St. Paul Community Limited Partnership v. St. Paul Community Church ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                         01/05/2021
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    November 12, 2020 Session
    ST. PAUL COMMUNITY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, ET AL. V.
    ST. PAUL COMMUNITY CHURCH
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County
    No. 15-0918-I     Patricia Head Moskal, Chancellor
    ___________________________________
    No. M2020-00272-COA-R3-CV
    ___________________________________
    This appeal concerns the trial court’s denial of attorney’s fees upon remand from this
    court. The defendant church requested attorney’s fees, to which the plaintiff lessee
    asserted that such fees were not warranted given the nature of the action. The trial court
    denied the request for fees, holding that an award of attorney’s fees was conditioned upon
    the need to hire counsel for the enforcement of the lease agreement and that the action at
    issue was one for declaratory judgment. We reverse and hold that attorney’s fees are
    warranted pursuant to the terms of the lease agreement. We remand for proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
    Reversed; Case Remanded
    JOHN W. MCCLARTY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL
    SWINEY, C.J. and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., joined.
    M. Taylor Harris, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Green Hills Community
    Church f/k/a St. Paul Community Church.
    W. Scott Simms, D. Gil Schuette, and William L. Harbison, Nashville, Tennessee, for the
    appellees, St. Paul Community Limited Partnership, John T. Rochford, III, and Rochford
    Realty and Construction Co.
    OPINION
    I.     BACKGROUND
    This appeal concerns property owned by Green Hills Community Church f/k/a St.
    Paul Community Church (“the Church”). In October 1987, the church leased the
    property at issue to Rochford Realty for a term of 101 years for the purpose of
    constructing and operating a retirement center. A retirement center was later constructed
    as anticipated. The facility is still operational to this day on the leased premises. In
    1988, Rochford Realty assigned the lease to John T. Rochford, III, who then assigned the
    lease to St. Paul Community Limited Partnership (“Lessee”), of which Mr. Rochford is
    the general partner.
    As pertinent to this appeal, the lease provided that Lessee “shall be allowed to
    mortgage its interest in the Leased Premises and to transfer, assign and convey its
    leasehold estate for such mortgage purposes.” The lease also specifically acknowledged
    Lessee’s right to procure mortgage insurance through the United States Department of
    Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) in connection with its financing of the
    improvements. The lease provided, in pertinent part, as follows:
    [The Church] agrees that Lessee, in connection with its financing of the
    Improvements, may enter into and execute a Regulatory Agreement for
    Multifamily Housing Projects, HUD-92466 (10-85), made applicable to
    mortgages insured under Section 221(d)(4) of the National Housing Act, as
    amended, and [the Church] agrees that the requirements and provisions of
    said Regulatory Agreement shall be paramount and controlling as to the
    rights and obligations set forth in the Regulatory Agreement and shall
    supersede any requirements or provisions of this Lease in conflict
    therewith. Attached hereto as Exhibit “C” and expressly made a part of this
    Lease is a Lease Addendum incorporating the provisions of FHA Form No.
    2070.
    Lessee sought HUD financing as agreed and then later fulfilled its loan obligations with
    HUD before obtaining a new mortgage with a conventional bank. The change in
    financing was documented by a lease addendum, entered in 1998, which provided, in
    pertinent part, as follows:
    [Lessee] is authorized to obtain a loan, the repayment of which is to be
    secured by a deed of trust on Lessee’s leasehold interest in the Leased
    Premises. Lessee is further authorized to execute a deed of trust on
    Lessee’s leasehold interest in the Leased Premises.
    -2-
    In 2013, Lessee again sought financing through HUD to repair and renovate the
    Community Center. At that time, FHA Form No. 2070 had been replaced with HUD
    Form 92070M, which allowed HUD to purchase the property, not just Lessee’s leasehold
    interest, in the event of default. New HUD regulations also required a reduction in rent
    owed to the Church to secure financing. The Church did not agree to these conditions1
    and advised Lessee that it was not authorized to secure said financing pursuant to the
    terms of the lease. Lessee then advised the Church of its intent to file a declaratory
    judgment action.
