Jrr Properties Westland LLC v. Westland Mall Realty LLC ( 2023 )


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  •             If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
    revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    JRR PROPERTIES WESTLAND, LLC,                                        UNPUBLISHED
    October 19, 2023
    Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-Appellant,
    v                                                                    No. 364334
    Wayne Circuit Court
    WESTLAND MALL REALTY, LLC, WESTLAND                                  LC No. 20-000418-CB
    CH, LLC, and WESTLAND NASSIM, LLC,
    Defendants/Counterplaintiffs/Third-
    Party Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    and
    JRR ASSOCIATES, INC., and JRR PROPERTIES,
    INC.,
    Third-Party Defendants.
    Before: MURRAY, P.J., and O’BRIEN and SWARTZLE, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Plaintiff owned and operated a restaurant and beer garden on Shopping-Center “outlots”
    that it leased from defendants. Plaintiff sued defendants for breach of contract after it was evicted
    from those outlots for nonpayment of rent. The trial court granted defendants summary
    disposition. We affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff originally entered into a “Ground Lease” to operate a restaurant on one of the
    Shopping Center’s outlots, and plaintiff agreed to pay a pro rata share of the common-area
    maintenance costs that the landlord incurred by maintaining the common-area in good repair. In
    relevant part, the Ground Lease stated:
    Landlord shall keep the Common Areas in a good state of repair and shall
    continuously perform maintenance to such Common Areas to ensure that the same
    -1-
    are in a state of repair comparable to that as of the date hereof, subject to ordinary
    wear and tear and casualty (“Common Area Maintenance”). Landlord’s obligations
    hereunder with regard to Common Area Maintenance shall include, but not be
    limited to: maintenance, repair and replacement required to clean, preserve and
    maintain the Common Area; lighting facilities serving the Common Area; policing
    and traffic direction; fire protection; security; ice and snow removal; landscaping;
    removal of trash, rubbish and debris; pest extermination; repairing all above and
    underground utility conduits and lines and sewers wherever such lines run over or
    under any part of the Common Area; public liability, workers’ compensation,
    property damage and hazard insurance. All parking areas shall be adequately
    maintained. All holes or breaks in the paving shall be repaired by Landlord
    promptly after Landlord becomes aware of such an occurrence.
    * * *
    Landlord shall deliver to Tenant within one hundred twenty (120) days after
    the end of each calendar year of the Term a statement, certified by an officer of
    Landlord or Landlord’s management company, setting forth the amount of the
    Common Area Maintenance Cost during the preceding calendar year.
    The Ground Lease defined “Common Area” as:
    The facilities within the Shopping Center Tract designated for the general
    enjoyment and use in common of Tenant and other occupants of the Shopping
    Center which shall include but not be limited to landscaping, curbs, curb cuts,
    entryways, drives, parking areas, striping, sidewalks and walk-ways, lighting and
    other utilities as depicted on attached Exhibit “A-4”.
    The Ground Lease also included an indemnification clause:
    12.2. Indemnification by Landlord. Landlord covenants and agrees to
    pay, defend, indemnify and save harmless Tenant from and against any and all
    liability, loss, damage, cost, expense (including all Actual Attorneys’ Fees and
    expenses of Tenant), causes of action, suits, claims, demands or judgments of any
    nature whatsoever arising or resulting from, unless if due to the wrongful or
    negligent act of Tenant, its agents, contractors, or employees: (i) any injury to or
    the death of any person or damage to any property occurring in the Shopping
    Center; (ii) the use, non-use, condition, operation, maintenance, or management of
    the Shopping Center or any Common Area; (iii) any negligence or willful act or
    omission on the part of the Landlord or its agents, contractors, servants, employees,
    licensees or invitees; (iv) the violation by Landlord of any term, condition or
    covenant of this Lease or of any contract, agreement, restriction or Regulation
    affecting the Shopping Center Tract or any part thereof or the ownership,
    occupancy or use thereof, (v) the condition or maintenance of the Landlord’s Area
    of Responsibility, or (vi) the violation by Landlord of any term, condition or
    covenant of this Lease or of any contract, agreement, restriction or regulation
    affecting the Landlord’s Area of Responsibility. The obligations of Landlord under
    this Section 12.2 shall survive any termination of this Lease and any transfer or
    assignment by Landlord or Tenant of this Lease or any interest hereunder.
