H. T. of West Palm Beach, Inc. v. Armour Management Corp.

45 Fla. Supp. 120
CourtCircuit Court for the Judicial Circuits of Florida
DecidedApril 7, 1977
DocketNo. 76-2544 A (L) 01 C
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Fla. Supp. 120 (H. T. of West Palm Beach, Inc. v. Armour Management Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court for the Judicial Circuits of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. T. of West Palm Beach, Inc. v. Armour Management Corp., 45 Fla. Supp. 120 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

VAUGHN J. RUDNICK, Circuit Judge.

Order, March 22, 1977: Armour Management Corporation, the appellee, brought eviction proceedings in the county court against H. T. of West Palm Beach, Inc., appellant. The appellant being evicted and dissatisfied with the decision of the lower court brings this appeal.

The appellant was in possession of the property in question pursuant to the terms of a written lease which had been executed in 1965 and provided for a term of fifteen years, together with two consecutive five year renewal terms and an option to purchase. Neither the appellant nor appellee were the original parties to the lease agreement as the appellant acquired its interest in 1970 while the appellee purchased its interest in November of 1975. The demised premises consists of commercial property upon which is [121]*121located an established restaurant. The alleged default relates to the non-payment of rent when due, together with the acceleration and cure provisions of the lease, the material parts of which are set forth below —

ARTICLE III

BASIC RENT

Section 1. Lessee covenants to pay to Lessor during such term a net basic rental (over and above the other additional payments to be made by Lessee as hereinafter provided) of $12,000.00 per year throughout the term of this lease, including the renewal option terms, hereinabove mentioned. In addition to the minimum guaranteed annual rental of $12,000.00, Lessee shall also pay, annually, a sum equal to one percent (1%) of the gross annual income from sales of goods and/or services upon the property in excess of $250,000.00 per calendar year and a sum equal to two percent (2%) of that gross annual income in excess of $300,000.00. The rental period shall commence upon delivery of possession to Lessee (as defined in Article I, Section 4, of this lease). The minimum, guaranteed annual rental ($12,000.00) shall be paid monthly, in advance in $1,000.00 installments, except that the first of such monthly rent payments shall be due upon signing of this lease, together with a security deposit of $1,000.00. Said deposit shall be held by Lessor until the termination of the lease and then returned to Lessee, provided no defaults then exist. The extra rental due from the percentage of gross income over $250,000.00 per year provision shall be reported and paid within 30 days of the end of each calendar year. The annual gross income report shall be in writing and its correctness attested to by the certification of a Certified Public Accountant. During the renewal periods, the percentage of gross income rental shall be only upon that in excess of $300,000.00, and, at two percent (2%).
Section 2. Payment of the net basic rental in installments is solely as a convenience to Lessee and in the event of a default in payment thereof Lessor shall have the option to declare all remaining installments then due and payable.
Section 3. The minimum, monthly rental ($1,000.00) shall be due on the first day of each month. Should the commencement of rental date, under Section 3 of Article I, occur during a calendar month, the rental shall be prorated for that partial month.

ARTICLE XVI

CONDITIONAL LIMITATIONS — DEFAULT PROVISIONS

Section 3. If Lessee shall mqke default in the payment of the basic rent, or any part of the same, and such default shall continue for ten days after notice thereof by Lessor, or shall make default in the payment of any item of additional rent or any other charge required to be paid by Lessee hereunder or any part of the same, and such default shall continue for [122]*122ten days after notice thereof by Lessor, or if this lease shall terminate as in Section 1 or Section 2 of this Article provided, Lessor may immediately re-enter the demised premises and remove all persons and all or any proprty therefrom, and repossess and enjoy said premises, as of their former estate together with all additions, alterations and improvements. (Italics added.)

The appellant had a history of being late in its lease payments and appellee, upon acquiring its interest in the lease, advised appellant the appellee would insist on rental payments being made on time as specified in the lease agreement. Notwithstanding the warnings given to the appellant, the appellant failed to timely pay the rental installment due December 1, 1975 and demand for payment was immediately made and legal proceedings were instituted but successfully defended by appellant.

The payment due May 1,1976 forms the basis of this controversy. May 1, 1976 was a Saturday and the offices of appellee were open all day and no rental payment was received. At 6:30 p.m. the appellant telephoned a desk clerk at a motel also owned by appellee and offered to deliver the rent to the clerk, which offer was rejected by the clerk because he had no authority to accept it. The rent was not paid on Sunday, nor early Monday morning and the appellee gave the appellant written notice of the default and advised all the remaining minimum monthly payments payable under the lease agreement were acceleratd. Appellee demanded the payment of $64,562.40 and the appellant did not pay it. The appellant had in its possession a cashier’s check in the amount of $1,195.60 which was immediately tendered to the appellee’s agent who had delivered the notice of default and demand but the agent refused to accept the cashier’s check. Later the same date the appellant delivered the cashier’s check to the office of the appellee’s attorney. On June 1, 1976 the appellant delivered the June 1st rental installment to Mr. Armour as president of the appellee corporation which was received by him without comment and immediately delivered to his attorney for the purpose of being returned to appellant.

This law suit was instituted on May 18, 1976 and pursuant to the directions of the lower court the checks tendered on May 3 and June 1 were delivered to the clerk of the court at the time of trial and thereafter endorsed for deposit pursuant to the directions of the court.

The issues as framed by the parties are —

(1) Does the written lease agreement give the lessee the right to ten days written notice of default in payment of rent?
[123]*123(2) Does the lessor’s option to accelerate rent upon default in payment of an installment extend only to the balance of the rent due for the lease year?
(3) Did the lessor waive any alleged default in payment of the May 1 rent installment by knowingly accepting the rent installment due on June 1 ?

The decision of the fact finder and the lower court arrives in this court with a presumption of correctness and the burden is upon the appellant to demonstrate before this court any reversible error committed below.

Addressing Issue No. 3, the trial judge was presented with a question of fact. The evidence presented during the course of the trial is consistent with the finding the receipt of the rental payments after demand and acceleration were made was not an acceptance of rent by the lessor which would act as a waiver of the default, and the appellant has failed to demonstrate reversible error relating to issue No. 3.

The remaining issues are concerned with the written provisions of the lease in question and the interpretation to be given them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Fla. Supp. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-t-of-west-palm-beach-inc-v-armour-management-corp-flacirct-1977.