Mayo's Island, L.C. v. Virginia Commonwealth University ( 2024 )


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  •                                             COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    UNPUBLISHED
    Present: Judges Huff, AtLee and Callins
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    MAYO’S ISLAND, L.C.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 0761-23-2                                 JUDGE DOMINIQUE A. CALLINS
    NOVEMBER 19, 2024
    VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY, ET AL.
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
    Clarence N. Jenkins, Jr., Judge
    Andrea Shaia Bade (Thomas Shaia; Shaia’s Law, PLLC, on briefs),
    for appellant.
    Christopher P. Bernhardt, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S.
    Miyares, Attorney General; Steven G. Popps, Deputy Attorney
    General; Jacqueline C. Hedblom, Senior Assistant Attorney
    General/Trial Section Chief, on brief), for appellees.
    This case concerns a dispute over the exercise of an early termination clause in a
    commercial lease. Mayo’s Island, L.C. filed a motion for judgment alleging one count of breach of
    contract against Virginia Commonwealth University, the Comptroller of Virginia, and the
    Commonwealth of Virginia (collectively, “VCU”) after VCU exercised an early termination clause
    in the parties’ lease and stopped paying rent. VCU demurred, and the circuit court sustained
    VCU’s demurrer. On appeal, Mayo’s Island argues that the circuit court erred in sustaining the
    demurrer. We disagree and affirm the circuit court’s judgment.
    *
    This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
    BACKGROUND1
    Commencing in 2014, VCU leased a parking area from Mayo’s Island for a period of
    approximately two years. In 2015, the parties amended the lease (“first amendment”) to extend the
    lease term, add additional parking spaces, restate the rent, and make improvements to the parking
    area. In 2019, VCU sought to “secure a bus shelter to the ground” of the leased premises, but
    certain code compliance issues with the City of Richmond prevented it from doing so. Thus, in the
    same year, the parties again amended the lease (“second amendment”) to extend the lease period
    until April 30, 2022, and to adjust certain terms. Most pertinent to this case, the second amendment
    “deleted in its entirety” a termination clause2 in the original lease and replaced it with the following
    early termination clause:
    As of August 31, 2019, [Mayo’s Island] shall resolve any present
    outstanding code or ordinance compliance (“Code”) issues with the
    City of Richmond, Virginia (the “City”) that affect the Premises as of
    May 1, 2019 as set forth on Exhibit B attached hereto (the “Code
    Compliance Items”). If the Code Compliance Items are not resolved
    with the City no later than August 31, 2019, unless [Mayo’s Island]
    has filed an applicable appeal with the City with respect to such
    Code Compliance Items that stays any enforcement of such violation,
    then at any time thereafter, [VCU] shall have the right to terminate
    the Lease upon 60 days written notice to [Mayo’s Island] so long as
    the Code Compliance Items have not been resolved with the City and
    there is no appeal of such matters. [VCU] is not required to give any
    notice to cure or other notice, except for the 60 days to terminate
    specified in this subsection.
    Exhibit B, which was attached to the second amendment, identified the specific code compliance
    issues that prevented VCU from obtaining a permit from the City of Richmond “to secure a bus
    1
    “In evaluating a demurrer, the appellate court ‘consider[s] as admitted the facts expressly
    alleged [in the complaint] and those which fairly can be viewed as impliedly alleged or reasonably
    inferred.” Qiu v. Huang, 
    77 Va. App. 304
    , 317 (2023) (first alteration in original) (quoting Hooked
    Grp., LLC v. City of Chesapeake, 
    298 Va. 663
    , 667 (2020)).
    2
    The record does not include the text of the termination clause in the original,
    unamended lease between VCU and Mayo’s Island.
    -2-
    shelter to the ground” in the leased parking area. It stated that the code compliance issues “must be
    brought into compliance with the City of Richmond Code,” however, “[o]nce [VCU] is able to
    receive a permit from the City of Richmond to secure a bus shelter to the ground on the Premises,
    this condition shall be considered met.”
