Beverly Enterprises, Inc. v. Fredonia Haven, Inc.

825 F.2d 374, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 11349
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 1987
Docket86-7472
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 825 F.2d 374 (Beverly Enterprises, Inc. v. Fredonia Haven, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beverly Enterprises, Inc. v. Fredonia Haven, Inc., 825 F.2d 374, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 11349 (11th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

HENDERSON, Senior Circuit Judge:

Fredonia Haven, Inc. (Fredonia) appeals from a decision of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama binding Fredonia to the terms of a parol lease agreement with Beverly Enterprises, Inc. (Beverly). Finding that the district court gave proper effect to the oral lease agreement based on the part performance exception to the Alabama statute of frauds, we affirm.

The resolution of this appeal depends upon a proper understanding of the rather complicated history of the formation of the lessor/lessee relationship between the two parties. For this reason, we set out these facts in some detail.

The appellant, Fredonia, is a closely held Alabama corporation owned in equal parts by three shareholders, Dale Hendrix, president of the corporation, Thomas Edd Snod-dy, attorney for Fredonia and Jane Laird, his sister. The corporation was formed in 1973 for the purpose of building and operating a nursing home in Double Springs, Alabama. As construction of the health care facility neared completion, however, Fredonia ran short of capital and was forced to lease the establishment to James Estes who provided the funds necessary to complete the nursing home. Fredonia and Estes executed a “Commercial Lease” dated September 24, 1974 reciting the rights and obligations of both parties. The document provided for an original five-year lease term with two successive five-year renewal options open to the lessee upon sixty days notice to the lessor, Fredonia. This resulted in Estes having the right to a leasehold estate for fifteen years from September 24, 1974 to September 23,1989. As consideration for the lease, Estes agreed to pay Fredonia the sum of $90.00 per month multiplied by the total number of beds in the nursing home. The lease also obligated Fredonia to pay all taxes, insurance premiums and the cost of major maintenance and repairs.

In 1978, James Estes formed his own corporation, Estes Health Care Centers (“EHCC”), and the 1974 lease was assigned to EHCC with the consent of Fredonia. From 1974 to 1981, Estes and EHCC operated the nursing home without default. While that lease contained a provision for periodic rent increases as an allowable medicare-medicaid cost with state approval, there was no escalation as of 1981 over the $90.00 per bed rental since Estes was never *376 able to obtain state approval for any increases.

In or about October 1981, Beverly, a nationwide operator of nursing homes, entered into an agreement for the purchase of the stock and subsequent merger of EHCC with Beverly. This agreement included Beverly's assumption of EHCC’s rights under all outstanding leases, including the Fredonia lease. Concerned that the merger might, under Alabama law, constitute an assignment of the leases without lessor approval, Beverly insisted that James Estes obtain a written agreement to the assumption of the leases from the owner-lessors of the health care facilities occupied by EHCC.

Estes presented the proposed agreement to the owner-lessors in letter form explaining the upcoming stock purchase merger and Beverly’s desire to assume the EHCC leases. The letter requested the lessors’ written execution and acceptance of the letter agreement at the bottom of the document under language stating “Agreed tó on this the_day of_, 1981.” It is undisputed that Dale Hendrix, as president of Fredonia, executed this letter agreement consenting to the merger on November 17, 1981.

Fredonia also prepared another document dated November 17, 1981 which purported to set out conditions for the corporation’s consent to the merger. The handwritten memorandum recited that in the event of the assignment to Beverly, as agreed by all the parties, Beverly would pay Fredonia an additional rental fee of $5.00 per bed per month beginning January 1, 1982, with an additional $2.00 per bed escalation every second year thereafter. Furthermore, Beverly was to assume all costs of repairs and maintenance, all insurance costs, and all taxes due during the term of the 1974 lease and the terms of any amendments entered into between Fredonia and Beverly “including a two-year extension.”

Apparently as a result of these demands, 1 Charles Wright, Senior Vice President of Beverly, agreed to meet with the Fredonia shareholders. In late November, the parties met in the Birmingham, Alabama offices of James Estes, who continued to take an active role in placating Fre-donia. There is a substantial conflict in the evidence concerning the precise agreement reached at this conference. All the participants concede that Beverly shouldered the responsibility for taxes, insurance and maintenance on the Double Springs nursing home, and committed to the increased rental payments contained in the handwritten memorandum. Fredonia and Beverly part company, however, with respect to the term of the new lease agreement. At trial, Charles Wright and James Estes contended that during the Birmingham meeting Fre-donia agreed to a new five-year lease term beginning January 1,1982 with two optional renewal terms of five years each. Hendrix and Snoddy maintained that they agreed to a two-year extension giving Beverly approximately a ten-year leasehold under the 1974 lease agreement.

After the Birmingham conclave, Beverly’s attorneys prepared a letter, dated December 4, 1981, purporting to contain the terms of the new lease agreement with Fredonia. The letter set out the new rental fees and shift of tax, insurance and maintenance costs to Beverly, but was silent as to the duration of the lease under the new agreement. Beverly maintains that the five-year lease period with two optional five-year renewals agreed upon at the Birmingham meeting was omitted through oversight. The letter was signed as “agreed to and accepted” by Edward Snod-dy on behalf of Fredonia. Following the merger with EHCC, Beverly took possession of the nursing home and increased the rent from $90.00 per bed per month to $95.00 per bed beginning in January 1982. Beverly began paying all taxes, insurance *377 and maintenance costs on the nursing home. Beverly also made substantial and costly repairs and improvements to the health care facility, including the addition of a new roof, the repavement of the parking lot and the construction of a laundry building on the premises.

In March of 1982, William H. Kennedy, III, counsel for Beverly, sent a written lease agreement, drafted in accordance with the agreement made in Birmingham, to William Wright and Edward Snoddy. Kennedy had delayed the submission of the lease until Beverly received final regulatory approval for their operation of the Double Springs nursing home. The lease agreement essentially redrafted the 1974 lease with new provisions for the increased rental payments, assumption of other financial obligations by Beverly and a five-year lease term with two successive options to renew for five more years. On March 12, 1982, William Wright executed the lease on behalf of Beverly and mailed it to Snoddy.

On March 15, 1982, after receipt of the new lease, Snoddy called Kennedy’s office to point out two small errors on the twelfth page of the lease documents. He made no objection to the duration of the new lease. Kennedy made the requested corrections and forwarded a revised page 12 to Snoddy for substitution in Fredonia’s copy of the agreement.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mobile Eye Center v. Van Buren Partnership
826 So. 2d 135 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2002)
Nelson v. Elway
908 P.2d 102 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
825 F.2d 374, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 11349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beverly-enterprises-inc-v-fredonia-haven-inc-ca11-1987.