Chattanooga Associates v. Cherokee Warehouses, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 18, 1999
Docket03A01-9901-CH-00021
StatusPublished

This text of Chattanooga Associates v. Cherokee Warehouses, Inc. (Chattanooga Associates v. Cherokee Warehouses, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chattanooga Associates v. Cherokee Warehouses, Inc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE FILED

October 18, 1999

Cecil Crowson, Jr.

Appellate Court Clerk

CHATTANOOGA ASSOCIATES, ) LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, ) 03A01-9901-CH-00021 ) Plaintiff/Appellee ) Appeal As Of Right From The ) HAMILTON CO. CHANCERY COURT vs. ) ) CHEROKEE WAREHOUSES, INC., ) HON. HOWELL N. PEOPLES, ) CHANCELLOR Defendant/Appellant )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee: Frank P. Pinchak Bruce C. Bailey WITT, GAYTHER & WHITAKER, P.C. CHAMBLISS, BAHNER & STOPHEL, P.C. 1100 SunTrust Bank Building 1000 Tallan Building 736 Market Street Two Union Square Chattanooga, TN 37402-4856 Chattanooga, TN 37402

REVERSED and REMANDED Swiney, J.

OPINION

This is an appeal from an Order of the Chancery Court of Hamilton County awarding

Page 1 Plaintiff $46,249.47 for the cost of construction (repaving) on the parking lot of a storage warehouse

which Chattanooga Associates Limited Partnership (“Plaintiff”) leased to Cherokee Warehouses, Inc. (“

Defendant”), plus late fee and attorney's fees, under the terms of the Lease, for a total judgment of

$71,288.77. Defendant appeals, and raises these issues:

1. Whether the Chancellor Erred in Refusing to Bar Recovery by Virtue of the Plaintiff's Breach of the Implied Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing.

2. Whether the Chancellor Erred in Concluding that the Defendant was liable under the lease agreement with the Plaintiff for its share of the paving “repairs.”

3. Whether the Chancellor Erred in Awarding a 15% Late Charge.

For the reasons stated in this Opinion, we reverse the judgment of the Trial Court and remand the

case to the Trial Court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Cherokee Warehouses, Inc. is in the public warehouse business. It owns 18 warehouses

(three million square feet) and leases other warehouses. In August1992, it leased 56% of a warehouse

owned by Chattanooga Associates, Ltd. In March 1993, Cherokee expanded its occupancy to 79% of

the space. The other 21% of the space in that warehouse was subject to an ongoing lease to Red Food

Stores. The Lease Agreement between Cherokee and Chattanooga Associates provides, as pertinent:

1. Payment of Rental; Tenant's Proportionate Share. . . . Tenant covenants and agrees to pay the rent herein reserved and each installment thereof promptly when and as due, together with all other sums, reimbursements, costs, fees, charges and expenses required to be paid by Tenant to Landlord from time to time hereunder, all of which shall be deemed additional rent hereunder.

13. Repairs; Maintenance and Common Areas. (f) To the extent Landlord elects to perform or otherwise performs any maintenance or repairs on the building, or the land on which the building is situated, including but not limited to, landscaping, grass cutting, resurfacing of paved areas, removal of snow or ice from paved areas, etc., Tenant agrees to pay its proportionate share (as defined in Section 1) of the costs incurred by Landlord therefor, within ten days of demand therefor by Landlord, which demand shall be accompanied by an invoice indicating the maintenance and repairs undertaken by Landlord in regard to such areas, the cost incurred in connection therewith, and Tenant's

Page 2 breakdown of Tenant's proportionate share thereof.

* * * 16. Default. (b) In the event of any default (as defined in subsection [a] above), Landlord, in addition to any and all legal and equitable remedies it may have, shall have the following remedies: * * * . . . In the event Landlord brings any action against Tenant to enforce compliance by Tenant with any covenant or condition of this Lease, including the covenant to pay rent, Tenant shall promptly reimburse Landlord for all costs and expenses incurred by Landlord in bringing, defending and/or prosecuting such action, including, but not limited to, attorneys' fees.

(c) In the event Tenant fails to pay Landlord any payment of rent (basic or additional) due hereunder within 10 days from the date on which any such payment was due, in addition to all other rights and remedies hereunder or at law or in equity to which Landlord may be entitled, Landlord may at Landlord's option charge Tenant a late charge equal to 15% of the payment or other such charge, which charge shall be payable by Tenant to landlord within 5 days of demand therefor.

In early fall of 1994, Red Food Store employees contacted Plaintiff’s general manager,

Pete Smith, and complained about a large pothole outside the portion of the warehouse occupied by Red

Food. Plaintiff contacted a large real estate developer in Chattanooga, CBL (the owner of Hamilton

Place Mall), and asked for the name of a qualified civil engineer. Plaintiff was referred to Charles Miller,

a licensed civil engineer with special experience in grading, water, pavement design, roadway design,

drainage, and parking lots, who had designed the parking lots for Hamilton Place Mall. Plaintiff told

Miller it had a warehouse, “. . . and that the parking lot was failing, potholes and those kinds of things,

would I go out and look at it and give her a contract to come up with -- to mitigate the failures in the

asphalt at this location.”

Miller sent a proposal to Plaintiff, dated and faxed on October 21, 1994. He advised

that the pavement failures should be filled and re-paved, then the whole parking lot should be paved

over. The primary reason for these failures was water getting into the subgrade. It was Miller’s opinion

that if they just repaired the cracks and didn’t repave the whole area, then the joints where new asphalt

and old asphalt join (“cold seams”) would develop leaks, and the repair would have to be done over.

Page 3 Also, Miller felt the concrete trailer pads should be extended by at least eight feet and concrete pads

should be installed for the dumpsters because the lack of pads had caused tractor-trailers and dumpster

trucks to punch holes in the asphalt. Miller also noticed tracks in the grass and recommended that

bollards1 be installed to keep trucks off the grass. His cost estimate for the recommended work was

$75,000, and his fee for the plans and specifications was $5,000, including the cost of receiving bids and

periodic inspection. Plaintiff accepted Miller’s proposal by signing the proposal letter the same day.

Miller testified that he had never been to the property before he was asked to quote and

supervise this job, and he had no idea of its condition in 1992, when these parties entered into their lease

agreement. When the project started, he did not have any formal discussions with the tenants but, as a

passing courtesy, he stopped by and spoke to someone, whose name he does not know, about the fact

that they were going to be digging and they would work with the tenants in getting the trucks in and out.

Although they doubled the size of the concrete pads, if they had not put down new concrete, they still

would have put down new asphalt because there were holes in the pavement where the truck stanchions

were too big and overshot the existing pads. Although the project improved the value of the property,

Miller regards the job as a maintenance and repair job, not a new construction project, and thinks that

any repairs will improve the value of any property.

The Trial Judge asked Miller whether he could produce a breakdown of what it would

cost just to repair the potholes, eliminate the increased dolly areas, eliminate the pads for the dumpsters,

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