Harry F. Chaddick Realty, Inc., a Corporation v. Geneva Maisel, Leonard Schanfield and Jeffrey H. Miro, as Trustees of the Emanuel N. Maisel Trust

762 F.2d 534, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 22205
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 21, 1985
Docket83-2653, 83-2695 and 84-1686
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 762 F.2d 534 (Harry F. Chaddick Realty, Inc., a Corporation v. Geneva Maisel, Leonard Schanfield and Jeffrey H. Miro, as Trustees of the Emanuel N. Maisel Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harry F. Chaddick Realty, Inc., a Corporation v. Geneva Maisel, Leonard Schanfield and Jeffrey H. Miro, as Trustees of the Emanuel N. Maisel Trust, 762 F.2d 534, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 22205 (7th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

Developer E.N. Maisel and Associates (“Maisel”) hired Harry F. Chaddick Realty, Inc. (“Chaddick Realty”) as leasing agent for a shopping center being developed on the northwest side of Chicago. Chaddick Realty has collected $800,000 in commissions under the agreement with Maisel. Chaddick Realty brought a federal diversity suit for some $1,250,000 in additional commissions under a bonus provision in the agreement. In a careful memorandum opinion and order the district court entered summary judgment for defendants. The district judge also denied defendants’ later motion for fees and expenses under § 2-611 of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure. Plaintiff now appeals from the grant of summary judgment, and defendants cross-appeal from the denial of the motion for fees. We affirm.

I.

On June 10, 1975, Chaddick Realty entered into a contract with Maisel Associates, developers of the Brickyard Shopping Center on the northwest side of Chicago, under which Chaddick Realty would, as leasing agent, have the exclusive right to lease certain space in the proposed mall. The contract contained a provision, If 502, according to which Chaddick Realty was entitled to a bonus commission if a certain percentage of the store space subject to Chaddick Realty’s exclusive right to lease had been leased by a certain date.

The paragraph in question reads in part as follows:

In the event the cumulative average annual rental reserved in the leases for mall stores located on the second and third levels of the shopping center exceeds $10.50 per square foot per year of such space leased, Developer will give Agent as additional commission an amount equal to 15 cents per square foot for each 10 cents per square foot of rental received in excess of $10.50 per square foot average, provided that 90% of said mall stores located on the second and third levels are leased by or before March 31, 1978.

(Emphasis added.) Plaintiff now argues that it has satisfied the conditions of the paragraph and is entitled to the bonus; defendant denies the claim. The dispute centers on the meaning and effect of the word “leased” as it appears in the paragraph. Plaintiff claims to have “leased” 96 stores by March 31, 1978 — well over 90% — but concedes that in 32 instances neither landlord nor tenant had actually signed a lease.

Defendants argued before the district court, and have argued here, that the contract is unambiguous so that the plain meaning of the word “lease” should govern, and that in ordinary parlance the word is so used that a lease is an enforceable contract. Since a lease is not ordinarily enforceable until signed by both parties, defendants’ view not surprisingly would entail that plaintiff had not leased 90% of the property by the deadline.

The district judge agreed that in its ordinary meaning a lease is an enforceable contract, but went on to hold that the contract was not unambiguous in this respect. In her view, defendants’ interpretation of “leased” could not be squared with paragraph 2.03, which specified that, in the event defendants lost control of the property, plaintiff could collect “commissions earned on leases theretofore executed by *536 developer.” In her view, if commissions accrue “as a general rule when leases are ‘executed by Developer,’ the need for the quoted portion of 112.03 is not apparent.” Chaddick v. Maisel, No. 79 C 1083, slip op. at 9 (N.D.Ill. Aug. 10, 1983). Because she believed paragraph 2.03 undermined defendants’ interpretation of “leased” to some extent, and rendered it ambiguous, she found it necessary to compare paragraph 5.02 with other provisions of the contract, and to look into what the parties had to say about the intended meaning of the provision. In the end, she held that the provision was to be interpreted so that no property would be considered leased until at least the tenant had signed the lease. Under that interpretation of the provision plaintiff had not leased 90% of the properties by the deadline, and the judge granted summary judgment in favor of defendants.

Based on the district court’s holding that the contract is ambiguous, plaintiff now argues that parol evidence raises an issue of fact as to how the word “leased” is to be understood. The evidence appealed to is intended to show that the parties’ understanding of the word derived in part from an Illinois doctrine under which, if a broker produces a tenant who is ready, willing and able to lease on the landlord’s terms, he has earned his commission; and that the parties intended the requirement of producing a ready, willing and able lessee to be satisfied when the defendants approved a prospective tenant’s application. Under this reading, plaintiff argues, 90% of the properties would have been leased by the deadline.

II.

It seems to us that the language of the contract is not ambiguous, and that “leased” is to be given its ordinary meaning, whether basic or bonus commissions are in question; that there is indeed an Illinois doctrine of the “ready, willing and able” lessee, as plaintiff argues, which can override the terms of the contract in the case of basic commissions; but that, in the absence of contrary indications, it would be wrong to extend that policy to override contract provisions controlling bonus commissions.

A.

We think that the district judge was wrong to think that the word “leased” was ambiguous in paragraph 5.02 — although, as we shall see, that is not the end of the matter. Her determination of ambiguity was based on paragraph 2.03, which said that if defendants lose control of the shopping mall, plaintiff can collect “for commissions earned on leases theretofore executed by Developer.” She reasoned that if. payments were earned in general when leases were executed by the developer, the provision in paragraph 2.03 would be superfluous; a clause is necessary, presumably, only when it affects the rights of the parties in some way.

Although what the district judge says is true, we do not think that the provision shows that the word “lease” in the contract is ambiguous as between the meanings suggested by the plaintiff and the defendant. If anything, her argument could be used only to show that there might be yet a third meaning, something that neither party has argued and which does not seem a serious possibility. For as the district judge understands the provision, it would be superfluous on both the defendant’s and the plaintiff’s understanding of the word. If, as the defendant claims, a commission is due when defendant executes the lease, then it is unnecessary to have a clause to guarantee the commission on the executed leases when the defendant loses control of the development. But the same is true if, as the plaintiff claims, the commission is earned when the plaintiff has presented a tenant ready, willing and able; if plaintiff is entitled to his commission at that point, a fortiori he is entitled to it when the lease has been executed, and the provision is superfluous.

Since, on either account, the provision would become superfluous, and since neither party suggests a third meaning for the word “lease,” the reasonable conclusion *537 to draw is that the paragraph is directed to other concerns than whether or not the plaintiff would be entitled to his commission.

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762 F.2d 534, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 22205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harry-f-chaddick-realty-inc-a-corporation-v-geneva-maisel-leonard-ca7-1985.