    Although Mayo’s Island submitted the paperwork to obtain the permits and resolve the code
    compliance issues in June and August of 2019, the City did not respond to the permit application;
    consequentially, Mayo’s Island did not resolve the code compliance issues with the City by August
    31, 2019. Mayo’s Island also did not have an appeal filed with the City by August 31, 2019.
    Nevertheless, at some point in time, VCU secured a bus shelter on the leased property.3 Prior to
    July 2021, VCU removed the bus shelter.
    On April 30, 2021, VCU notified Mayo’s Island that it was exercising its early termination
    option, stating that “[a]fter verifying with the City of Richmond, it is clear that the outstanding code
    compliance issues Mayo’s Island, L.C. has with the City . . . continue to be unresolved, and
    continue to prevent VCU from installing the bus shelter.” On May 10, 2021, Mayo’s Island
    responded to VCU’s letter, asserting that the early termination clause could not be exercised for the
    City’s nonresponse. Therefore, Mayo’s Island stated that it would enforce the terms and conditions
    of the lease. In July 2021, VCU stopped paying rent to Mayo’s Island until the end of the lease on
    April 30, 2022.4
    3
    The record does not reflect when VCU secured the bus shelter or if the bus shelter was
    secured to the ground.
    4
    Mayo’s Island “received permission [from the City of Richmond] to commence work
    on the property in accordance with the terms as stated in [the early termination clause] of the
    Second Amendment” on or about July 1, 2021. Mayo’s Island then notified VCU of the City’s
    response on or about July 12, 2021. However, VCU had already provided Mayo’s Island with 60
    days’ notice of its termination pursuant to the early termination clause.
    -3-
    Mayo’s Island filed a motion for judgment alleging one count of breach of contract against
    VCU. In Mayo’s Island’s motion, it argued that the “[f]ailure of the City of Richmond to give an
    answer to the permit request was not contemplated by the Termination clause.” Because Mayo’s
    Island did not expressly assume the risk of the City of Richmond’s failure to respond, Mayo’s Island
    argued that VCU was not able to terminate the lease; it also contended that the City’s lack of
    response created a legal impossibility for it to obtain the permits or to appeal. Therefore, Mayo’s
    Island claimed that VCU owed $240,000 for 10 months of unpaid rent.
    VCU filed a demurrer, arguing that the failure of the City to give an answer to Mayo’s
    Island’s permit request “is irrelevant to the exercise of the Termination Clause . . . [t]he Parties
    agreed that [Mayo’s Island] had the responsibility to resolve the code compliance issues,” not
    merely file paperwork with the City to obtain the proper permits. VCU further argued that the
    City’s nonresponse did not create a legal impossibility because performance of an absolute promise
    is not excused by the fact that a third person fails to take action essential to performance. Because
    Mayo’s Island did not resolve the compliance issues and had no appeal pending with the City, VCU
    argued that it permissibly terminated the lease under the early termination clause and requested that
    the circuit court sustain its demurrer. Mayo’s Island filed a response to VCU’s demurrer, and, after
    a hearing on the matter, the circuit court sustained VCU’s demurrer with prejudice on January 17,
    2023. In reaching its ruling, the circuit court reasoned that the code compliance issues, which
    “must” have been brought into compliance with the City in order for VCU to secure a bus shelter to
    the ground, were not resolved by August 31, 2019. Because “there’s no time restrictions that are
    placed on [VCU]” for when it could exercise the early termination clause, the circuit court ruled in
    favor of VCU.
    Mayo’s Island filed a motion to suspend, and the circuit court “issue[d] a stay” of the
    January 17 order on February 7, 2023, pending “further proceedings.” Mayo’s Island
    -4-
    simultaneously filed a motion to reconsider, and after a hearing, the circuit court denied the motion
    to reconsider and reinstated its previous order, dismissing Mayo’s Island’s claim with prejudice on
    April 10, 2023. The final order of April 10, 2023, reinstated the January 17, 2023 order “for the
    reasons stated on January 17, 2023, and April 10, 2023.” Mayo’s Island appealed, and VCU filed a
    motion to dismiss.5
    ANALYSIS
    Mayo’s Island argues that the circuit court erred by “failing to consider all of the reasons
    why the Termination Clause could not be exercised by [VCU].” Although Mayo’s Island presents
    four assignments of error, they reduce to a single argument: that the circuit court erred in sustaining
    VCU’s demurrer as a matter of law. We disagree.
