PARK CREST CLEANERS, LLC VS. A PLUS CLEANERS AND ALTERATIONS CORP.(C-0078-14, CAMDEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2017 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
    Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1734-15T1
    PARK CREST CLEANERS, LLC d/b/a
    A PLUS CLEANERS AND ALTERATIONS,
    SALVATORE TAMBURO and DANIELA
    TAMBURO,
    Plaintiffs—Respondents,
    v.
    A PLUS CLEANERS AND
    ALTERATIONS CORP, A PLUS
    CLEANERS, LLC, LEE STEPHEN CHIN,
    ELSA CHIN and SABRINA "ELSA"
    CHIN,
    Defendants.
    _________________________________
    CHERRY PLAZA, LLC,
    Appellant.
    ______________________________________________________
    Submitted May 2, 2017 – Decided October 17, 2017
    Before Judges Messano, Suter, and Grall.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Chancery Division, Camden County,
    Docket No. C-0078-14.
    McDowell Posternock Apell & Detrick, PC,
    attorneys for appellant Cherry Plaza, LLC
    (Daniel Posternock and Diana R. Sever, on
    the briefs).
    Genova Burns LLC, attorneys for respondents
    Park Crest Cleaners, LLC, d/b/a A Plus
    Cleaners and Alterations, Salvatore Tamburo
    and Daniela Tamburo (James Bucci, of counsel
    and on the brief; Nicholas J. Repici and
    Michael C. McQueeny, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    This appeal is from a final judgment in an action on a
    contract to purchase an ongoing dry-cleaning business and its
    equipment for $500,000.1   Plaintiffs, Park Crest Cleaners, LLC
    and its owners Daniela and Salvatore Tamburo, purchased the
    business from defendants, A Plus Cleaners and Alterations Corp.,
    LLC (A-Plus), Lee Stephen Chin (Chin), and his wife and
    daughter, Sabrina and Elsa Chin.     The non-party, Cherry Plaza,
    LLC (Cherry), owns the premises and leased it to defendants
    prior to the sale and to plaintiffs after the sale.    Although
    Cherry was not a party to the action on the contract of sale,
    the final judgment includes provisions that affect Cherry's
    rights under its lease with plaintiffs.
    Cherry's cross-appeal and plaintiffs' opposition are before
    us.   Defendants' appeal was dismissed for failure to prosecute.
    1
    The contract includes two agreements: an asset purchase
    agreement, which addresses the sale of the business and its
    equipment; and an agreement on a note held by the seller that
    secures a loan for half of the purchase price.
    2                          A-1734-15T1
    We reverse on Cherry's appeal and remand for amendment of the
    final judgment.
    I.
    A few months after purchasing the business, plaintiffs sued
    defendants on the contract.   They alleged defendants
    fraudulently misrepresented and conspired to misrepresent the
    value of its sales,2 breached the contract and covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing and were unjustly enriched.   Plaintiffs
    sought monetary damages and rescission of the contract, and
    demanded a jury trial on "all issues so triable."
    The jurors found that plaintiffs proved fraud, conspiracy
    to defraud, breach of the contract and the implied covenant and
    grounds to pierce the corporate veil.   The jurors awarded
    plaintiffs $682,000 for compensatory and $301,000 for punitive
    damages.
    Cherry was drawn into the dispute at the conclusion of the
    parties' post-trial, pre-judgment motions.   The trial court
    2
    In the contract, defendants warranted and represented that the
    "financial information of the Business for the past year
    provided by the Selling Parties to the Purchaser are true and
    correct in all material respects"; and "[n]o representation or
    warranty . . . made in any certificate or memorandum furnished
    or to be furnished by any of the Selling Parties, or on the
    Seller's behalf, contains, or will contain any willful and
    knowing untrue statement of material fact or omits [sic] to
    state any material fact necessary to make any statement herein
    not misleading."
    3                            A-1734-15T1
    denied defendants' motions for judgment notwithstanding the
    verdict and a new trial.   On plaintiffs' motion for equitable
    relief on the contract of sale, the court rescinded, nullified
    and voided the contract and note and restored defendants as
    owners of the business and its equipment.
