Maha v. Ardolino (In Re Ardolino)

298 B.R. 541, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1149, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 264, 2003 WL 22136799
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 12, 2003
Docket19-70117
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 298 B.R. 541 (Maha v. Ardolino (In Re Ardolino)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maha v. Ardolino (In Re Ardolino), 298 B.R. 541, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1149, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 264, 2003 WL 22136799 (Pa. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER OF COURT

M. BRUCE MCCULLOUGH, Bankruptcy Judge.

AND NOW, this 12th day of September, 2003, upon consideration of (a) the adversary complaint of Robert Maha, plaintiff herein (hereafter “Maha”), wherein Maha (i) appears to seek the entry by the Court of a money judgment in his favor in the amount of $10,000, which amount Maha contends he is entitled to as damages for the failure by Joyce Ardolino, the above-captioned debtor and defendant herein (hereafter “the Debtor”), to return Maha’s $5,000 security deposit, and (ii) seeks a determination by the Court that his security deposit claim is nondischargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(4), and (b) the Debtor’s answer to such complaint, as well as the Debtor’s counterclaim, designated as “New Matter” within her answer, wherein the Debtor seeks damages from Maha totalling $23,300 for Maha’s alleged improper early termination of a lease of residential realty from the Debtor; and subsequent to notice and a trial on the matter held on August 28, 2003, it is hereby ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that (a) the Debtor succeeds on her counterclaim but only to the extent of $2,600, which amount shall be, and has already been, set off against Maha’s $5,000 security deposit, thereby resulting in an entitlement to Maha of the return of only $2,400 of his $5,000 security deposit, (b) Maha is entitled to a statutory doubling of such $2,400 as a remedy for the Debtor’s *544 failure to timely return such $2,400, thereby entitling Maha to relief against the Debtor in the total amount of $4,800, (c) such claim for $4,800 is determined to be NONDISCHARGEABLE but only in the amount of $2,400, (d) the remaining $2,400 of Maha’s $4,800 claim is DISCHARGED, and (e) Maha must seek the entry of a money judgment in state court for the $2,400 portion of his claim that is found herein to be nondischargeable, as this Court will not enter a money judgment for such amount. The rationale for the Court’s decision is set forth in some detail below.

I.

In January 2000 Maha and his wife entered into a lease with the Debtor of what the Court will hereafter refer to as a Carriage Home, the terms of which lease (hereafter “the Lease”) called for the monthly rental payment by Maha of $2,600 during the time period which is relevant to a resolution of the instant matter. Maha, at the commencement of the Lease and pursuant to paragraph 6 of the lease agreement between the parties (hereafter “the Lease Agreement”), deposited with the Debtor an amount of $5,000 to be held as a security deposit (hereafter the “Security Deposit”).

Paragraph 27 of the Lease Agreement contains three additional handwritten provisions to the Lease, the last of which provides that Maha could unconditionally terminate the Lease upon 60 days notice to the Debtor of his intent to so terminate (hereafter the “Early-Out Clause”). The Debtor maintains that, the existence in the Lease Agreement of the unconditional Early-Out Clause notwithstanding, Maha was not free to terminate the Lease until January 30, 2002, which date, according to the Debtor, constituted the end of the primary term of the Lease pursuant to paragraph 1 of the Lease Agreement. The Debtor maintains as much because, argues the Debtor, the activation of the Early-Out Clause was actually subject to a condition, that is that such clause could only be activated by Maha in the event of a geographic change in Maha’s employment, which geographic change in employment the Court finds did not occur; the Debtor, through both her own testimony and that of her ex-husband, provided parol evidence as to the existence of such condition regarding the Early-Out Clause. The Court must reject this particular position of the Debtor, as well as the relevancy of such parol evidence, however, because (a) the Early-Out Clause is free, and unambiguously so, from any condition as to its activation by the Debtor, (b) the Early-Out Clause can be read in harmony, and thus is not inconsistent, with paragraph 1 of the Lease Agreement, which conclusion is dictated since (i) the latter paragraph establishes the primary term of the Lease, providing, in particular, that the Lease “shall end ... on the 30th day of January 2002 (unless sooner terminated under the provisions hereof),” and (ii) the primary term of the Lease thus extended to January 30, 2002, only in the event that the Lease was not terminated earlier via another provision of the Lease, such as, for instance, the Early-Out Clause, and (c) the Court, as a matter of law, is not free to consider parol evidence as to the existence of a condition regarding the Early-Out Clause absent either an ambiguity in such clause or an internal conflict between such clause and another provision in the Lease Agreement, see 30 P.L.E.2d Landlord and Tenant § 27 at 116-118 (Bender 2003); 12 P.L.E.2d Contracts § 143 at 186, § 144 at 190, § 159 at 215-216, § 161 at 217-220 *545 (Bender 2001). 1

The Court finds that Maha provided the Debtor with notice on January 27, 2001, of his intent to terminate the Lease, and that the Lease was accordingly terminated on March 28, 2001. The Court also finds that Maha failed to make, and has never tendered to the Debtor, the $2,600 rental payment due for the month of March 2001, which rental payment was the last such payment to which the Debtor was entitled.

In light of the foregoing factual findings and legal conclusions, and pursuant to paragraph 6(B) of the Lease Agreement, the Debtor was entitled to withhold from, and thus to refuse to return to, Maha $2,600 of the $5,000 Security Deposit as a setoff for Maha’s refusal to make the March 2001 rental payment. Moreover, the Debtor was entitled to so withhold without having to provide written notice to Maha that she intended to so withhold. See 68 P.S. § 250.512(a) (Purdon’s 1994) (“Nothing in this section shall preclude the landlord from refusing to return the escrow fund ... for nonpayment of rent”); McEvilly v. Tucci, 239 Pa.Super. 474, 362 A.2d 259, 261-262 n. 4 (1976) (obligation by landlord to provide written list to tenant only applies when landlord withholds security deposit to compensate for damages to leasehold premises; such obligation does not apply when security deposit is set off against rent defaults). However, because the Lease was properly terminated by Maha by the end of March 2001, the Debt- or is not entitled to recover for rents from April 2001 until she relet the Carriage Home on or around the end of September 2001. Accordingly, the Debtor’s counterclaim fails except to the extent that she was entitled to withhold $2,600 of the Security Deposit.

Because the Debtor presents no other basis for retaining the remaining $2,400 of the Security Deposit from Maha, the Debtor was obligated to return such $2,400 to Maha within thirty (30) days of the termination of the Lease, or by approximately April 27, 2001. See 68 P.S. § 250.512(a). Because the Debtor failed to so return such $2,400, and since the Court finds that Maha provided the Debtor with his new address in writing prior to the termination of the Lease, Maha is entitled to recover from the Debtor double such $2,400, or $4,800.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 B.R. 541, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 1149, 41 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 264, 2003 WL 22136799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maha-v-ardolino-in-re-ardolino-pawb-2003.