Lysenko v. Sawaya

2000 UT 58, 7 P.3d 783, 399 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2000 Utah LEXIS 73, 2000 WL 943328
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 2000
Docket990240
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2000 UT 58 (Lysenko v. Sawaya) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lysenko v. Sawaya, 2000 UT 58, 7 P.3d 783, 399 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2000 Utah LEXIS 73, 2000 WL 943328 (Utah 2000).

Opinion

*785 ON CERTIORARI TO THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

RUSSON, Associate Chief Justice:

{1 On writ of certiorari, plaintiff Peter Lysenko seeks review of the court of appeals' decision affirming the trial court's award of damages to Lysenko for conversion. Lysenko claims that the trial court applied an incorrect measure of damages and that the court of appeals improperly affirmed.

BACKGROUND

T2 In May 1978, defendants Mitchell J. Sawaya and Lillie Marie Sawaya (the "Sawa-yas") leased property (the "premises") in Orem, Utah, to the Burger King Corporation ("Burger King") on which Burger King intended to construct a restaurant building. The lease term was for fifteen years. Under the lease, any additions or improvements that Burger King made to the premises would become the property of the Sawayas if not removed within fifteen days of termination of the lease.

3 On February 6, 1979, after constructing a restaurant building on the premises, Burger King entered into a sublease agreement with plaintiff Peter Lysenko,. The sublease permitted Lysenko to operate a restaurant in accordance with a franchise agreement into which he entered with Burger King. The sublease provided that any personal property installed on the premises by Lysenko would remain his property after the sublease ended. Lysenko purchased and installed the necessary equipment and opened for business.

{4 Lysenko's purchase of equipment was financed by a loan from Central Bank and Trust ("Central Bank"). Central Bank filed a UCC-1 financing statement in connection with the loan to Lysenko. The collateral listed in the financing statement included the restaurant equipment, fixtures, furniture, signs, improvements, accessories, accessions, and additions.

T5 On February 22, 1992, Lysenko and Burger King executed an agreement in which Burger King agreed to sell, and Lysenko to purchase, the restaurant building. The agreement provided that in case of default, the nondefaulting party could terminate the agreement if the defaulting party did not cure the default within five days of receiving notice of default. The agreement also stated that Burger King's interest in the premises was still subject to Burger King's lease with the Sawayas.

1 6 In February 1998, after Lysenko failed to cure monetary defaults to Burger King, Burger King terminated Lysenko's franchise agreement, sublease of the premises, and agreement for sale of the restaurant building. Lysenko closed the restaurant in April 1998.

17 Before the fifteen-year term of the Sawayas' lease to Burger King expired on February 6, 1994, the Sawayas informed Central Bank, Burger King, and Lysenko that all improvements, personal property, and equipment were to be removed from the premises. The Sawayas warned that any improvements, personal property, or equipment not removed within fifteen days after February 6, 1994, would be forfeited to the Sawayas. Burger King informed the Sawa-yas that at that time, Lysenko's claim to the equipment was subject to Central Bank's and Burger King's interests, and as a result, Lysenko was in no position to remove his equipment from the premises. When Lysenko then requested permission to remove his equipment from the premises, the Sawayas refused.

T8 Meanwhile, Lysenko arranged for one of his former employees, Curtis Loos!i, to purchase Central Bank's security interest in the restaurant equipment. On February 8, 1994, Central Bank sold its security interest in the equipment to Loosli, who then conveyed his interest to Lysenko,. Lysenko never successfully entered the premises to remove the equipment after the lease terminated.

T9 Thereafter, the Sawayas leased the premises to another tenant, HB Properties, which began operating a restaurant on the site in September 1994. HB Properties discarded some of Lysenko's equipment that remained on the premises but retained and used most of it.

*786 T{10 Lysenko filed an action against the Sawayas, arguing that they had unlawfully prevented him from removing his equipment, and in fact had converted the equipment. 1 Lysenko sought either possession of the equipment or its equivalent value. At trial, Lysenko's expert witness testified regarding two methods for determining the value of the equipment that remained in the restaurant: (1) "in-place" value, measuring the value of the equipment as a going concern; and (2) "salvage" value, measuring the value of the equipment if it were removed from the restaurant and sold. 2 The expert stated that the value of the equipment if left in place was $35,185 and the value of the equipment if removed and sold was $10,980. Lysenko urged the trial court to award damages based on the in-place value of the equipment. The Sawayas did not contest the expert's figures at trial but argued that Lysenko was not entitled to any damages. In the alternative, the Sawayas contended that the salvage value of the equipment was the proper measure of damages.

[ 11 The court granted judgment to Lysenko. In its findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court stated that Central Bank had obtained a perfected security interest in the equipment and that its perfected security interest was properly assigned to Loosli and then to Lysenko. Moreover, Lysenko's perfected security interest entitled him to possession of the equipment, and by interfering with Lysenko's recovery attempts and receiving benefit from the continued use of the equipment, the Sawayas had converted the equipment.

12 The court determined, from the testimony of Lysenko's expert, that the value of the equipment if left in place in the restaurant was $85,185 and the value of the equipment if removed and sold was $10,980. Reasoning that the objective of damages for conversion is to compensate the plaintiff for "actual losses," the court concluded that Lysenko was entitled to $10,980, the salvage value of the equipment if it were removed from the restaurant and sold. In addition, the court determined that the value of Lysenko's equipment that HB Properties had discarded was $2000 and thus awarded a total of $12,980 to Lysenko as damages for conversion, plus prejudgment interest and costs.

113 Lysenko appealed to this court, and we transferred the matter to the court of appeals pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 78-2-2(4) (1996). Before that court, Lysenko argued that he was entitled to the in-place value of the equipment because the equipment was still in place and in use at the restaurant. 3 The court of appeals disagreed and affirmed the trial court's decision to award salvage value. See Lysenko v. Sawaya, 1999 UT App. 031, ¶¶ 10-12, 973 P.2d 445. The court of appeals stated that "because the adequacy of a damage award is a factual question, we will not reverse the trial court's findings unless they are clearly erroneous," id. at ¶ 6, 973 P.2d 445, and then concluded that Lysenko failed to show that 'the trial court's decision to award salvage value rather than in-place value was clearly erroneous, see id. at ¶ 12, 973 P.2d 445.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 UT 58, 7 P.3d 783, 399 Utah Adv. Rep. 17, 2000 Utah LEXIS 73, 2000 WL 943328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lysenko-v-sawaya-utah-2000.