Paul Branco v. Hull Storey Retail

CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 24, 2023
Docket2021-000233
StatusUnpublished

This text of Paul Branco v. Hull Storey Retail (Paul Branco v. Hull Storey Retail) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Branco v. Hull Storey Retail, (S.C. 2023).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE. IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 268(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Supreme Court

Paul Branco and Branco Investments, Inc., d/b/a Great American Cookie Co., Petitioners,

v.

Hull Storey Retail Group, LLC and Sumter Mall, LLC, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2021-000233

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS

Appeal from Sumter County R. Ferrell Cothran Jr., Circuit Court Judge

Memorandum Opinion No. 2023-MO-009 Heard March 29, 2023 – Filed May 24, 2023

REVERSED

John S. Simmons, of Simmons Law Firm, LLC, of Columbia; and Patrick McFadden Killen, of Sumter, for Petitioners.

Miles Edward Coleman, of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, LLP, of Greenville; and John M. Markwalter, of Hull Property Group, LLC, of Augusta, GA, for Respondents.

PER CURIAM: This appeal involves a dispute over leased space in the Sumter Mall that housed a Great American Cookie Co. ("GACC") franchise. Paul Branco and Branco Investments (collectively, "Petitioners") brought this action for tortious interference with a contract against the Hull Storey Retail Group and the Sumter Mall (collectively, "Respondents"), alleging their conduct caused a third party to abandon a contract to purchase certain GACC assets when their mall lease expired. The trial court ruled in favor of Petitioners and awarded damages. The court of appeals reversed. Branco v. Hull Storey Retail Group, LLC, No. 2021-UP- 009, 2021 WL 118536, at *1 (S.C. Ct. App. filed Jan. 13, 2021). This Court has granted a petition for a writ of certiorari to review the decision of the court of appeals. We reverse.

I.

On December 30, 2002, Paul and Anne Branco ("the Brancos"), executed a ten-year lease of a store in the Sumter Mall, where they operated a GACC franchise. The lease was set to expire on April 30, 2013. The assets of the GACC franchise were held in the name of their company, Branco Investments, Inc.

Near the end of their ten-year lease, the Brancos considered several options before ultimately deciding to sell their GACC assets (equipment and inventory) and get out of the business when their lease expired. In January 2013, Paul Branco began discussions with Stewart Applebaum to sell the GACC assets to Applebaum's company, Brooktenn, LLC. Applebaum was already the owner of several GACC franchises, and he was interested in obtaining a new, independent lease for Brooktenn at the location the Brancos occupied in the Sumter Mall.

On March 1, 2013, an asset purchase agreement was entered into between Branco Investments and Brooktenn for Brooktenn to buy the GACC assets for $70,000. Paul Branco and Applebaum signed on behalf of their companies. The document made the purchase "contingent upon Buyers [Brooktenn] getting a satisfactory lease from [the Sumter Mall's leasing agent] within 90 days of [the] signed proposal."1 The asset sale ultimately fell through, however, after the leasing

1 The agreement also contained a separate provision for Brooktenn to purchase the assets in a GACC store located at the Magnolia Mall in Florence for $30,000. agent tried to impose a substantial "lease assignment fee" (on either the Brancos or Brooktenn), despite the fact that the Brancos were not assigning their lease to Brooktenn.

Lewis White, an employee of the Sumter Mall's leasing agent, the Hull Storey Retail Group, LLC ("Hull Storey"), was the person primarily responsible for negotiating with the parties. It is undisputed that Applebaum's application for a lease on behalf of Brooktenn was approved by the Sumter Mall. In addition, according to Applebaum, he had a new, independent lease of the premises in the name of Brooktenn "in place," although a document had not been signed. No mention was made at that time of a lease assignment. 2 Rather, the point came up only after Hull Storey could not extract a "lease assignment fee" from the Brancos.

During White's negotiations, he, along with Hull Storey, repeatedly insisted that the Brancos were attempting to assign their lease to Brooktenn, which they maintained triggered a provision in the Brancos' existing lease governing assignments. That provision required the Brancos to pay over to the Sumter Mall all consideration received in connection with an assignment—in this case, the full $70,000 in proceeds from the sale of the GACC assets. 3

In response, the Brancos asserted their ten-year lease was about to expire, so they were not, in fact, attempting to assign their lease. Rather, they were allowing their lease to expire at the conclusion of their ten-year term and selling their GACC assets, and Brooktenn was seeking a new, independent lease of the mall location. The Brancos refused to pay the "lease assignment fee" on the ground the provision was not applicable.

When that effort failed, Hull Storey reduced the amount demanded to $20,000, and it attempted to collect this sum from either the Brancos or Brooktenn.

However, after a dispute arose over the Sumter Mall location, the parties allowed the entire agreement to expire. 2 Applebaum later testified in the trial of this matter: "[T]hey knew I wasn't taking Paul's [Paul Branco's] lease because I [Brooktenn] had a new lease. We already had discussed it and that was in place. There was nothing [said] about an assignment." (Emphasis added.) 3 "If Tenant assigns its interest in this Lease, all consideration payable to Tenant in conjunction with such assignment shall be payable and belong to Landlord." On April 30, 2013, the last day of the Brancos' lease, White emailed both Paul Branco and Applebaum several items, including (1) a proposed lease assignment, and (2) a letter from Hull Storey's attorney offering the Brancos an extension of their existing lease until May 15, 2013 (presumably to allow time to finalize the negotiations).

The first document, a proposed "Assignment, Assumption, Amendment and Ratification of Lease Agreement," set forth specific lease terms for Brooktenn, and indicated the monthly rent would increase incrementally over ten years from $3,200 in 2013 to $3,800 in 2023. However, the document also included language stating the Brancos were (purportedly) agreeing to "sell the business" to Brooktenn for $70,000, which Hull Storey described as an "Assignment Cost," and that, pursuant to the Brancos' original lease, the $70,000 "Assignment Cost" was "payable entirely to" the Sumter Mall, but the Sumter Mall had agreed to accept $20,000 "as full satisfaction of its entitlement to the Assignment Cost." (Emphasis added.) The second document, the offer for a short extension of the Brancos' lease, stated it would be effective upon the signing of the "Tenant."

The Brancos signed the letter on May 3, 2013, accepting the extension of their lease until May 15, 2013. However, the Brancos and Applebaum reiterated to White that the Brancos' lease was expiring and was not being assigned, so no fee was due under the assignment provision in the Brancos' (expiring) lease. Neither the Brancos nor Brooktenn ever signed the proposed lease assignment, as the parties could not resolve the dispute regarding Hull Storey's repeated demand for an additional, one- time fee of $20,000 over and above the amount of the lease payments.

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Bluebook (online)
Paul Branco v. Hull Storey Retail, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-branco-v-hull-storey-retail-sc-2023.