    On its motion for equitable relief, plaintiffs also sought
    rescission or reformation of Cherry's lease.     Although that
    relief implicated Cherry's as well as plaintiffs' and
    defendants' rights, plaintiffs did not join Cherry as a party or
    give Cherry notice of the motion.3
    As to Cherry, plaintiffs asked the court to substitute
    defendants for plaintiffs as the tenants and guarantors or
    reinstate defendants' prior lease with Cherry.     In their
    supporting brief, plaintiffs submitted that $344,176.45 of their
    compensatory damages award was for their future obligations to
    Cherry under the lease and supported a remittitur in that
    amount.
    3
    There were two pre-trial motions on Cherry's participation.
    The first was filed by defendants, who sought to dismiss the
    complaint for failure to include an indispensable party, Cherry;
    plaintiffs opposed the dismissal and, in the alternative to
    dismissal, sought leave to amend to include Cherry. The second
    was filed by plaintiffs, who sought leave to amend to include
    Cherry; defendants opposed that motion. The court denied both
    motions on the ground that plaintiffs did not have an accrued
    claim for relief against Cherry at that point. But Cherry was
    not joined after the jurors found fraud.
    4                             A-1734-15T1
    The pertinent circumstances and terms of Cherry's lease
    with plaintiffs are as follows.       Plaintiffs signed the lease
    with Cherry four days prior to signing the business contract,
    which was done on June 14, 2014.      The lease was to commence on
    "the earlier of the Business Sale date or July 30, 2014."
    As to use of the premises, the lease permits use "as a
    clothing dry cleaner store with a full on-site dry cleaning
    plant, and no other use whatsoever without the express written
    consent of the Landlord."   Commencement of the lease is linked
    to sale of the business: "If the Business Sale does not close by
    July 30, 2014 the Lease shall become void."      But, the lease does
    not address termination for any reason related to the sale or
    the success of the business.   To the contrary, it states: "The
    sole relationship between the parties [Cherry and the individual
    plaintiffs] created by the agreement is that of Landlord and
    Tenant.   Nothing contained in the lease shall be deemed, held,
    or construed as creating a joint venture or partnership between
    the parties."
    None of the defendants were tenants on the lease.       But Chin
    and both Tamburos gave Cherry personal guarantees of payment and
    "compliance with and performance of all terms and covenants of
    the lease."
    5                           A-1734-15T1
    On plaintiffs' post-trial motion seeking revision of the
    lease, the court reserved decision pending notice and giving
    Cherry an opportunity to be heard.   To that end, the court
    authorized plaintiffs to file an order to show cause (OTSC)
    "related to the issue of whether the commercial lease should be
    rescinded and/or reformed in light of the jury's finding that
    defendants committed fraud and/or conspiracy to commit fraud
    related to the above-referenced sales contracts, and each of the
    parties remaining rights and obligations . . . under the
    commercial lease stemming therefrom."4 (initial capitalization
    omitted for ease of exposition).
    The court signed the OTSC on October 2, 2015.   It indicates
    that plaintiffs seek
    relief by way of summary proceeding at the
    return date set forth . . . pursuant to Rule
    4:67 and as authorized by the [c]ourt, based
    upon the facts set forth in the verified
    complaint and the conclusions of law entered
    by the court following a trial and the issues
    addressed therein, and for good cause shown.
    [(emphasis added)]
    The complaint referenced was not informative, because it
    does not name or state a claim involving Cherry.   And, the trial
    court's findings and conclusions were stated on the record and
    4
    The order quoted was not entered until October 23, 2015, but
    plaintiffs indicate argument was heard on September 23, 2015.
    6                          A-1734-15T1
    the transcript was not provided to Cherry.    The OTSC required
    plaintiffs to serve Cherry with nothing other than the complaint
    and the brief and the certifications they submitted to secure
    the OTSC.
    The OTSC compels Cherry to appear on the return date and
    show cause why the court should not preliminarily enjoin and
    restrain enforcement of the lease; rescind "and/or" reform the
    lease; discharge plaintiffs' obligations "and/or" liabilities
    under the lease; and grant other relief the court deems
    equitable and just.
    Cherry's attorney submitted a written response addressing
    preliminary restraints in light of Crowe v. De Gioia, 
    90 N.J. 126
     (1982).   When the hearing on the return date commenced, the
    court asked plaintiffs' attorney to address irreparable harm
    pertinent to preliminary relief.    