    -2-
    Plaintiff then entered into a second lease for another outlot to operate a beer garden.
    Defendants bought the Shopping Center after plaintiff entered into those leases, and
    defendants assumed the role of the landlord under both leases. Defendant Westland Mall Realty
    notified plaintiff that it had an outstanding balance on both outlots, and plaintiff responded that
    Westland Mall Realty had breached the leases by not conducting the necessary maintenance and
    repairs after other tenants had vacated the Shopping Center. Plaintiff also alleged that defendants
    had been improperly billing plaintiff for property tax because plaintiff was paying the property tax
    directly to the city.
    Westland Mall Realty initiated eviction proceedings against plaintiff, and the district court
    in those proceedings ordered plaintiff to pay costs associated with both outlots or be evicted.
    Plaintiff did not pay those costs, and plaintiff’s establishments closed shortly after the eviction
    proceedings.
    Plaintiff then sued defendants, claiming that defendants had breached the leases by not
    providing certified common-area-maintenance statements, overcharging plaintiff for property tax
    and common-area maintenance, and failing to maintain the common area with proper lighting and
    snow removal. Plaintiff maintained that defendants were liable to plaintiff for contract damages
    under the indemnification provision of the Ground Lease. Defendants answered, asserting that
    plaintiff failed to mitigate damages and counterclaiming that plaintiff had breached the leases by
    failing to make rental payments, pay property taxes, and pay other costs and fees associated with
    upkeeping the property.
    During the course of the litigation, plaintiff offered affidavits from its members that stated
    that plaintiff’s establishments lost “thousands of dollars per month in revenue and hundreds of
    thousands of dollars or more of losses over time” because defendants failed to maintain the parking
    lots. This resulted in plaintiff not being able to pay its rent. Further, those affidavits stated that
    plaintiff was overcharged for the common-area maintenance, but failed to substantiate that
    allegation beyond conjecture that the overcharge had occurred.
    Defendants produced a report that identified the monthly common-area maintenance
    charges, as well as plaintiff’s failure to pay those charges. This report was accompanied by an
    affidavit of the director of operations for the third-party manager that defendants hired to manage
    their assets.
    The parties submitted competing motions for summary disposition under MCR
    2.116(C)(8), (9), and (10), and the trial court held that plaintiff had acknowledged that it had not
    made all payments for the common-area maintenance, plaintiff did not refute the city’s letter
    identifying the amount of taxes that were outstanding, plaintiff had not moved to terminate the
    lease before the eviction, plaintiff did not specify how defendants failed to maintain the Shopping
    Center or how that alleged failure caused the damages, and that the indemnification provision was
    to protect plaintiff from loss by a third party and not as a remedy for a breach of contract. The
    trial court granted defendants summary disposition, and judgment was entered against plaintiff for
    the stipulated amount of damages.
    Plaintiff now appeals.
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    II. ANALYSIS
    “We review de novo a trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion for summary
    disposition.” Sherman v City of St Joseph, 
    332 Mich App 626
    , 632; 
    957 NW2d 838
     (2020)
    (cleaned up). When, as here, the trial court grants a motion for summary disposition brought under
    both MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (C)(10), and it is clear that the trial court looked beyond the pleadings,
    this Court “will treat the motions as having been granted pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10).” Kefgen
    v Davidson, 
    241 Mich App 611
    , 616; 
    617 NW2d 351
     (2000). “Summary disposition is appropriate
    if there is no genuine issue regarding any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law.” Sherman, 332 Mich App at 632.
    A. COMMON-AREA MAINTENANCE
    Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by granting defendants summary disposition on
    plaintiff’s claim that defendants failed to conduct common-area maintenance as required by the
    Ground Lease. This issue raises a question of contract interpretation, which is reviewed de novo.
    Reicher v SET Enterprises, Inc, 
    283 Mich App 657
    , 664; 
    770 NW2d 902
     (2009). A written
    contract must be interpreted according to its plain and ordinary meaning. Woodington v Shokoohi,
    
    288 Mich App 352
    , 373-374; 
    792 NW2d 63
     (2010). If contractual language is clear, its
    interpretation is a question of law for the court. Id. at 374. Courts must give “effect to every word,
    phrase, and clause in a contract and avoid an interpretation that would render any part of the
    contract surplusage or nugatory.” Id.
