B & C Management Vermont, Inc. v. John

2015 VT 61, 122 A.3d 511, 199 Vt. 202, 2015 Vt. 61, 2015 Vt. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 10, 2015
DocketNo. 14-224
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2015 VT 61 (B & C Management Vermont, Inc. v. John) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B & C Management Vermont, Inc. v. John, 2015 VT 61, 122 A.3d 511, 199 Vt. 202, 2015 Vt. 61, 2015 Vt. LEXIS 37 (Vt. 2015).

Opinions

¶ 1.

Skoglund, J.

Tenant appeals the court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of defendant landlords on the parties’ dispute concerning a rental-increase provision of the lease. On appeal, tenant argues that the court erred in using extrinsic evidence to interpret a portion of the lease tenant believes is unambiguous, and in reaching an inequitable result. We affirm.

¶ 2. The basic facts are not disputed. Tenant is the successor lessee to a thirty-year lease on a commercial property in Brattleboro. The lease was executed in 1987. The lease established [204]*204a basic annual rent of $26,500 in paragraph 8, and then set forth how the rent would increase in subsequent years. The relevant portion of the lease on the annual increase is as follows:

9. INCREASED BASIC RENT DUE TO COST OF LIVING INCREASES

A. For the purposes of this Paragraph, the term “Price Index” shall mean the Consumer Price Index (C.P.I.-U) For All Urban Consumers With The Population Size Class D (Less than 75,000 in population) For The Northeast Region, or a successor or substitute index appropriately adjusted.
B. Tenant agrees that if the Price Index as of January 1, 1988 and on any subsequent January 1 of the remaining years of the terms of this Lease Agreement reflects an increase in the cost of living over and above such cost as reflected in the Price Index on January 1, 1987 (the “base index year”), an adjustment of the Basic Rent payable under Paragraph 8 shall be made based on the percentage difference. This shall be called “Increased Basic Rent.” However, in no event shall any annual increase be more than four percent (4%) per year.
C. The percentage increase thus determined shall be multiplied by the Basic Rent payable by Tenant under Paragraph 8 and the aggregate of this sum and the Basic Rent set forth in Paragraph 8 shall represent “Increased Basic Rent” payable by Tenant in equal monthly installments during the remaining years of the terms of this Lease Agreement, including any option periods. The Basic Rent for purposes of this paragraph is Twenty-Six Thousand Five Hundred and no/100 Dollars ($26,500.00) NOT Thirteen Thousand Two Hundred Fifty and no/100 Dollars ($13,250.00).
E. In computing any increases under this Paragraph 9 the Basic Rent shall at all times be deemed to be the Basic Rent set forth in Paragraph 9 and in no event shall any cost of living increases be computed on the Increased Basic Rent.
[205]*205F. Under no circumstances shall the rent ever decrease or be less than the amount being paid at the time of any period of readjustment pursuant to this paragraph.

¶ 3. Pursuant to the rent-increase provision, each year landlords calculated the annual rent increase and sent a notice to tenant. The increase was calculated as the percentage change in the CPI from the previous year to the current year multiplied by the previous year’s rent. This increase was then added to the prior year’s rent to arrive at the new annual rent. In March 2007, tenant assumed the lease. From 2008 to 2012, landlords sent rent-increase notices and tenant paid rent annually adjusted for increases, calculated according to this method, without objection.

¶ 4. In 2013, landlords sent the annual rent increase notice to tenant. The notice reflected the new 2013 rent as $54,060. Tenant objected to the amount of rent and the calculation method for rental increases. The parties were unable to resolve their dispute, and tenant filed an action seeking both a declaration that its interpretation of the lease language was correct and damages for overpaid rent.

¶ 5. Tenant moved for summary judgment. Tenant claimed that the plain language of the lease agreement precluded landlords from using the increased basic rent to compute rental increases. Tenant alleged that the method of calculation was inconsistent with the language of the lease because the rent was calculated based on the increased basic rent and the lease agreement expressly states in paragraph 9E that “in no event shall any cost of living increase be computed on the Increased Basic Rent.” Tenant claimed that the method for calculating the rent increases most consistent with the lease language was to calculate the difference between the CPI of the current year and the previous year, subject to the 4% cap, add that to the cumulative change in the CPI since 1987, and then multiply it by the basic rent. This increase would then be added to the basic rent. Using this method, for 2013, tenant calculated the rent as $45,819.83.

¶ 6. Landlords also moved for summary judgment. Landlords argued that the plain language of the lease agreement required calculating the rent increase in a different way. Landlords’ method involved determining the percentage increase in the CPI between -the current year and 1987, multiplying this by the basic rent of $26,500, and adding that to the basic rent. Landlords claimed that the 4% cap should apply to the annual increase in rent, not the [206]*206percentage change in the CPI. Using this method, landlords calculated the 2013 rent as $57,836. In the alternative, landlords argued that if the court determined the lease as ambiguous, the court should interpret the rent-increase provision based on the method of calculation used by the parties over the preceding years.

¶ 7. The trial court determined that the contract language describing the process for calculating annual rent increases was “highly ambiguous.” The court explained that the main ambiguities were in paragraph 9B, which states that the adjustment in rent will be based on the percentage difference in the CPI, but does not specify whether the difference is calculated with respect to the prior year’s index or the 1987 index. Further, the lease states that increases are limited to 4% without specifying which variable is subject to the cap — the year-to-year increase in CPI or the actual increase in rent.

¶ 8. In interpreting of the rent-increase provision, the court determined that the parties’ apparent intent in establishing the rent-increase provision was two-fold: to account for inflation by incorporating the CPI, and also to limit annual rent increases by imposing a 4% cap. The court rejected both parties’ interpretations of the lease language as inconsistent with at least one of these purposes. The court rejected landlords’ assertion that the 4% cap was intended to be measured by comparing the current-year CPI with the 1987 CPI because this would result in an increase greater than 4% for every year after 1988 and therefore would simply increase rent by a set 4% each year, which would negate the language in the lease incorporating the annual CPI increase. The court further concluded, however, that applying the 4% cap to year-to-year increases in the percent CPI while using the calculation tenant offered would be inconsistent with the parties’ intent because the increases would have little correspondence to actual inflation and would steadily dimmish over the life of the lease.

¶ 9. Instead, the court looked to the parties’ performance under the contract, and concluded that while the calculation employed by the parties during the life of the lease had departed from some language in the contract, it best reflected the parties’ intention. The court further determined that this result was the most equitable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 VT 61, 122 A.3d 511, 199 Vt. 202, 2015 Vt. 61, 2015 Vt. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-c-management-vermont-inc-v-john-vt-2015.