    Id. at 134
    .   In response to
    that question, plaintiffs' counsel explained that plaintiffs
    were "really seeking . . . to go straightforward to final
    relief" and moot the question of irreparable harm.    On that
    response, the court identified the issue as a declaration of
    rights under the lease that would include the right to have the
    lease rescinded or reformed.
    Cherry's attorney objected to the court considering the
    merits that day and referred to a certification from the manager
    7                           A-1734-15T1
    of Cherry's shopping center, which included the drycleaners.
    According to the manager, he had information and believed that
    plaintiffs violated the lease by using chemicals prohibited by
    environmental laws and failing to provide proof of insurance and
    permit annual inspections.    The attorney also pointed to the
    unfairness of leaving Cherry to collect rent from tenants and
    guarantors who were subject to a sizeable judgment for damages.
    The court assured the attorney those matters could be raised by
    motion for reconsideration.
    Unpersuaded, the court included provisions in the final
    judgment that affected Cherry's rights under the lease, as well
    as the rights of the parties to the contract of sale litigated
    between them in the contract action.       As a remedy for
    defendants' fraud, the court removed the Tamburos as tenants and
    guarantors, and rescinded the obligations and liabilities "that
    may exist or arise" on or after the date the court voided and
    nullified the contract of sale.5       Under the lease as revised by
    the court, Chin retained his status as a guarantor and Sabrina
    and Elsa Chin were substituted as additional guarantors in lieu
    of the Tamburos.   The court further reformed the lease to add
    all three Chins as tenants.   In recognition of the shift of
    5
    The rescission of obligations that existed can be understood as
    absolving them of unsatisfied obligations prior to that date.
    8                          A-1734-15T1
    responsibility and obligations under the lease, the court
    remitted the compensatory damages awarded by $346,223.55.
    In short, plaintiffs were given a remedy that absolved them
    of any responsibility to Cherry in lieu of the damages the jury
    awarded in a proceeding that did not include Cherry.
    II.
    Plaintiffs urge us to dismiss Cherry's appeal for non-
    compliance with the rules of appellate procedure.   Their
    arguments do not require extensive discussion.
    There is no basis for dismissal of Cherry's appeal as
    untimely filed.   The final judgment was entered on November 9,
    2015, and defendants filed a timely appeal on December 24, 2015,
    as required by Rule 2:4-1.   Cherry filed its cross-appeal on
    January 5, 2016, within the fifteen days of the filing of the
    notice of appeal, as permitted by Rule 2:4-2(a), and pursuant to
    that Rule, a respondent "may appeal against a non-appealing
    party" by serving and filing a notice of appeal and case
    information statement within the time fixed for cross appeals.
    This court has no basis for dismissing the appeal for untimely
    filing of the notice pursuant to Rule 2:4-1, because it was
    timely filed pursuant to Rule 2:4-2(a).   See, e.g., Semexant v.
    MIL Ltd., 
    252 N.J. Super. 318
     (App. Div. 1991) (dismissing a
    cross-appeal filed in similar circumstances because it was not
    9                           A-1734-15T1
    filed within the time permitted by Rule 2:4-2(a)).     In our view,
    the fact that the parties did not identify Cherry as a
    respondent or Cherry labelled its appeal as a cross-appeal is of
    no moment.
    Plaintiffs also contend we should dismiss the appeal
    because Cherry did not file transcripts of all proceedings
    conducted in the trial court on the contract action.     Setting
    aside plaintiffs' decision to forego a motion to compel and hold
    this objection for its brief on the merits, Cherry has provided
    the transcript needed to resolve this appeal, which is the only
    proceeding conducted on notice to Cherry.6
    For those reasons, we decline to dismiss the appeal for
    non-compliance with the Rules.
    III.
    Turning to the merits, Cherry contends the court erred in
    reforming the lease to remove the Tamburos as tenants and
    guarantors, and rescind, void and nullify plaintiffs'
    obligations and liabilities under the lease.    Cherry claims
    reversible error on several grounds.    We conclude reversal is
    6
    Although we do not have a record that allows us to confirm the
    validity of plaintiffs' segregation of damages representing
    their future obligations on the lease, the trial court accepted
    plaintiffs' account, plaintiffs are bound by it and it is not
    disputed.
    10                         A-1734-15T1
    required because Rule 4:67, properly applied, did not permit a
    grant of the relief plaintiffs sought in a summary proceeding
    conducted on the return date of this OTSC.