    In lieu of court involvement, the Church put the matter to a vote and ultimately
    approved the request by letter, which provided as follows:
    This letter will serve as confirmation of the vote taken by the St. Paul
    Community Church members this day, Sunday June 23, 2013, where there
    was an overwhelming majority approval by St. Paul Community Church
    affirming the rights approved in the 1988 lease with the St. Paul Senior
    Living Community and all amendments signed by the church in the
    following years, and also to include HUD financing and HUD-2070 as
    amended with HUD-92070M which would control if there is any conflict
    with the lease.
    However, Lessee did not pursue the requested financing. Instead, the parties entered into
    negotiations to purchase the property upon which the Center was built. The negotiations
    later stalled, prompting Lessee to pursue the financing option once again. The Church,
    again, disputed Lessee’s right to pursue the financing.
    In 2015, Lessee filed this action, requesting a judgment establishing either its right
    to pursue the financing through the terms of the lease or recognition of a settlement
    agreement between the parties to allow the financing as evidenced by the 2013 letter.
    Lessee later amended its complaint, adding causes of action for (1) breach of settlement
    agreement as evidenced by the approval letter and (2) breach of contract. In support of
    its claim for breach of contract, Lessee asserted as follows:
    By refusing to agree that [Lessee] is entitled to obtain HUD financing under
    the terms of the Lease, [the Church] has anticipatorily repudiated its
    obligations under the Lease and has materially breached the lease.
    1
    Lessee claims that FHA Form 2070 contained an identical purchase right for HUD, to
    which the Church responded that it never agreed to that portion of FHA Form 2070 when the
    lease was executed in 1988 and that the purchase option provision was intentionally omitted
    from Exhibit C to the Lease.
    -3-
    Further, the Lease provides that it may be amended by an “instrument in
    writing signed by the party or parties to be charged.”
    The [approval letter] constitutes a valid and enforceable amendment of the
    Lease. It was signed with authorization by [the Church] or with apparent
    authority by elder Jack Cope.
    Prior to and in the course of this lawsuit, [the Church] has made it clear that
    it does not intend to honor the terms of the [approval letter]. As a result,
    [the Church] has further materially breached the Lease by anticipatorily
    repudiating its obligations thereunder as amended by the [approval letter].
    [Lessee] has been harmed as a direct and proximate result of [the Church’s]
    breaches of the Lease.
    [Lessee] is entitled to specific performance of the Lease with respect to
    HUD financing because a damage remedy would not be adequate under the
    circumstances.
    The Church filed a counter-complaint, asking the court to enforce the lease as written,
    claiming that the terms of the lease did not require the Church to continually amend the
    lease in keeping with HUD’s current underwriting requirements for Lessee’s benefit and
    to its detriment. The Church claimed that the HUD provision in the lease was null and
    void as evidenced by the 1998 addendum. The Church asserted that Lessee’s continued
    assertions to the contrary breached both the express terms of the lease and Lessee’s duty
    of good faith and fair dealing. The Church also sought attorney’s fees, costs, and
    expenses. Lessee asserted that the lease agreement contemplated the need for long-term
    financing and that the parties agreed that HUD financing should be permitted throughout
    the term of the lease.
    The case proceeded to a hearing on cross-motions for summary judgment. The
    trial court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the Church by order, dated
    October 25, 2016, finding that the lease did not require compliance with new HUD
    regulations once the original HUD financing obligation was fulfilled. The court
    explained,
    [O]ngoing HUD insured mortgages were not contemplated by the parties.
    It would not be reasonable for the parties to in advance decide to accept
    HUD regulations. And it would not be reasonable for [the Church] to
    predict or accept a HUD regulation that would reduce its rent by a
    substantial or material amount.
