Haghighi v. Sager

15 Va. Cir. 90
CourtSpotsylvania County Circuit Court
DecidedApril 5, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 Va. Cir. 90 (Haghighi v. Sager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Spotsylvania County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haghighi v. Sager, 15 Va. Cir. 90 (Va. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

By JUDGE WILLIAM H. LEDBETTER, JR.

The question for determination is whether the defendant’s amended cross-bill is demurrable.

This is a suit for specific performance of purchase option provisions of a lease dated April 27, 1985. A copy of the thirteen-page lease, bearing the notarized signatures of the parties, was filed with the bill and, therefore, is a part of that pleading. Rule l:4(i).

Paragraph 19 of the lease contains language by which the Haghighis, lessees, are granted an option to purchase the property according to terms set forth therein. The Haghighis allege that they attempted to exercise their purchase option in November of 1987 and that Sager refused to convey the property in violation of the lease agreement.

Sager filed a timely response, consisting of an answer and a cross-bill. The Haghighis demurred to the cross-bill.

After an ore tenus hearing on February 1, 1988, the court sustained the demurrer and granted Sager leave to file an amended cross-bill.

Sager filed an amended cross-bill. The Haghighis again demurred. A hearing on the second demurrer was held [91]*91on April 4, 1988, and the court took the matter under advisement. This opinion addresses that second demurrer.

A demurrer lies when an affirmative pleading does not state a cause of action or does not state facts upon which the relief demanded can be granted. Virginia Code Section 8.01-273. In considering a demurrer, all facts stated in the questioned pleading are assumed to be true.

Sager acknowledges that she leased the property to the Haghighis. Further, she acknowledges that the lease contains a purchase option. (The acknowledgment appears. It is not specifically repeated in the amended cross-bill. Nevertheless, such an acknowledgment must be inferred from the allegations in the amended cross-bill in order for that pleading to make any sense; in fact, the existence of the purchase provisions in the lease create the basis for her claim.)

In essence, Sager contends that the pertinent lease provisions, whereby the Haghighis were granted the right to purchase her real estate and the furniture, furnishings, fixtures, and equipment used in connection with the child care center located on the property, were supposed to be operable only if and when the Haghighis decided to purchase her other "business assets." Therefore, she argues, the Haghighis "have been unjustly enriched by the failure of [the parties] to enter into a contract for the sale of the defendant’s business assets." She seeks relief in the amount of $100,000.00 representing the value of those other business assets.

Preliminarily, two points should be noted.

First, Sager’s claim is based on the assumption that the relief sought in the Haghighis’ bill will be granted. If the court were not to compel specific performance of the purchase option provisions in the lease, her theory of recovery would fall of its own weight: i.e., in such event, the Haghighis would not be unjustly enriched but would be mere tenants of Sager, holding the property under the rental provisions of the lease.

Second, Sager seeks monetary damages measured by the value of those other business assets. Ordinarily, unjust enrichment is viewed as an equitable doctrine which imposes, under certain circumstances, a legal duty of restitution.

[92]*92Nonetheless, putting those difficulties aside, the court will analyze all of Sager’s contentions to ascertain whether the amended cross-bill, as a whole, states a cause of action.

As noted above, Sager concedes that the parties did not contract for the sale and purchase of her other business assets. The amended cross-bill does not allege that the written lease of April 27, 1985, should be construed to contain such an agreement, nor does it allege that the instrument contains language from which the court could conclude that the option to purchase in paragraph 19 of the lease is contingent upon the purchase of her other business assets. Further, the amended cross-bill does not contain an allegation that the parties entered into a collateral or separate agreement, written or oral, relating to the sale of those other business assets. In fact, in paragraph 27 of the amended cross-bill, she acknowledges that the parties failed to make any contract for the sale and purchase of those other business assets.

Instead, she asks the court to imply a contract.

From what facts or circumstances is the court to imply such a contract?

If Sager intends to advance the proposition that her failure to contract for the sale of the other business assets, without more, entitles her to the relief sought, the contention is without merit. Clearly, a court cannot imply a contract merely because the parties failed to make one.

Sager asserts that such failure to contract unjustly enriches the Haghighis. Does this additional allegation improve the claim? An assertion of unjust enrichment, without more, is conclusory. Unjust enrichment is an equitable doctrine that a person should not be allowed to profit or enrich himself unfairly at another’s expense. The doctrine is applied where one person has and retains something of value which in justice and equity belongs to another. Therefore, a naked allegation that a party is "unjustly enriched" is not enough. Facts must be alleged that, if proven, would permit the court to apply the doctrine. Sager has alleged no facts which, if proven, would establish that the Haghighis have anything of value which in justice and equity belongs to her. Instead, she alleges, in essence, that she has something (the other business [93]*93assets) that the Haghighis should purchase but which admittedly they have not agreed to purchase; and she has offered no explanation why they should be compelled to purchase those other business assets except to say that they otherwise will be "unjustly enriched."

May 18, 1988

In other parts of her. amended cross-bill, Sager alleges that she was in the process of getting a divorce and "under severe emotional distress" at the time the lease was negotiated; that Mr. Haghighi is an accountant who had "superior business knowledge"; that she was "under the mistaken belief" that the other business assets would be purchased by the Haghighis simultaneously with the exercise of their option to purchase the leased property; and that she "never intended" to sell the leased property without receiving additional compensation for the other business assets.

If the court is being invited to infer from these allegations a claim of fraud, undue influence, mental incapacity, or mistake of fact, the court declines the invitation. If Sager intends to seek relief based upon one or more of these well-known principles, she must say so. Those allegations, liberally construed, taken individually or together, do not state a basis upon which the doctrine of unjust enrichment can be applied, and do not state facts upon which the relief demanded, monetary damages upon an implied contract, can be granted.

The demurrer to the defendant’s amended cross-bill is sustained.

If the defendant cannot state a cause of action consistent with this opinion within twenty-one days from the date of the order, the case will be referred to a commissioner in chancery on the plaintiffs’ bill and the defendant’s answer (which includes a general denial and certain affirmative defenses).

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Related

Haghighi v. Sager
19 Va. Cir. 216 (Spotsylvania County Circuit Court, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Va. Cir. 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haghighi-v-sager-vaccspotsylvani-1988.