Holcomb, Dunbar, Watts, Best, Masters & Golmon, P.A. f/k/a Holcomb Dunbar, P.A. v. 400 South Lamar Oxford Mad Hatter Partners, LLC and Blake Tartt III

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 18, 2021
Docket2019-CA-01702-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Holcomb, Dunbar, Watts, Best, Masters & Golmon, P.A. f/k/a Holcomb Dunbar, P.A. v. 400 South Lamar Oxford Mad Hatter Partners, LLC and Blake Tartt III (Holcomb, Dunbar, Watts, Best, Masters & Golmon, P.A. f/k/a Holcomb Dunbar, P.A. v. 400 South Lamar Oxford Mad Hatter Partners, LLC and Blake Tartt III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holcomb, Dunbar, Watts, Best, Masters & Golmon, P.A. f/k/a Holcomb Dunbar, P.A. v. 400 South Lamar Oxford Mad Hatter Partners, LLC and Blake Tartt III, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2019-CA-01702-COA

HOLCOMB, DUNBAR, WATTS, BEST, APPELLANT MASTERS & GOLMON, P.A. F/K/A HOLCOMB DUNBAR, P.A.

v.

400 SOUTH LAMAR OXFORD MAD HATTER APPELLEES PARTNERS, LLC AND BLAKE TARTT III

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/08/2019 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. FRANK G. VOLLOR COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LAFAYETTE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: MICHAEL N. WATTS BRADLEY T. GOLMON ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JOSEPH T. GETZ L. CLAYTON CULPEPPER III NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CONTRACT DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 05/18/2021 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., WESTBROOKS AND McDONALD, JJ.

BARNES, C.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This dispute arises from a commercial lease of office space at 400 South Lamar

Avenue, Suite A (the Property), in Oxford, Mississippi. The law firm of Holcomb, Dunbar,

Watts, Best, Masters & Golmon, P.A. (Holcomb Dunbar) was the tenant, and 400 South

Lamar Mad Hatter Partners, LLC (Mad Hatter) was the landlord. Blake Tartt III is one of

the owners and the principal of Mad Hatter.1

1 Tartt is a commercial real estate developer and investor who has properties in Oxford and throughout the United States that he maintains through his management ¶2. Mad Hatter sued Holcomb Dunbar for breach of the office space’s lease due to

nonpayment of rent, filing a “Complaint in Ejectment, Breach of Contract and Associated

Damages” in the Lafayette County Circuit Court. After discovery, Mad Hatter filed a

motion for summary judgment, stating that under the unambiguous terms of the lease, it had

no obligation to locate a substitute tenant for Holcomb Dunbar. Therefore, Mad Hatter

contended the firm had no valid claim for default on the lease based on the undisputed

material facts, and summary judgment should be granted to Mad Hatter. The trial court

agreed, granted summary judgment in favor of Mad Hatter, and awarded it $133,900 in

unpaid rent. Additionally, the trial court denied Holcomb Dunbar’s motion for partial

summary judgment and motion to amend its counterclaim, while granting Mad Hatter’s

motion to quash certain subpoena results. Holcomb Dunbar’s remaining counterclaims went

to trial, and the jury found against it. Holcomb Dunbar appeals the trial court’s rulings only

on these four motions.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

¶3. In November 2009, Holcomb Dunbar entered into a lease with Greenville Compress

Company for approximately 6,000 square feet of office space at 400 South Lamar, Suite A.

In 2012, the firm exercised its option to renew the lease for another three-year term.

Greenville Compress then sold the Property to Mad Hatter. On September 25, 2015, Tartt

and Bradley Best, managing partner and firm administrator at Holcomb Dunbar, met

regarding the firm’s next lease renewal. Best informed Tartt that Holcomb Dunbar was in

company New Regional Planning Inc., based in Houston, Texas.