    As the Supreme Court recently explained:
    Rule 4:67-1 is designed "to accomplish
    the salutary purpose of swiftly and
    effectively disposing of matters which lend
    themselves to summary treatment while at the
    same time giving the defendant an
    opportunity to be heard at the time
    plaintiff makes his application on the
    question of whether or not summary
    disposition is appropriate." Pressler &
    Verniero, Current N.J. Court Rules, comment
    1 on R. 4:67-1 (2015).
    [Grabowsky v. Township of Montclair, 
    221 N.J. 536
    , 549-51 (2015).]
    Summary disposition is authorized in only two situations.
    Grabowsky, supra, 221 N.J. at 549-50; R. 4:67-1(a)-(b).     This
    situation, an ex parte OTSC filed against a non-party that was
    not accompanied by a complaint, is not covered by Rule 4:67-
    1(b).   See also R. 4:67-3, -4(b), 4(b), -5 (all contemplating
    summary proceedings involving parties).     And, there is no court
    rule or statute expressly authorizing summary disposition of a
    claim for reformations or rescission of a contract on a lease.
    R. 4:67-1(a).
    There were other problems.      This was not a matter "likely"
    to "be completely disposed of in a summary manner."     R. 4:676-
    11                           A-1734-15T1
    1(b).    If the complexity of this matter precluding summary
    resolution was not clear earlier, it certainly was clear when
    Cherry's counsel raised the question of violations of the lease
    that had not been addressed at trial.    R. 4:67-1(b).   The
    court's summary dismissal of those concerns as matters that
    could be addressed on a motion for reconsideration suggest its
    recognition of the fact the matter could not be "completely
    disposed of" in a summary proceeding.
    Moreover, "[s]ummary disposition is permitted by agreement
    of the court and the parties, evinced by 'a clear and
    unambiguous statement from the judge and the unequivocal consent
    of the parties to a final resolution . . . .'"    Grabowsky,
    supra, 221 N.J. at 550 (quoting Waste Mgmt. of N.J., Inc. v.
    Union Cnty. Utils. Auth., 
    399 N.J. Super. 508
    , 518-19 (App. Div.
    2008)); see R. 4:67-5.    Here, Cherry's counsel objected at the
    outset of the proceeding and with the affidavit of Cherry's
    manager indicating violations of the lease, it was not
    "palpably" shown that there was "no genuine issue of material
    fact."   R. 4:67-5.   Certainly, the potential for plaintiffs
    acquiring a shield from liability for lease-violations existing
    on the return date was a factual matter pertinent to the equity
    of reforming the lease and rescinding plaintiffs' obligations.
    12                             A-1734-15T1
    Simply put, the trial "court's summary disposition" in
    plaintiffs' favor denied non-party Cherry a fair opportunity to
    be heard on and defend against the relief requested.     See
    Grabowsky, supra, 221 N.J. at 551 (reversing because the trial
    court's sua sponte summary disposition contrary to Rule 4:67 in
    defendant's favor deprived plaintiff of a fair opportunity to
    present his claims).    Accordingly, we reverse and remand with
    direction to amend the final judgment by reinstating the damages
    and plaintiffs' lease and vacating provisions of the judgment
    reforming that lease.
    There are several issues we have not addressed and are not
    remanding for reconsideration.    Because plaintiffs have not
    filed a complaint against Cherry, or against defendants,
    pleading a claim for revision of the Cherry's lease, there is no
    pending matter to remand.    We have not addressed the
    availability of reformation or rescission of the lease, because
    it was not necessary to resolve this appeal.    We have not
    addressed Cherry's argument based on the entire controversy
    doctrine, because Cherry did not raise that issue in the trial
    court and it does not implicate the public interest or, at this
    point, the jurisdiction to adjudicate any matter in the trial
    court.    Nieder v. Royal Indem. Ins. Co., 
    62 N.J. 229
    , 234
    (1973).   In the event Cherry, plaintiffs or defendants elect to
    13                            A-1734-15T1
    proceed with an action addressing the lease in light of the fact
    that plaintiffs' no longer own the drycleaner business, see,
    e.g., Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 153, 164(2), 265, 266
    (1981), Cherry may raise the entire controversy doctrine at that
    time.
    Reversed and remanded for amendment of the judgment in
    conformity with this opinion.
    14                       A-1734-15T1
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-1734-15T1

Filed Date: 10/17/2017

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021