    -4-
    That was not contemplated by the parties. It would not be reasonable to
    inflict those regulations on [the Church] when [the Church] is not a party to
    the mortgage terms, to the current mortgage terms.
    The court reserved ruling upon the issue of whether the parties reached a settlement
    agreement as evidenced by the 2013 approval letter. The court later granted summary
    judgment in favor of the Church on the settlement issue by order, dated May 19, 2017,
    and certified the judgment as final for purposes of appeal.
    A panel of this court upheld the trial court’s ruling. See St. Paul Cmty. Ltd. P’ship
    v. St. Paul Cmty. Church, No. M2017-01245-COA-R3-CV, 
    2018 WL 5733288
    , at *5
    (Tenn. Ct. App. Oct. 31, 2018) (holding that the approval letter did not form a binding
    contract). Upon remand, Chancellor Bonnyman, the chancellor assigned to this case,
    retired. Chancellor Moskal then became the presiding judge assigned to this case.
    Meanwhile, the Church moved for a grant of summary judgment on its remaining
    counter-complaint, requesting a declaration establishing that the Church was permitted to
    terminate the lease based upon Lessee’s failure to comply with the lease agreement. The
    Church also sought attorney’s fees pursuant to Paragraph 21 of the lease, which provides
    as follows:
    ATTORNEY’S FEES AND INTEREST. In the event that it becomes
    necessary for Lessor to employ an attorney to enforce collection of the rents
    herein agreed to be paid, or to enforce compliance with any of the
    covenants and agreements herein contained, Lessee shall be liable for all
    reasonable attorney’s fees costs and expenses so incurred by Lessor; and in
    addition, Lessee shall be liable for interest at ten per cent (10%) per annum
    on any sum which a court of competent jurisdiction shall finally determine
    to be due from lessee by reason of a breach of this Lease, such interest to
    run from the date of the breach.
    (Emphasis added.). Prior to the court’s ruling, the Church voluntarily dismissed its
    counter-complaint, with the exception of its request for attorney’s fees.
    The trial court denied the Church’s motion, finding that the Church had not sought
    to “enforce compliance with any covenants and agreements” of the lease but that the
    Church had merely prevailed on Lessee’s declaratory judgment claims, which were not
    enforcement actions. The court also rejected an alternative argument that fees should be
    awarded, even if the Church’s request did not fall within the scope of the lease, because
    Lessee’s claims were unreasonable. This timely appeal followed.
    -5-
    II.     ISSUES
    This case presents the following dispositive issues on appeal:
    A.     Whether the trial court erred in denying the Church’s request for
    attorney’s fees upon remand pursuant to terms of the lease agreement.
    B.     Whether the Church is entitled to attorney’s fees on appeal.
    III.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The language of a fee provision in a contract is subject to the usual rules of
    contract interpretation, and the award of such fees is limited to the situation agreed to by
    the parties. Segneri v. Miller, No. M2003-01014-COA-R3-CV, 
    2004 WL 2357996
    , at *6
    (Tenn. Ct. App. Oct. 19, 2004). Questions relating to the interpretation of written
    contracts involve legal rather than factual issues. Brandt v. Bib Enters., Ltd., 
    986 S.W.2d 586
    , 592 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998). We review questions of law de novo, affording the trial
    court’s decision no presumption of correctness. Armbrister v. Armbrister, 
    414 S.W.3d 684
    , 692 (Tenn. 2013) (citing Mills v. Fulmarque, 
    360 S.W.3d 362
    , 366 (Tenn. 2012)).
