Darlene Forshee & a. v. Joseph Brown ( 2015 )


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  •                     THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    SUPREME COURT
    In Case No. 2015-0303, Darlene Forshee & a. v. Joseph
    Brown, the court on December 4, 2015, issued the following
    order:
    Having considered the briefs and record submitted on appeal, we
    conclude that oral argument is unnecessary in this case. See Sup. Ct. R. 18(1).
    We affirm.
    The defendant, Joseph Brown (landlord), appeals a decision of the Circuit
    Court (Bamberger, J.) following a bench trial, ruling in favor of the plaintiffs,
    Darlene Forshee and Jennifer Berman (tenants), on their small claim complaint
    seeking the return of a security deposit. In ruling for the tenants, the trial
    court found, in part, that there was no enforceable lease. On appeal, the
    landlord argues that the evidence at trial compelled findings that the parties
    had entered into an enforceable oral lease for a shared facility, see RSA 540-
    B:1, :2 (2007), and that the tenants failed to provide timely notice that they
    were terminating the tenancy, see RSA 540-B:4 (2007), thereby entitling the
    landlord to retain the security deposit to cover the tenants’ unpaid rent.
    We will uphold the trial court’s findings and rulings unless they are
    unsupported by the evidence or erroneous as a matter of law. See Vincent v.
    MacLean, 
    166 N.H. 132
    , 134 (2014). We assume that the trial court made all
    subsidiary findings necessary to support its general findings. See Nordic Inn
    Condo. Owners’ Assoc. v. Ventullo, 
    151 N.H. 571
    , 586 (2004). We defer to the
    trial court’s judgment on issues such as resolving conflicts in the testimony,
    assessing the credibility of witnesses, and evaluating the weight of the evidence
    submitted at trial. See Vincent, 
    166 N.H. at 134
    .
    The evidence at trial establishes that, in late February or early March of
    2014, the parties began negotiating the rental of the upstairs of the landlord’s
    home. The space that the tenants would rent consisted of two bedrooms, a
    living area, and a half bathroom; the parties would share use of the kitchen.
    On March 18, the landlord emailed the tenants a lease; the tenants, however,
    never signed a written lease. At some point in March, the tenants paid $825
    for the first month’s rent, and toward the end of March, they paid a security
    deposit of $825. The tenants moved into the landlord’s home on March 31.
    At 5:50 p.m. on March 31, the date that the tenants moved into the
    landlord’s home, the landlord sent the tenants an email telling them that they
    would be responsible for sharing several household chores, such as washing
    dishes, vacuuming common areas of the house, doing laundry, gardening,
    cooking meals, shopping for groceries, and providing childcare for his children.
    Although the tenants had agreed to assist the landlord in caring for his
    children under certain limited circumstances, the parties had otherwise never
    discussed the chores that the landlord expected them to perform. The landlord
    further stated that clothing was optional in the house, and that the tenants
    should “pay attention to site lines and avoid shocking the neighbors.” As with
    the expected chores, the parties had never before discussed whether clothing
    would be “optional” in the common areas of the home.
    The tenants responded to the landlord’s email on April 7, advising him
    that they had not been aware that clothing would be “optional,” and requesting
    that he remain clothed in their presence. The tenants further requested that
    neither the landlord nor his children enter the upstairs portion of the house
    except by invitation or to make necessary repairs. According to the tenants,
    the landlord’s children had not been respecting their privacy, and were
    persistently entering the upstairs area of the house without permission.
    On April 10, the landlord responded to the tenants’ email, asserting that
    he was “not sure how clothing optional could be any source of confusion,” and
    that he “had mentioned that as one reason that [he] wouldn’t have rented [the
    space] to just anyone” when the parties had earlier met to discuss the
    possibility of a lease. Realizing that they disagreed with the landlord as to the
    terms of the rental agreement, the tenants began to look for a new place to live.
    On the morning of April 15, five days after the landlord’s email claiming that
    the parties had discussed the clothing arrangement during their negotiations,
    the tenants advised the landlord that they were moving; they moved later that
    day. The landlord subsequently refused to return their security deposit.
    RSA chapter 540-B governs the rental of “shared facilities.” A “shared
