Lumpkins v. CSL LOCKSMITH, LLC

911 A.2d 418, 2006 D.C. App. LEXIS 626, 2006 WL 3370345
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 2006
Docket05-CV-1085
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 911 A.2d 418 (Lumpkins v. CSL LOCKSMITH, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lumpkins v. CSL LOCKSMITH, LLC, 911 A.2d 418, 2006 D.C. App. LEXIS 626, 2006 WL 3370345 (D.C. 2006).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

This appeal is from the grant of summary judgment to appellee CSL Locksmith, LLC in an action brought by appellant Maria C. Lumpkins for, inter alia, a declaratory judgment regarding the meaning and validity of a commercial lease under which CSL Locksmith occupies, and claims the right to occupy, a building. On appeal, Ms. Lumpkins — together with appellant CSL Property, LLC — contends that triable issues of fact remain concerning (1) the meaning of the termination clause of the lease in light of the circumstances surrounding its drafting; (2) whether a mistake was made in the signing of the lease such that reformation or rescission is warranted; and (3) whether CSL Locksmith, through its principal Michael Conway, fabricated or altered the lease under which it occupies the building. The trial judge, we hold, correctly concluded that the termination provision of the lease unambiguously supports CSL Locksmith’s right to remain in the building, so that a prior unsigned, differing version of that provision would be inadmissible to impeach it. We further hold that appellants proffered insufficient evidence as a matter of law to meet their heightened burden of showing entitlement to rescission or reformation or that the lease in question had been fabricated. We therefore affirm the grant of summary judgment.

I.

Through a company they formed in 1999 named CSL Property, LLC, brothers John Thomas (“Rocky”) and Warren R. (“Bobby”) Lumpkins jointly owned a building at 1104 9th Street, N.W. Beginning in March 1999, the building was occupied by CSL Locksmith, LLC, also a company jointly owned by the brothers, under a lease that *421 is the subject of this controversy. According to documentary and deposition testimony presented by the parties, Brett Or-love, Rocky Lumpkins’ attorney, prepared successive drafts of the lease, each identified by date. (The respective dates appeared in a “footer” at the bottom of each hard copy page of the computer document.) As relevant here, the drafts differed only with respect to paragraph XIII, entitled Assignment and Subletting, which specified a condition or conditions for termination of the lease by the landlord. The two drafts dated “3/25/99” and “4/16/99” each provided in that paragraph:

In the event this Lease has been assigned or all of the Premises have been sublet, Landlord shall have the right to terminate this Lease upon ninety days’ prior notice to tenant in the event Landlord has executed a valid contract to sell the building.

The “4/19/99” draft, by contrast, defined the right to terminate in paragraph XIII as follows:

In the event this Lease has been assigned or all of the Premises have been sublet, or in the event Landlord has executed a valid contract to sell the Building, Landlord shall have the right to terminate this Lease upon ninety days’ prior notice to Tenant.

A note from attorney Orlove to Rocky accompanying this draft stated, “Revised as discussed,” which Orlove testified in deposition reflected changes having “to do with the right to terminate the lease” that he had made after discussion with Rocky.

As they appear in the record, none of the three draft leases was signed by Rocky or Bobby Lumpkins.

In June 1999, Bobby sold his 50% interest in CSL Locksmith to Michael Conway for $300,000, and Rocky and Conway signed an amended Operating Agreement to run CSL Locksmith. When Rocky died unexpectedly in March 2001, the Agreement required CSL Locksmith (through Conway as sole surviving member) to buy out Rocky’s 50% share. Conway initially balked, and instead filed a claim for $300,000 against Rocky’s estate in Maryland Orphans’ Court, asserting that Rocky had breached an oral agreement whereby he and Conway would each name the other as beneficiary of $300,000 in life insurance. Conway later dismissed his suit and purchased Rocky’s share of the business.

In Spring 2003, Rocky’s widow, Maria Concepcion Lumpkins (referred to by the parties as Conchita), received an offer to buy her share of the 1104 9th Street property. When she apparently sought to invoke the termination paragraph of the 4/19/99 draft lease against CSL Locksmith, Conway produced a lease agreement containing a paragraph XIII identical in language to the 3/25/99 and 4/16/99 drafts; this agreement bore a footer date of 6/29/00. The lease was signed under seal by Rocky on behalf of both CSL Property and CSL Locksmith as manager of each; and in keeping with the first two drafts prepared by Orlove, it conditioned the landlord’s right to terminate on the twin events of a sale of the building by the landlord and assignment of the lease or subletting of the premises by the tenant. Conway testified in deposition that Rocky had given him the lease in July 2000 after he had asked Rocky several times for a copy.

In November 2003, Conchita brought this suit in Superior Court to enforce the 4/19/99 version of the lease. She sought a declaratory judgment that the 6/29/00 lease Conway had produced was “not authentic and genuine,” and that assuming it was genuine, the termination clause was ambiguous, and extrinsic evidence would show that it reflected Rocky’s intention to allow termination of the lease upon sale of *422 the building by CSL Property, without further condition. She further sought rescission or reformation of the lease, alleging that, at most, Rocky had mistakenly executed the lease in June 2000 believing that it was the 4/19/99 version containing his requested modifications. 1

Following discovery, the trial court granted summary judgment to CSL Locksmith as to each of Conchita’s claims relevant here, giving rise to this appeal.

II.

We consider first appellants’ contention that the termination clause of the 6/29/00 lease executed by Rocky is ambiguous, thus creating triable issues of fact concerning Rocky’s understanding in executing the lease. 2 Paragraph XIII of the 6/29/00 lease again states:

In the event this Lease has been assigned or all of the Premises have been sublet, Landlord shall have the right to terminate this Lease upon ninety days’ prior notice to Tenant in the event Landlord has executed a valid contract to sell the Building.

Appellants assert three reasons why this provision is ambiguous: (1) “The language is confusing because the words ‘in the event’ are used twice”; (2) “The reasonable inference” from Orlove’s April 19, 1999, revision of the lease after discussion with Rocky is that “the Landlord was to have the right to terminate the lease if it contracted to sell”; and (3) “[T]he purported lease was not integrated and does not contain a merger clause,” and “whether the lease is a completely integrated contract by itself is an issue of fact which should have resulted in the denial of ... summary judgment.” We consider these points in turn after briefly stating the relevant legal standards.

Our review of an order granting summary judgment is de novo. Summary judgment is appropriate where a contract is unambiguous since, absent such ambiguity, a written contract duly signed and executed speaks for itself and binds the parties without the necessity of extrinsic evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
911 A.2d 418, 2006 D.C. App. LEXIS 626, 2006 WL 3370345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumpkins-v-csl-locksmith-llc-dc-2006.