H&B Realty, LLC v. JJ Cars, LLC

2021 ME 14
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 23, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2021 ME 14 (H&B Realty, LLC v. JJ Cars, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H&B Realty, LLC v. JJ Cars, LLC, 2021 ME 14 (Me. 2021).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2021 ME 14 Docket: BCD-20-82 Submitted On Briefs: September 29, 2020 Decided: March 23, 2021

Panel: MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HUMPHREY, HORTON, and CONNORS, JJ. Majority: MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HUMPHREY, JJ. Dissent: CONNORS and HORTON, JJ.

H&B REALTY, LLC

v.

JJ CARS, LLC, et al.

GORMAN, J.

[¶1] H&B Realty, LLC, appeals from a judgment of the Business and

Consumer Docket (Duddy, J.) in favor of JJ Cars, LLC, and John Mokarzel on

H&B’s complaint for breach of contract. H&B contends that the court erred by

applying the affirmative defenses of breach of contract and failure to mitigate

damages as pleaded by JJ Cars and Mokarzel.1 We affirm the judgment.

1 We have not specifically held that “breach of contract” is an affirmative defense that must be pleaded as such. Here, JJ Cars and Mokarzel asserted both in a counterclaim and as a “defense” that H&B’s material breach of the contract excused their obligations under the contract. The trial court agreed. We have identified failure to mitigate damages as an affirmative defense, see Tang of the Sea, Inc. v. Bayley’s Quality Seafoods, 1998 ME 264, ¶ 12, 721 A.2d 648, but need not address that issue here. See infra n.4. 2

I. BACKGROUND

[¶2] In its judgment, the court made the following findings of fact, which

are supported by competent evidence in the record. See Dupuis v. Ellingwood,

2017 ME 132, ¶ 3, 166 A.3d 112. H&B and JJ Cars entered into a five-year

commercial lease agreement commencing on July 1, 2011, and ending on

June 30, 2016, whereby JJ Cars leased a car dealership property in Portland

from H&B. Mokarzel, the sole member of JJ Cars, personally guaranteed the

payment of rent and other charges under the lease. Article XIII of the lease

contained the following provision regarding subleasing:

Lessee will not . . . sub-let . . . the lease premises, without the prior written consent of Lessor in each instance which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. The consent by Lessor to any . . . sub-letting shall be subject to Lessor’s reasonable review and approval of subtenant’s or sublessee’s creditworthiness, business experience, and capacity to perform the Lessee’s obligations under this lease. . . .

Any assignment . . . as to which Lessor has consented . . . shall not be effective or deemed valid unless at the time of such assignment:

(a) Each . . . sublessee shall agree in a written statement satisfactory to Lessor to assume and abide by all of the terms and provisions of this Lease . . . and

(b) Each . . . sublessee has submitted a current financial statement . . . and

(c) Lessee shall pay Lessor an assignment fee . . . . The assignment fee will be . . . ($250.00). 3

Lessor shall not be obligated to consent to any proposed . . . subletting if . . . at the time of the proposal . . . Lessee is in material default under any term, covenant or condition of this Lease . . . .

Article XX(a)(iv)(B) of the lease also required that “[u]pon any termination of

the Lessee’s right to possession only without termination of the Lease: . . .

Lessor shall use commercially reasonable efforts to relet the leased premises

or any part thereof for such rent and upon such terms as Lessor, in its

reasonable discretion, shall determine.”

[¶3] JJ Cars operated a car dealership at the location from July of 2011

until February of 2013. By February of 2013, JJ Cars was in financial distress,

and Mokarzel, the sole member of JJ Cars, decided to close the business and

sublet the property.

[¶4] From February of 2013 until October of 2015, three separate

businesses sublet the property from JJ Cars. Approval for the first and third of

these sublets by H&B was provided by its sole member, Sterling Boyington. As

to the second sublet, the court found that “Boyington never objected.” JJ Cars

never submitted any of the financial information required by the lease terms

for any of these sublets to H&B.

[¶5] In November of 2015, Wholesale Motors, Inc., owned by Dave

McGovern, began occupying the property. Wholesale Motors wanted to sublet 4

the property and was also interested in extending the lease or purchasing the

property. When JJ Cars sought H&B’s consent to sublease the property to

Wholesale Motors, Boyington refused to give consent on behalf of H&B because

he “did not like McGovern.” Because H&B refused to approve the sublease,

Wholesale Motors vacated the property in November of 2015.

[¶6] After the sublease opportunity with Wholesale Motors ended, the

property was unoccupied and JJ Cars stopped paying rent. H&B obtained a

forcible entry and detainer judgment against JJ Cars on March 24, 2016, and

then sold the property on or about April 7, 2016.

[¶7] Two months after the sale, H&B filed a one-count complaint against

JJ Cars and Mokarzel individually, alleging breach of contract and seeking

damages for unpaid rent from November of 2015 through April 6, 2016. In

their amended answer, JJ Cars and Mokarzel asserted five counterclaims

against H&B—alleging breach of contract, fraud, discrimination, failure to

mitigate damages, and punitive damages—and eight affirmative defenses,

including breach of contract and failure to mitigate damages.2

2Later in the action, JJ Cars and Mokarzel filed a separate action against Boyington. The trial court explained that the separate claims and counterclaims other than that alleging breach of contract were based on assertions that Boyington “harbors racial animus against persons of color[,] harassed and discriminated against JJ Cars’ subtenants[,] and caused those subtenants to vacate the premises.” Although the trial court found that Boyington had made “bigoted, repulsive, and discriminatory statements,” it concluded that JJ Cars failed to establish that Boyington’s statements had any effect on its ability to find or keep tenants. The court entered a judgment in favor of H&B on the 5

[¶8] The court conducted a jury-waived trial during which Boyington

and Mokarzel testified.3 In its judgment, the court found that JJ Cars and

Mokarzel had breached the lease agreement by failing to pay rent beginning in

November of 2015. The court also found that H&B breached Article XIII of the

lease by unreasonably withholding its consent to JJ Cars to sublease to

Wholesale Motors. The court further found that H&B breached its duty to

mitigate damages—pursuant to Article XX(a)(iv)(B) of the lease—because it

did not take steps to relet the property after JJ Cars began missing rent

payments in November of 2015. Based on these findings, and citing Cellar

Dwellers, Inc. v. D’Alessio, 2010 ME 32, ¶ 16, 993 A.2d 1, the court issued a

judgment in favor of JJ Cars and Mokarzel on the ground that their breach—

failure to pay rent—was excused by H&B’s material breaches—unreasonably

withholding consent to sublet to Wholesale Motors and failing to mitigate

damages.

counterclaims of JJ Cars and Mokarzel. The court also entered a judgment in favor of Boyington on the third-party complaint of JJ Cars and Mokarzel. 3 In this appeal, H&B has not provided a transcript of the testimony of the other trial witnesses. The court’s findings are supported by the testimony of Boyington and Mokarzel alone. See M.R. App. P. 5(b)(2)(A) (requiring a party claiming insufficiency of the evidence to provide a transcript of all relevant evidence). 6

[¶9] The court denied H&B’s subsequent motion for additional and

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