    5
    VCU moves this Court to dismiss Mayo’s Island’s appeal because Mayo’s Island “filed
    its notice of appeal more than thirty days after the entry of the final order sustaining the demurrer
    without leave to amend, not counting the days the final order was stayed.” (Emphasis added).
    We disagree with VCU and deny the motion to dismiss.
    A circuit court loses jurisdiction over a final order 21 days after it is entered unless the
    court enters another order expressly modifying, vacating, or suspending that order. Rule 1:1(a).
    Yet, if the order is “modified, vacated, or suspended by the trial court pursuant to Rule 1:1,” then
    the “time for filing is computed from the date of the final judgment entered following such
    modification, vacation, or suspension.” Rule 5A:3 (emphasis added). On January 17, 2023, the
    circuit court entered an order sustaining VCU’s demurrer with prejudice. The court then
    “issue[d] a stay” of that order, at Mayo’s Island’s request, on February 7, 2023, pending “further
    proceedings.” On April 10, 2023, the circuit court ordered “that the Order entered on January
    17, 2023, and stayed by the Court by Order dated February 7, 2023, is hereby reinstated on this
    date for the reasons stated on January 17, 2023, and April 10, 2023, [and] this case is dismissed
    with prejudice.” (Emphases added).
    To argue that Mayo’s Island’s “30-day deadline” did not start anew on April 10, 2023,
    VCU relies on two cases, Wagner v. Shird, 
    257 Va. 584
     (1999), and Hutchins v. Talbert, 
    278 Va. 650
     (2009). In both Wagner and Hutchins, however, the circuit court stayed the final orders for
    fixed periods of time; after these fixed periods of time, the final orders became operational upon
    the expiration of that time. Here, the circuit court stayed its January 17, 2023 order “until further
    proceedings.” The “further proceeding” occurred on April 10, 2023. In the April 10 order, the
    trial court explicitly stated that it reinstated the January 17 order and dismissed Mayo’s Island’s
    claim for both “the reasons stated on January 17, 2023, and April 10, 2023.” (Emphasis added).
    Thus, the final order in this case, and the final order for purpose of a timely appeal, is April 10,
    2023. Because Mayo’s Island’s appeal was timely, we deny VCU’s motion to dismiss.
    -5-
    This Court “reviews a decision to sustain or overrule a demurrer de novo because that
    decision ‘involves issues of law.’” Qiu v. Huang, 
    77 Va. App. 304
    , 316 (2023) (quoting Coutlakis
    v. CSX Transp., Inc., 
    293 Va. 212
    , 216 (2017)). “When a court dismisses a complaint on demurrer,
    we assume without any corroboration that factual allegations made with ‘sufficient definiteness’ are
    presumptively true.” Morgan v. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    302 Va. 46
    , 52 (2023) (quoting Squire v. Va.
    Hous. Dev. Auth., 
    287 Va. 507
    , 514 (2014)). “This is because ‘[a] demurrer tests the legal
    sufficiency of the facts alleged in pleadings, not the strength of proof.’” Livingston v. Va. Dep’t of
    Transp., 
    284 Va. 140
    , 150 (2012) (alteration in original) (quoting Lee v. City of Norfolk, 
    281 Va. 423
    , 432 (2011)). In testing the legal sufficiency of the facts alleged in the pleadings, a reviewing
    “court may also examine any exhibits accompanying the pleading.” TC MidAtlantic Dev., Inc. v.
