Cedar Springs Mobile Estates v. Angela Smith

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 17, 2019
Docket344630
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cedar Springs Mobile Estates v. Angela Smith (Cedar Springs Mobile Estates v. Angela Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cedar Springs Mobile Estates v. Angela Smith, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

CEDAR SPRINGS MOBILE ESTATES, UNPUBLISHED September 17, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 344630 Kent Circuit Court ANGELA SMITH, LC No. 17-011684-AV

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and GLEICHER and M. J. KELLY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Cedar Springs Mobile Estates’ rental contracts make tenants responsible for damages caused by negligent acts. At the bench trial to evict tenant Angela Smith and collect the costs of repairing her rental unit, however, Cedar Springs’ only evidence of negligence was speculative and was rebutted by Smith. On this record, the district court could not find Smith financially responsible and therefore could not support a judgment of eviction. We reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

Angela Smith rented a mobile home and lot in the Cedar Springs Mobile Estates. On July 22, 2017, a couch in the home’s living room caught fire, damaging the surrounding area. Cedar Springs paid to repair the fire damage and then attempted to recoup approximately $5,000 from Smith. When Smith did not remit these funds in addition to her normal rent payments, Cedar Springs instituted eviction proceedings in the district court and sought damages. Following a bench trial, the district court ordered Smith’s eviction and also entered judgment of $6,997.10. Smith appealed that judgment to the circuit court, which affirmed.

The relationship between Smith and Cedar Springs was memorialized in two lease agreements entered on June 3, 2017—the Cedar Springs Mobile Estates Lease Agreement (Lot Lease) and the Cedar Springs Mobile Estates Home Lease Agreement (Home Lease)—and was also governed by the Cedar Springs Community Rules (Community Rules). Under the Lot Lease, Smith was required to pay $400 in monthly lot rent. Under the Home Lease, Smith was required to pay an additional $375 in monthly rent for the mobile home.

-1- The Home Lease specifically addresses fire damage to mobile homes as follows:

18. DESTRUCTION OF HOME. If the Home is partially damaged by fire . . ., Landlord shall make necessary repairs as quickly as reasonably possible. If the Home is not habitable, rent will be abated until the Home is again habitable, unless the damage or destruction is due to the conduct (whether intentional or negligent) of Tenant, other members of Tenant’s household, or guests or invitees of Tenant, in which case there shall be no abatement of rent. No reduction in rent shall be made if Tenant can use and occupy the Home without substantial inconvenience. [Emphasis added.]

The Home Lease more generally provides that the tenant must “maintain the Home and all fixtures and appliances in good working condition and repair.” The tenant is “responsible for all repairs to Home and all fixtures and appliances” after move-in. Moreover:

Tenant shall be liable for any damage to the Home or to Landlord’s other property that is caused by the acts or omissions (whether intentional or negligent) of Tenant, members of Tenant’s household or Tenant’s guests, visitors or invitees. Tenant shall reimburse Landlord, upon demand by Landlord, the costs of all required damage repairs/replacements. Landlord may require advance payment for any repair for which Tenant is responsible. [Emphasis added.]

The tenant also “agrees that he will not allow anything to be done on the Home, including the operation of any equipment or machinery, which may result in imminent serious property damage to the Home. . . .”

The Lot Lease also governs the parties’ duties in the event of fire, providing that the tenant remains “responsible for payment of [lot] rent” following a fire. In relation to the “maintenance of home & site,” the Lot Lease provides:

Resident must maintain the exterior of the home in accordance with the Community Rules and Regulations. In the event Resident neglects to maintain the site, Management will notify Resident to take corrective action within a reasonable number of days after the date of the written notice, and if Resident fails to bring the site into compliance within that time, Management shall have the right to enter upon the site and perform or subcontract this maintenance and charge resident for all maintenance performed.

Resident will be charged for all such maintenance as provided in the Community and Regulations. Such charges shall be deemed rent and shall be collectable as rent. Management reserves the right to raise or lower said fees, charges, however. Resident shall be provided thirty (30) days written notice of such change. [Emphasis added.]

The Community Rules similarly provide that residents are required “to maintain the home site as required” and that if Cedar Springs must enter to make repairs, “[t]he charges incurred as a result of such maintenance shall be deemed to be rent and collectable as rent.”

-2- Both leases provide a mechanism for eviction. The Lot Lease permits Cedar Springs to “terminate this tenancy for just cause and evict Resident as provided by law if Resident defaults under this Lease. . . .” The Home Lease permits Cedar Springs to evict Smith if she “fails to pay rent or other amounts owed by Tenant under this Lease.”

The subject fire rendered the mobile home uninhabitable. Cedar Springs employed a general contractor to oversee the repairs, a maintenance worker to clean the home, and an electrician. Smith and her family were able to move back into the mobile home on October 13, 2017. At that time, she submitted $1,514.28 to Cedar Springs. Smith made an additional payment of $872.28 on November 4. Pursuant to the Community Rules, ¶ IXA, these payments were applied in a specific order: “1st to dishonored check charges; 2nd to late fees; 3rd to states specific tax; 4th to water/sewer charges; 5th to other charges pursuant to these rules; 6th to delinquent rent; and 7th to current rent.” The funds were applied only to the outstanding repair bills under this provision, leaving the rent balance due and owing. Cedar Springs then charged a late fee.

One month later, Cedar Springs filed in district court a “demand for possession” based on the rent arrearage. It also filed a form complaint seeking the payment of back rent and attested, “The plaintiff declares that this residential property was kept fit for the use intended and has been kept in reasonable repair during the term of the lease.”

At a pretrial hearing, Cedar Springs shared its belief that the fire “was caused by an afghan sitting on top of an air conditioner, which caused the air conditioner to overheat and caught a couch on fire.” Cedar Springs reprised that theory at the bench trial and claimed that an incident report prepared by the fire department supported this. The district court excluded the report from evidence, however, because Cedar Springs failed to secure the presence of the preparing officer and the report’s contents would therefore be hearsay. The court reiterated its ruling later in the trial upon further motion of Cedar Springs.

Cedar Springs manager, Ranee Dewey, testified at trial regarding the extent of the damage to the mobile home, the types of repairs needed, and the cost expended. Dewey inspected the mobile home the day after the fire. Dewey observed that the damage to the home was centered in the living room “at the first window; . . . an air conditioner that was in that window with an afghan laid on the top that was charcoaled.” The sofa would have been located adjacent to that window. However, during Dewey’s inspection, the burnt couch was outside.

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Bluebook (online)
Cedar Springs Mobile Estates v. Angela Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedar-springs-mobile-estates-v-angela-smith-michctapp-2019.