    Causation is an essential element in all breach-of-contract claims. Gorman v American
    Honda Motor Co, Inc, 
    302 Mich App 113
    , 118-119; 
    839 NW2d 223
     (2013). “[T]he plaintiff must
    establish a causal link between the asserted breach of contract and the claimed damages.” 
    Id.
    Causation may be established with circumstantial evidence, as long as the proofs facilitate
    reasonable inferences of causation beyond mere speculation. Id. at 119.
    The trial court held that plaintiff did not specify how defendants failed to conduct the
    common-area maintenance and, even if it had, plaintiff did not establish how defendants’ failure
    caused plaintiff’s damages. Plaintiff argues that defendants did not conduct the proper common-
    area maintenance as required by the Ground Lease because they did not “clear the parking lot of
    snow and ice, failed to properly light the parking areas at night, and failed to maintain the parking
    lot,” and plaintiff provided affidavits from its members to establish that defendants’ failure resulted
    in a loss of business at plaintiff’s establishments.
    Even assuming for the sake of argument that there is no genuine issue of material fact that
    defendants did not perform the common-area maintenance as required by the Ground Lease,
    plaintiff’s affidavits only provide conclusory speculation that their purported lost business was
    caused by defendants’ purported failures. As the trial court held, an unkempt Shopping Center
    might well result in the loss of some business, but both snow removal and properly lit parking
    areas have limited applicability to the operation of plaintiff’s establishments because outdoor
    lighting is only necessary during certain evening hours and snow removal is only necessary during
    a few winter months depending on the weather. Nowhere do the affidavits, for example, tie
    particular instances of poor lighting or snowy parking areas with lower-than-expected revenues at
    the restaurant. To create a genuine issue of fact, plaintiffs had to come forward with evidence that
    -4-
    drew (or at least reasonably inferred) a causal connection between instances of poor maintenance
    and instances of lost business, and they failed to do so. Thus, even when viewing the evidence
    favorably to plaintiff, plaintiff’s affidavits amounted to mere speculation that was insufficient to
    create a genuine issue of material fact as to causation. See Skinner v Square D Co, 
    445 Mich 153
    ,
    164; 
    516 NW2d 475
     (1994).
    Next, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in granting defendants summary disposition
    regarding plaintiff’s claim that defendants overcharged plaintiff for the common-area maintenance
    costs. The trial court held that defendants had provided plaintiff with an accurate bill regarding
    the common-area maintenance charges. Even though plaintiff argues that the trial court
    misconstrued what “certification” meant under the Ground Lease, the gravamen of plaintiff’s claim
    is that it overpaid the charges and that it was entitled to recoup the excess payment. Plaintiff relied
    on its members’ affidavits to demonstrate that there was an overpayment, but the statements that
    plaintiff’s members provided in the affidavits lacked the specificity required to establish that there
    was a genuine issue of material fact. Instead, the affidavit provided speculation that an
    overpayment had occurred, and this is not sufficient to overcome defendants’ evidence that the
    common-area maintenance charges were properly submitted to plaintiff and not paid by plaintiff.
    Plaintiff further argues that the trial court erred by granting defendants summary
    disposition on the basis that plaintiff failed to mitigate its damages, which was one of defendants’
    affirmative defenses. Plaintiff ignores, however, that the trial court merely remarked that plaintiff
    never sought to terminate the Ground Lease as a mere description of the evidence that plaintiff
    relied on to argue that defendants’ failures caused plaintiff’s business losses. The trial court did
    not rely on plaintiff’s purported failure to mitigate its losses when granting defendants summary
    disposition, and instead the trial court held that plaintiff had not presented a genuine issue of
    material fact that defendants’ lack of common-area maintenance caused plaintiff’s business losses,
    as already explained.
    Thus, the trial court did not err when it granted defendants summary disposition on these
    issues.