    Commonwealth, 
    280 Va. 204
    , 210 (2010). But “[i]f the pleading fails to state a cause of action,
    then the demurrer should be sustained.” Hartley v. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    80 Va. App. 1
    , 26 (2024)
    (quoting La Bella Dona Skin Care, Inc. v. Belle Femme Enters., LLC, 
    294 Va. 243
    , 255 (2017)).
    “The elements of a breach of contract action are (1) a legally enforceable obligation of a
    defendant to a plaintiff; (2) the defendant’s violation or breach of that obligation; and (3) injury or
    damage to the plaintiff caused by the breach of obligation.” Young-Allen v. Bank of Am., N.A., 
    298 Va. 462
    , 469 (2020); see also Filak v. George, 
    267 Va. 612
    , 619 (2004) (outlining the same
    elements). This case concerns the second prong, and Mayo’s Island’s pleading fails to allege facts
    that VCU violated or breached a contractual obligation by exercising the early termination clause
    and refraining from paying rent.
    In Mayo’s Island’s motion for judgment, it asserts that it “filed the proper paperwork with
    the City of Richmond to obtain the necessary permits” in June and August of 2019. Additionally,
    Mayo’s Island contends that “VCU did secure a bus shelter on the property as requested” and that
    VCU removed the secured bus shelter sometime in or before July 2021. Finally, Mayo’s Island
    -6-
    asserts that the City did not respond to its permit application until July 2021, at which point it
    “notified VCU of that response on or about July 12, 2021.” Even when it is presumed that these
    factual allegations are true, Mayo’s Island’s pleading does not sufficiently allege that VCU
    breached or violated an obligation under the lease terms.
    The early termination clause, to which both parties agreed, states that VCU “shall have the
    right to terminate the Lease [after August 31, 2019] . . . so long as the Code Compliance Items have
    not been resolved [by Mayo’s Island] with the City and there is no appeal of such matters.” Under
    the plain terms of the clause, Mayo’s Island needed to either (1) resolve the code compliance issues
    or (2) have an appeal pending with the City by August 31, 2019, to prevent VCU from lawfully
    terminating the lease. It is undisputed that Mayo’s Island did not receive a permit from the City and
    that it did not have an appeal filed with the City by August 31, 2019; Mayo’s Island’s motion for
    judgment does not suggest otherwise. Exhibit B to the second amendment states that, “[o]nce
    [VCU] is able to receive a permit from the City of Richmond to secure a bus shelter to the ground
    on the Premises, this condition shall be considered met.” (Emphases added). Although Mayo’s
    Island asserts that VCU did secure a bus shelter on the leased premises at some point, Mayo’s Island
    does not factually allege that VCU received a permit from the City or that the bus shelter was
    secured to the ground of the leased property. Thus, Mayo’s Island’s pleaded facts, even when
    presumed true, fall short of successfully alleging a claim that VCU breached the contract by
    exercising the early termination clause and withholding rent.
    Mayo’s Island also argues that the circuit court erred by failing to consider that it “properly
    pled impossibility as a valid defense” because the City unexpectedly failed to respond to Mayo’s
    Island’s application for a permit. Mayo’s Island itself recognizes that the impossibility doctrine is a
    defense—not an affirmative pleading. Our Supreme Court has likewise “long recognized an
    impossibility defense in contract actions.” RECIP IV WG Land Investors LLC v. Cap. One Bank
    -7-
    USA, N.A., 
    295 Va. 268
    , 284 (2018) (emphasis added); Hampton Rds. Bankshares, Inc. v. Harvard,
    
    291 Va. 42
    , 53 (2016) (“The defense of impossibility of performance is an established principle of
    contract law.”). Because on demurrer we review the sufficiency of the facts alleged in the
    pleadings, asserting an affirmative defense of impossibility does not save nor support Mayo’s
    Island’s claim that VCU breached the lease between the parties; this doctrine does not salvage the
    legally insufficient facts alleged in Mayo’s Island’s pleading. We therefore affirm the circuit court’s
    judgment in sustaining VCU’s demurrer.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
    Affirmed.
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0761232

Filed Date: 11/19/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/19/2024