Concrete Spaces, Inc. v. Henry Sender

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 31, 1998
Docket01A01-9607-CH-00288
StatusPublished

This text of Concrete Spaces, Inc. v. Henry Sender (Concrete Spaces, Inc. v. Henry Sender) 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
Concrete Spaces, Inc. v. Henry Sender, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE

FILED CONCRETE SPACES, INC., ) July 31, 1998 FAUX FUR, INC., ) Cecil W. Crowson PAULETTE DALTON, and ) Appellate Court Clerk STUART DALTON, ) ) Davidson Chancery Plaintiffs/Appellees, ) 94-993-I ) VS. ) Appeal No. ) 01A01-9607-CH-00288 HENRY SENDER, Individually, ) DARREN LIFF and ZACKARY LIFF, ) HENRY SENDER, EUGENE I. SACKS ) and wife RUTH SACKS, d/b/a ) LIFF, SENDER AND SACKS, Tenants ) in Common, NATIONAL BUILDING ) CORPORATION, ) ) Defendants/Appellants. )

APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY COURT FOR DAVIDSON COUNTY AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE WHITNEY STEGALL, SPECIAL CHANCELLOR

For Plaintiffs/Appellees: For Defendants/Appellants:

Steve North Charles Hampton White Mark North Andrew D. Dunn Madison, Tennessee Cornelius & Collins Nashville, Tennessee Abby Rubenfeld Nashville, Tennessee

AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE

-2- OPINION

This appeal arises from a dispute over the lease and renovation of commercial space in Nashville’s Cummins Station. After abandoning the leases because the renovations had not been completed within the time promised, the lessees filed suit in the Chancery Court for Davidson County against the lessors and the project manager. A jury awarded the lessees $75,000 in compensatory damages and $1,100,000 in punitive damages which the trial court later reduced to $500,000. On this appeal, the lessors and the project manager take issue with the punitive damage award and with the inconsistencies between the judgment and the jury’s answers to special interrogatories. We affirm the compensatory damage award; however, we vacate the punitive damage award and remand the case to the trial court to consider whether the compensatory damages should be trebled in accordance with the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act.

I.

In early 1993, Paulette Dalton operated two businesses on lower Broadway near Second Avenue – a vintage clothing boutique called The Emperor’s New Clothes and a gallery for local artists called The Gallery on Broadway. She was considering relocating her businesses because she needed more space and because she had been approached by Gavin Gaskins about combining her gallery and boutique with a nightclub. Mr. Gaskins had managed several nightclubs in Nashville, and he and Ms. Dalton believed that a nightclub featuring progressive “grunge” music could be a commercial success. They became interested in Cummins Station after Ms. Dalton received an advertisement from its leasing agents in July 1993.

Cummins Station is a large, five-story building on the corner of Tenth Avenue, South and Demontbreun Avenue in Nashville. It was erected in 1913 as office and warehouse space for wholesale merchants. It was largely unoccupied when a group of investors led by Henry Sender1 purchased it in March 1993 with the view to

1 The other four investors were Darren Liff, Zackary Liff, Eugene Sacks, and Ruth Sacks. The investors owned the property as tenants in common and did business under the trade name of (continued...)

-3- renovate it into office, retail, and warehouse space. The building had fallen into disrepair, and the purchasers understood that it would require extensive renovations in order to make it suitable for commercial tenants.

After discussing the location with her husband,2 Ms. Dalton met one of Cummins Station’s leasing agents to inspect possible spaces for the boutique, gallery, and nightclub. Ms. Dalton then toured Cummins Station a second time accompanied by her husband, Mr. Gaskins, and the curator of her gallery. After deciding that the space met their needs, the Daltons and Mr. Gaskins formed two corporations to carry out their business ventures. The Daltons incorporated Concrete Spaces, Inc. to operate the boutique and art gallery, and Ms. Dalton and Mr. Gaskins incorporated Faux Fur, Inc. to operate the nightclub.

On August 18, 1993, the Daltons and Mr. Gaskins met with Mr. Sender, Michael Cooper, who is Mr. Sender’s son-in-law and who is also the president of National Building Corporation3, and the leasing agents to discuss the lease terms and the improvements needed in order to operate a boutique, art gallery, and nightclub in the proposed space. Mr. Sender left the meeting early, and most of the discussions concerning the parties’ obligations with regard to the “build out” of the space were handled by Mr. Cooper. During the meeting, Ms. Dalton stated she desired to open for business in early October in order to take advantage of the peak retail months of the holiday season. Mr. Cooper and the leasing agents replied that the space would be ready for occupancy by the first of October.

At the conclusion of the meeting, the leasing agents provided the Daltons and Mr. Gaskins with copies of two proposed leases – one lease with Concrete Spaces for the boutique and gallery and the other lease with Faux Fur for the nightclub. The Daltons’ lawyer proposed extensive alterations in the leases. Eventually, on August

1 (...continued) “Liff, Sender, and Sacks”. Mr. Sender owned a 25% interest in the property; Mr. and Mrs. Sacks owned a 25% interest; and Darren and Zackary Liff owned the remaining 50% interest. Darren and Zackary Liff eventually acquired Mr. and Mrs. Sacks’s 25% interest in the property. 2 Stuart Dalton worked as a sales representative for a medical supply company and did not take an active role in the day-to-day management of his wife’s businesses. 3 National Building Corporation was the project manager for the renovation of Cummins Station. Mr. Sender is the chairman and chief executive officer of National Building Corporation and is also a major stockholder of the company.

-4- 26, 1993, the parties executed two leases for approximately 6,520 square feet of contiguous space on the first floor of Cummins Station. The terms of the two leases were essentially the same. Their term was for five years, and the rent was $1,222.50 per month. Attached to both leases was an exhibit addressing some of the needed improvements to the space. The Daltons signed the Concrete Spaces lease, and Ms. Dalton and Mr. Gaskins signed the Faux Fur lease.

As it turned out, the two leases did not clearly allocate the parties’ responsibilities concerning the build out of the leased space. Ms. Dalton understood that the lessors would be responsible for paying for most of the improvements and for seeing that they were completed in time to open her businesses in October. Messrs. Sender and Cooper believed that this responsibility belonged to the lessees. As a result, the construction of the improvements was delayed, and numerous disputes arose between the parties – particularly between Ms. Dalton and Mr. Sender.

Even though the construction plans for the leased space were not completed until September 28, 1993, the space for the boutique and gallery were ready for their grand opening on October 22, 1993. The insurance company providing coverage for the inventory in the boutique and gallery required Ms. Dalton to inquire into the security and fire safety of the building before she moved her inventory into the new space. Even though a rear door opening onto a common hallway had not been installed, Mr. Cooper assured Ms. Dalton that the building was secure and that the fire sprinkler system was adequate. Relying on Mr. Cooper’s assurances, Ms. Dalton moved her inventory into the building, and the boutique and gallery opened for business on October 22, 1993.

The boutique and gallery were burglarized on October 24 and again on October 27, 1993. The thieves stole all of Ms. Dalton’s inventory, a safe containing approximately $2,350 in cash and other business documents, a stereo system, and a cash register. When Ms. Dalton suggested that the lessors should reimburse her for the loss because Mr.

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Concrete Spaces, Inc. v. Henry Sender, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/concrete-spaces-inc-v-henry-sender-tennctapp-1998.