in the lease for a decision as to termination following a fire or other casualty
    causing damage to the leased premises. The circuit court observed that the lease provides
    that if the premises were destroyed by fire or other casualty, the landlord was required to
    determine whether to repair the premises, or, within thirty calendar days, give notice to the
    tenant “that it has elected not to reconstruct or repair the [l]eased [p]remises, and the [l]ease
    and tenancy created hereby shall cease as of the date of the occurrence” of the fire or other
    casualty. The court looked to this thirty-day period when assessing whether a reasonable
    person would have “act[ed] as the [Marquises] did” after the issuance of the Governor’s
    first COVID-19-related executive orders prohibiting in-person dining. We fail to see how
    the thirty-day period specified in the lease during which the landlord could elect to
    terminate the lease after a fire or other casualty somehow gives rise to an option for the
    tenant to terminate the lease under entirely different circumstances that did not render the
    premises entirely unusable.
    Nor do we consider it particularly significant that the lease did not contain a force
    majeure clause. Perhaps a force majeure clause would have more clearly delineated the
    14
    options available to the landlord or tenant under these circumstances and apportioned the
    risk of such an event as desired by the negotiating parties. Nonetheless, the absence of a
    force majeure clause does not suggest that the tenant is somehow excused from
    nonpayment of rent.
    We do not intend to discount the difficulties faced by the Marquises and other
    restaurateurs and business owners during the unprecedented challenges of the COVID-19
    pandemic and associated limitations on the operation of businesses throughout the State of
    Maryland. It is beyond dispute that the pandemic challenged the Marquises’ ability to
    operate a financially viable business. Economic challenges, however, do not themselves
    establish the affirmative defenses of frustration of purpose or legal impossibility.
    Throughout the entirety of the relevant time period, carry-out and delivery service
    continued to be permitted throughout the State of Maryland. Furthermore, the tenancy
    continued through the end of 2020, and in-person dining resumed -- albeit at a limited
    capacity -- in June. The COVID-19 pandemic restrictions did not order a complete
    shutdown of the Marquises’ business. We, therefore, hold that the evidence presented to
    the circuit court was insufficient to establish the affirmative defenses of frustration of
    purpose and legal impossibility.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR    ANNE   ARUNDEL     COUNTY
    REVERSED. CASE REMANDED TO THE
    CIRCUIT COURT FOR FURTHER
    PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH
    THIS OPINION. COSTS TO BE PAID BY
    APPELLEES.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0293-22

Judges: Berger

Filed Date: 1/3/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/4/2023