    B. INDEMNIFICATION
    Next, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by dismissing its claim for indemnification
    under the Ground Lease. As noted earlier, the Ground Lease states that defendants agree to
    “indemnify and save harmless [plaintiff] from and against any and all liability, loss, damage, cost,
    [or] expense…of any nature whatsoever arising or resulting from, unless if due to the wrongful or
    negligent act of [plaintiff], … the use, nonuse, condition, operation, maintenance, or management
    of the Shopping Center or any Common Area.”
    The trial court held that this indemnification provision was limited to third-party conduct.
    As plaintiff points out, however, this indemnification provision is broadly written, and it is
    arguable whether it is limited by its terms to losses involving third parties. With that said, even
    assuming that the provision could be read broadly to apply to contract claims between the parties,
    the phrase “arising or resulting from” requires a causal connection “that is more than incidental,
    fortuitous or but for.” Pacific Employers Ins Co v Mich Mut Ins Co, 
    452 Mich 218
    , 224; 
    549 NW2d 872
     (1996) (cleaned up). The indemnification provision makes clear, moreover, that it does
    -5-
    not apply if the “liability, loss, damage, cost, [or] expense” is “due to the wrongful or negligent
    act of” plaintiff. Thus, by its plain terms, the indemnification provision does not make defendants
    the general insurer of any and all losses suffered by plaintiff. Rather, to be a covered loss, that
    loss must be connected to one of the enumerated reasons listed in the indemnification provision.
    Plaintiff was evicted because it owed outstanding amounts on its leases and other
    obligations. The indemnification provision does not indemnify plaintiff for eviction based on the
    nonpayment of rent. With respect to maintenance, as already explained, plaintiff failed to come
    forward with evidence creating a genuine issue as to causation. Plaintiff also points to the loss of
    anchor tenants and general decline in the Shopping Center, but plaintiff provides no evidence
    beyond speculation and generalities that any action or inaction by defendants caused those anchor
    tenants to leave or business at the Shopping Center to decline. Thus, even assuming without
    deciding that the trial court read the indemnification provision too narrowly, summary disposition
    in favor of defendants on this matter was still appropriate. Gleason v Dep’t of Transp, 
    256 Mich App, 1
    , 3; 
    662 NW2d 822
     (2003).
    C. COUNTERCLAIMS
    Lastly, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred when it granted defendants summary
    disposition on defendants’ counterclaims because the party “who first breaches a contract cannot
    maintain an action against the other contracting party for his subsequent breach or failure to
    perform.” Able Demolition, Inc v Pontiac, 
    275 Mich App 577
    , 585; 
    739 NW2d 696
     (2007)
    (cleaned up). To preclude recovery, the initial breach must be substantial, meaning that the
    nonbreaching party did not “obtain[] the benefit which he or she reasonably expected to receive.”
    
    Id.
     (cleaned up). This Court has recently held that a substantial breach:
    can be found only in cases where the breach has effected such a change in essential
    operative elements of the contract that further performance by the other party is
    thereby rendered ineffective or impossible, such as the causing of a complete failure
    of consideration or the prevention of further performance by the other party.
    [Tindle v Legend Health, PLLC, ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW2d ___ (2023)
    (Docket No. 360861); slip op at 6 (cleaned up).]
    Plaintiff argues that defendants breached the lease twice. Once when they failed to
    indemnify plaintiff’s losses, and once when they failed to maintain the common area. Plaintiff
    ignores, however, that plaintiff’s breach for nonpayment arose before any claim of indemnification
    related to that eviction. Further, plaintiff does not argue that defendants’ failure to maintain the
    common area rendered plaintiff’s obligations impossible. As already stated, plaintiff did not offer
    evidence tending to show that defendants’ failure to maintain the common area caused plaintiff’s
    business losses. Simply put, the first-substantial-breach rule is inapplicable to this case.
    III. CONCLUSION
    The trial court did not err when it granted defendants summary disposition because plaintiff
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    did not substantiate that defendants’ alleged failure to provide common-area maintenance caused
    plaintiff’s business losses.
    Affirmed. Defendants, as the prevailing parties, may tax costs. MCR 7.219(A).
    /s/ Christopher M. Murray
    /s/ Colleen A. O’Brien
    /s/ Brock A. Swartzle
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 364334

Filed Date: 10/19/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/20/2023