    IV.     ANALYSIS
    A. & B.
    Tennessee follows the American Rule which provides that “litigants pay their own
    attorney’s fees absent a statute or an agreement providing otherwise.” State v. Brown &
    Williamson Tobacco Corp., 
    18 S.W.3d 186
    , 194 (Tenn. 2000); accord Taylor v. Fezell,
    
    158 S.W.3d 352
    , 359 (Tenn. 2005). Paragraph 21 of the lease agreement provides for an
    award of attorney’s fees in the event that the Church must employ an attorney “to enforce
    compliance with any of the covenants and agreements” in the lease agreement. Lessee
    argues that dismissal of the fee application was warranted when the action is most
    properly characterized as a declaratory judgment action to determine whether the lease
    conferred any right upon Lessee to utilize HUD financing over the Church’s objection.
    The Church claims that the denial of its fee application was error, asserting that the action
    was not simply a declaratory judgment action. The Church further requests attorney’s
    fees on appeal.
    In denying the fee application, the trial court relied upon an unpublished opinion
    in which a panel of this court upheld the denial of attorney’s fees in a suit seeking the
    declaration of rights under a restrictive covenant. New Covenant Baptist Church v. Sark,
    No. E2002-02693-COA-R3-CV, 
    2003 WL 21544248
    , at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. Jul. 8, 2003).
    -6-
    In New Covenant, the plaintiff church purchased a lot that it planned to use as an ingress
    egress point to an adjacent tract. 
    Id.
     The plaintiff filed an action in which it sought a
    declaration that the lot’s restrictive covenants did not preclude the use of the lot in such a
    manner. 
    Id.
     The trial court ruled that the planned use was not in violation of the
    restrictive covenants. 
    Id.
     A panel of this court reversed, holding that the lot could not be
    used in such a manner. 
    Id.
     The defendant property owners sought an award of attorney’s
    fees pursuant to the following provision in the restrictive covenants:
    In any proceedings at law or equity to enforce these restrictions or for
    violation thereof, the losing party shall pay the attorney’s fees of the
    prevailing party in such amount as may be fixed by the court in such
    proceedings.
    
    Id.
     The trial court denied the requested fees, and a panel of this court affirmed on
    different grounds, holding that a suit seeking a declaration of rights under a restrictive
    covenant was not a suit to “enforce” those restrictions as required by the attorney fee
    provision. 
    Id.
     Judge Susano authored a dissenting opinion in which he claimed that a fee
    award was warranted based upon the fact that the defendant property owners hired
    counsel and filed a counter-complaint to enforce said restrictions even though the
    plaintiff church had not yet violated the same. Id., at *2-4 (Susano, dissenting).
    Our review of the record in this case reflects that while Lessee may have originally
    filed a declaratory judgment action, the complaint was later amended to include claims of
    (1) breach of settlement agreement and (2) breach of the lease agreement. As pertinent to
    this appeal, Lessee argued that the requested financing was anticipated in the lease
    agreement and that the Church’s refusal to acquiesce was an anticipatory repudiation of
    its obligations and a breach of the lease. The Church argued that the HUD financing
    clause was null and void as evidenced by the 1998 addendum to the lease agreement.
    The Church claimed that the lease did not require continued acquiescence to HUD
    financing and current underwriting requirements for Lessee’s benefit and to its detriment.
    In sum, Lessee sought to enforce compliance with the 1988 lease, while the Church
    sought to enforce compliance with the 1998 addendum to the lease.
    In consideration of the foregoing, we hold that attorney’s fees are warranted
    pursuant to the terms of the lease agreement. Exercising our discretion in such matters,
    we affirm the request for attorney’s fees on appeal and remand for a determination of the
    reasonable amount of such fees at the trial court level and now on appeal.
    -7-
    V.     CONCLUSION
    We reverse the judgment of the trial court. The case is remanded for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs of the appeal are taxed to appellees, St.
    Paul Community Limited Partnership, John T. Rochford, III, and Rochford Realty and
    Construction Co.
    _________________________________
    JOHN W. MCCLARTY, JUDGE
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: M2020-00272-COA-R3-CV

Judges: Judge John W. McClarty

Filed Date: 1/5/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/5/2021