Fuller v. Barattini
This text of 574 So. 2d 412 (Fuller v. Barattini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
A. Paul FULLER and/or United Talent Associates, Inc.
v.
William L. BARATTINI.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*413 Harry Burglass, Kenner, for plaintiff-appellee.
Gerald Wasserman, Metairie, for defendant-appellant.
J.B. Kiefer, Sherry W. Schneider, Dean R. Yellin, Metairie, for defendant-appellee.
Before GAUDIN, DUFRESNE and WICKER, JJ.
DUFRESNE, Judge.
This dispute arose from a commercial lease signed by A. Paul Fuller, lessee, and William Barattini, lessor, on October 21, 1982. After trial on the merits, the trial judge found that Fuller had entered into the lease agreement through errors as to the principal cause of the lease, brought about by misrepresentations made by Barattini. He therefore rescinded the lease because of a vice of consent and awarded Fuller damages of some $59,000, for labor and materials used to remodel the premises before the errors were discovered. He denied attorney fees, however, because he found that Barattini's misrepresentations did not rise to the level of fraud, but were rather the result of overzealousness in concluding the lease.
Barattini now appeals this judgment alleging four grounds for relief:
1. The action based on the alleged misrepresentations sounded in tort, and thus *414 this claim had prescribed when suit was filed three years after those events;
2. The lease, by its own terms, became effective on the date the permits were issued, and the lessor was entitled to rent from that date until the lessee vacated the premises in 1988;
3. It was error to allow parole evidence at trial to vary the terms of the written lease; and
4. The lease agreement precluded an award of damages beyond return of rent paid.
Fuller answers the appeal, contending that the trial judge failed to award damages for certain items claimed because of insufficient proof, even though sufficient evidence was in fact presented to establish these items, as well as for attorney fees because of fraud on Barattini's part.
For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
In August of 1982, Fuller and a business associate, Steve Memory, began lease negotiations with Barattini for a property in a small shopping center at 3116 Arnoult Road in Jefferson Parish. Fuller's plan was to open a lounge featuring an all male troupe of dancers, and targeting a predominately women's audience. Fuller testified, and was corroborated by Memory, that one of the major requisites for a potential location was that it have sufficient parking, and the location being considered did not appear to comport with this need. Barattini assured him however, that he also owned a parking area adjacent to the building, and had a lease in effect on yet another parking lot across the street, both of which would be available for use in the evenings.
A second significant area of discussion involved the availability of all necessary permits. Fuller testified that this problem was discussed prior to signing the lease and that Barattini not only assured him that there would be no problems, but also that he himself would see to the permits through his familiarity with various parish officials.
When the lease was signed on October 21, 1982, it was silent as to both the adjacent parking spaces, and the responsibility for obtaining the permits. It did contain a clause stating that the lease would not go into effect until all proper permits were issued by the Parish. Nonetheless, Fuller began extensive remodeling work on the club in late October. He testified that he began the work without any permits because Barattini again assured him after the lease was signed that he would take care of them, and urged him to go forward without them. Although Barattini stated that he only indicated to Fuller that he would help him get the permits, the testimony of a number of other people working on the job corroborated Fuller's version. Michael Stoffer, a Dallas, Texas contractor who was running the job, stated that on at least six occasions between late October and early December, when the work was almost completed, he spoke directly to Barattini about when the permits would be forthcoming. On each occasion he was reassured that the permits would be issued, and was also told by Barattini that he should not attempt to get the permits himself because that would only complicate matters. B. Vonn, a lighting specialist who was installing the light system, gave similar testimony as to at least two conversations about permits with Barattini. These workmen, as well as Fuller, also testified that during the job all workmen were told by Barattini to park in the adjacent lot or in the one across the street so as not to take up spaces used by customers of other businesses in the shopping center.
The evidence shows that this entire matter came to a head in late November or early December, when Fuller, Memory and Stoffer learned that there was a problem with getting the permits. Fuller stated that he and Memory confronted Barattini in early December and demanded the permits. When they were not produced, two men went to the parish permits office where they learned for the first time that no permits could be issued because of insufficient parking for the proposed use at the location. At that point Fuller began the process of attempting to get a zoning approval or variance from the zoning board, and eventually had to seek relief in *415 the courts. During the course of administrative hearings, Fuller learned for the first time that Barattini did not own the adjacent lot. It further appears, however, at the time the lease was signed that Barattini was attempting to purchase the adjacent lot and apparently had informal permission to use the lot across the street. (A formal lease of this latter lot was signed on January 1, 1983.) Nonetheless, when the permits were eventually obtained through court action in January 1985, the adjacent lot was not available to Fuller for parking.
Fuller's further testimony was that because of the money already spent on the club and litigation, he was still prepared to open for business in early 1985, rather than seek rescission of the lease. However, at that point Barattini demanded rent of $6,000 per month for the more than two years that the club had been closed due to the permits dispute, even though the lease provided that it would not be effective until issuance of permits by the parish. When negotiations on this point failed, Fuller filed the present suit.
On these facts the trial judge concluded that Barattini had misled Fuller into believing that procurement of the permits would be a simple matter which he would see to, and that there was ample parking. He further concluded that these two factors were essential to Fuller's consent to the lease and because of errors induced by Barattini on both points, this consent was vitiated. He therefore rescinded the lease and awarded Fuller damages for construction expenses incurred between October and December of 1982.
Two cases involving facts similar to those before us are Marcello v. Bussiere, 284 So.2d 892 (La. 1973), and Guaranty Savings Assurance Co. v. Uddo, 386 So.2d 670 (La.App. 1st Cir.1980). Marcello involved the sale-lease of a bar-lounge business. The defendants purchased the equipment and furnishings of a lounge and leased the premises. After doing some remodeling, they discovered that a liquor permit could not be obtained for the business.
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574 So. 2d 412, 1991 WL 6518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-barattini-lactapp-1991.