    facility” is defined as “real property rented for residential purposes which has
    separate sleeping areas for each occupant and in which each occupant has
    access to and shares with the owner of the facility one or more significant
    portions of the facility in common, such as kitchen, dining area, bathroom, or
    bathing area, for which the occupant has no rented right of sole personal use.”
    RSA 540-B:1, I. A verbal rental agreement is enforceable under RSA chapter
    540-B, and unless otherwise provided for by a written rental agreement, every
    shared facility “tenancy shall be deemed to be at will.” RSA 540-B:2. Absent
    any different notice requirement in a written rental agreement, terminating an
    at-will tenancy under RSA chapter 540-B requires the tenant to provide a
    written thirty-day notice. RSA 540-B:4 (2007). A landlord may require a
    security deposit, and if there is no written agreement, must return it within
    twenty days after the tenant has vacated the property. RSA 540-B:10 (2007).
    2
    In this case, the parties agree that the landlord’s home constituted a
    “shared facility.” In arguing that the trial court erred by ruling that there was
    “no enforceable lease,” the landlord contends that, although the tenants never
    signed a written lease, the evidence conclusively established that there was a
    verbal lease, and that there was no evidence that the verbal lease was invalid,
    void, or unenforceable. Because the tenants failed to provide timely notice of
    their intent to terminate the tenancy under RSA 540-B:4, the landlord argues
    that they owed rent for May 2014, and that he was entitled to retain their
    security deposit to cover that obligation as a matter of law. We disagree.
    A lease is a form of contract, governed by the standard rules of contract
    interpretation. Tulley v. Sheldon, 
    159 N.H. 269
    , 272 (2009). As with any
    contract, the formation of an enforceable lease agreement requires a meeting of
    the minds as to all of the essential terms of the lease. See Syncom Indus. v.
    Wood, 
    155 N.H. 73
    , 82 (2007). A meeting of the minds occurs when the parties
    assent to the same terms. 
    Id.
     Whether the parties assented to the same
    essential terms of the lease is a question of fact to be analyzed under an
    objective standard. See 
    id.
    In this case, the evidence establishes that the parties did not assent to
    the same essential terms of the lease. Specifically, the evidence shows that the
    landlord assented to a lease obligating the tenants to perform a broad range of
    household chores, while the tenants agreed only to provide childcare under
    limited circumstances. Additionally, the evidence shows that the tenants’
    agreement to a “clothing is optional” term was critical to the landlord’s assent,
    while the landlord’s agreement to a “clothing is mandatory in our presence”
    term was equally critical to the tenants’ assent. We note that the landlord has
    not provided copies of the emails that the tenants introduced at trial
    concerning these issues. Accordingly, we assume that the emails support the
    trial court’s determination that there was no enforceable lease. See Bean v.
    Red Oak Prop. Mgmt., 
    151 N.H. 248
    , 250 (2004).
    We conclude that the evidence supports a finding that the parties did not
    assent to the same essential terms of the lease, regardless of whether the lease
    was oral. Absent a meeting of the minds as to the essential terms, there was
    no lease, and no basis for the landlord to retain a security deposit. Under
    these circumstances, the trial court’s finding that there was no enforceable
    lease, and its requirement that the landlord return the security deposit, was
    neither unsupported by the evidence nor erroneous as a matter of law.
    Vincent, 
    166 N.H. at 134
    ; cf. Kowalski v. Cedars of Portsmouth Condo. Assoc.,
    
    146 N.H. 130
    , 133 (2001) (upholding district court’s award of restitution of real
    estate commission where defendant was not a licensed real estate broker and,
    thus, lacked authority to collect commission); Kline v. Burns, 
    111 N.H. 87
    , 93
    (1971) (noting that basic contract remedies, including rescission, are available
    to tenants in district court for landlord’s breach of implied warranty).
    3
    To the extent that the landlord also argues that the trial court violated
    his right to due process, the argument was neither raised in his notice of
    appeal, nor sufficiently developed in his brief. See State v. Blackmer, 
    149 N.H. 47
    , 49 (2003).
    Affirmed.
    Dalianis, C.J., and Hicks, Conboy, Lynn, and Bassett, JJ., concurred.
    Eileen Fox,
    Clerk
    4
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2015-0303

Filed Date: 12/4/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/12/2024