2 the process of constructing a new building in a development called Oxford Commons, and

the firm would be moving there in about a year. Tartt and Best discussed various options,

including a shorter term lease on the Property at a higher rental rate.2 In his deposition, Best

testified several times that Tartt stated at the meeting that he would try to help find a

replacement tenant for the Property in order to let Holcomb Dunbar out of the lease. In that

way, he noted Tartt could also lease the Property at a higher rate. Tartt later agreed he said

he would help but maintained he was not obliged to do so.

¶4. Holcomb Dunbar decided to renew the lease for another three-year term ending

December 31, 2018, even though it planned on vacating the Property in November 2016,

over two years prior to the expiration of the lease.3 As planned, the firm moved to its new

building in Oxford Commons in November, but a replacement tenant had not been found.

Holcomb Dunbar continued to pay rent for the 400 South Lamar space, now vacant.

¶5. During this time, Best contended that Tartt had made no effort to find a replacement

tenant. For the firm’s own efforts, it ran an advertisement in a local paper for two weeks;

however, it never hired a broker or agent. The firm also complained that Mad Hatter

prohibited it from placing advertising banners across the building, but this prohibition was

2 Mad Hatter maintains that Holcomb Dunbar could have opted for a shorter termed lease at $25 per square foot instead of the current $13 per square foot. Holcomb Dunbar’s rent, which had stayed the same since 2009, was significantly “under market,” with similar properties in the area rented for upwards of $25 per square foot. 3 Holcomb Dunbar also rented Suite B from Mad Hatter under a separate lease, with options through 2020. This space fronted South Lamar. In October 2016, the firm found a subtenant to lease the space with consent from Mad Hatter.

3 in accordance with the terms of the lease.4 Mad Hatter did allow the firm to place signs in

its window, but unfortunately the firm’s “front” entrance and windows were located in the

back of the building. Moreover, Tartt claimed that the leads he obtained were unsuitable for

a variety of legitimate business reasons.

¶6. Holcomb Dunbar continued to pay rent on vacant office space and perceived Tartt

to be thwarting its efforts to find a replacement tenant. In February 2017, Tartt put a banner

on the front of the Property, advertising its availability for rent and identifying himself as

the contact entity. The firm claimed this was Tartt’s first attempt to market the Property

since the September 2015 discussion. In March 2017, Holcomb Dunbar surrendered its key

to the Property. Holcomb Dunbar claims that Tartt “continued to interfere with [its] attempts

to find a substitute tenant” or “adequately market” the Property.

¶7. On April 11, 2017, Best secretly recorded a telephone conversation with Tartt about

his progress in finding a replacement tenant for Holcomb Dunbar’s remaining lease term.5

Tartt insisted that he was trying to mitigate the firm’s damages and find a replacement

tenant. Best, however, complained that Tartt had not sent him any referrals. Tartt pointed

to the fact Holcomb Dunbar had chosen to extend the lease another three years instead of

4 Paragraph 15 of the lease on advertising provides, in part:

That no outside walls, roads or other exterior portion of the Premises or of any buildings or other improvements now or hereafter erected on the Premises shall be used for any advertising purposes whatsoever except for the direct advertising of the Lessee’s own business. All signage must be approved by Lessor. 5 The telephone call recording was transcribed and is a part of the record.

4 signing a shorter lease at a higher rate, knowing it would be vacating the Property twenty-

five months before the lease period ended. Best then requested that Tartt refer any possible

replacement tenants to him, but Tartt responded it was not his obligation to do so.

¶8. Tartt became offended at what he considered an unethical request by Best—if Tartt

would give the firm an early release from the lease, in exchange the firm would help Tartt

get approval to join two plats in a separate, unrelated matter before the city planning

commission on one of Tartt’s developments at Oxford Commons. Tartt told Best he

considered this offer highly unethical, as the Oxford Commons development was under a

different partnership than 400 South Lamar. Tartt told Best “just . . .

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Holcomb, Dunbar, Watts, Best, Masters & Golmon, P.A. f/k/a Holcomb Dunbar, P.A. v. 400 South Lamar Oxford Mad Hatter Partners, LLC and Blake Tartt III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-dunbar-watts-best-masters-golmon-pa-fka-holcomb-dunbar-missctapp-2021.