Cedar-Fieldstone Marketplace, LP v. T.S. Fitness, Inc.

99 N.E.3d 798, 93 Mass. App. Ct. 33
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMarch 15, 2018
DocketAC 17-P-791
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 N.E.3d 798 (Cedar-Fieldstone Marketplace, LP v. T.S. Fitness, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cedar-Fieldstone Marketplace, LP v. T.S. Fitness, Inc., 99 N.E.3d 798, 93 Mass. App. Ct. 33 (Mass. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

MILKEY, J.

*799 *33 In this case, we consider whether the release of a landlord's claims against a tenant for unpaid rent pursuant to a lease precluded the landlord from bringing a collection action against a guarantor of the lease. We conclude that it did not.

Background . The defendant T.S. Fitness, Inc. (tenant), rented commercial property in New Bedford from the plaintiff, Cedar-Fieldstone Marketplace, LP (landlord). In 2011, those parties agreed to a modification of the then-existing lease between them. To secure the tenant's payment obligations under the modified *34 lease, the tenant's president, the defendant Thomas W. Sheridan, executed a personal guaranty, which was memorialized in a detailed, three-page document. Under the terms of the guaranty, Sheridan's liability was "co-extensive with that of [the t]enant," except that it was capped at a specified amount, $52,271.06. The existence of that cap appears to explain why the document is captioned a limited guaranty.

Except for the cap on his liability, Sheridan's obligations under the guaranty are set forth expansively, as we will review in detail later. The guaranty states that "[n]o waiver or modification of any provision of this [g]uaranty nor any termination of the [g]uaranty shall be effective unless in writing, signed by [the l]andlord."

After the lease modification, the tenant subsequently defaulted on the lease, prompting the landlord to bring a summary process action against it in District Court. That action was resolved through an agreement for judgment in February of 2013. The parties to the agreement for judgment were the parties to the summary process action, that is, the landlord and the tenant. Sheridan himself signed the agreement for judgment, but he did so in his capacity as president of the tenant.

The essence of the agreement for judgment was that the landlord allowed the tenant to occupy the premises for an additional three months, and that the tenant agreed to vacate the premises after that and to make agreed-to monthly use and occupancy payments in the interim. The body of the agreement for judgment included a paragraph through which the tenant expressly (and broadly) released its potential claims against the landlord. Curiously, there is no corresponding provision that addresses what claims the landlord agreed to release. However, in prefatory "whereas" clauses, there is language that could be taken to suggest that the agreement for judgment was intended to resolve the entirety of the dispute between the parties. 3

*800 After the agreement for judgment had been executed, the landlord brought a collection action in Superior Court against *35 both the tenant and Sheridan seeking over $100,000 in unpaid rent. Relying on the prefatory language quoted in note 3, supra , a Superior Court judge (first motion judge) ruled, as a matter of law, that the agreement for judgment barred the landlord's only count (breach of contract) against the tenant. 4 That count eventually was dismissed, and the landlord took no appeal from that ruling when the judgment ultimately issued.

However, a second Superior Court judge (second motion judge) ruled on summary judgment that the landlord's counts against Sheridan as guarantor were not similarly barred. 5 Because it was undisputed that the unpaid rent exceeded the specified amount that Sheridan had agreed to guarantee ($52,271.06), 6 the second motion judge granted summary judgment in the landlord's favor against Sheridan in that amount. Accordingly, judgment issued ordering Sheridan to pay the landlord $52,271.06, plus attorney's fees and costs. 7 Sheridan appealed, arguing that he no longer could be liable under the guaranty once the tenant's underlying liability was resolved by the agreement for judgment. We affirm.

Discussion . For purposes of our analysis, we will assume, without deciding, that the first motion judge was correct to conclude that the agreement for judgment barred the landlord's collection count against the tenant. The limited issue we face is whether, based on that premise, the landlord's counts against Sheridan as guarantor also were barred.

The argument that Sheridan makes on appeal is a narrow one. It is undisputed that Sheridan himself was not a party to the agreement *36 for judgment, and he makes no claim that he was an intended third-party beneficiary of it. 8 Thus, Sheridan *801 is not claiming that when the parties terminated the summary process action through the agreement for judgment, they in fact agreed that his obligations as guarantor had been released as part of a comprehensive settlement. Rather, he argues that once the tenant no longer was liable under the lease, he automatically was relieved of his guaranty obligations as a matter of law. 9 He bases this contention on what he characterizes as the "black letter legal principle that a guarantor's obligations are coextensive with those of the principal obligor." We are unpersuaded.

To be sure, the cases do recite that "the liability of the guarantor cannot exceed the liability of the debtor." See 275 Washington St. Corp. v. Hudson River Intl., LLC , 465 Mass. 16 , 30, 987 N.E.2d 194 (2013). However, that principle is of more limited application than Sheridan warrants. It stands for the straightforward proposition that a guarantor's own liability is bounded by the scope of the underlying liability that he has guaranteed. 10 Thus, in the case at hand, Sheridan's liability under the guaranty could not exceed the tenant's payment obligations that arose under the terms of the lease. See ibid. However, it is a different question altogether whether a subsequent negotiated compromise of such underlying *37 liability affected Sheridan's obligations as guarantor of the tenant's lease obligations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 N.E.3d 798, 93 Mass. App. Ct. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedar-fieldstone-marketplace-lp-v-ts-fitness-inc-massappct-2018.