Pee Dee Stores, Inc. v. Doyle

672 S.E.2d 799, 381 S.C. 234, 2009 S.C. App. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 29, 2009
Docket4467
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 672 S.E.2d 799 (Pee Dee Stores, Inc. v. Doyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pee Dee Stores, Inc. v. Doyle, 672 S.E.2d 799, 381 S.C. 234, 2009 S.C. App. LEXIS 23 (S.C. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

GEATHERS, J.

Appellant Billy W. Huggins, d/b/a Huggins Farm Service (Huggins), seeks review of an order granting Pee Dee Stores, Inc.’s (Pee Dee Stores) summary judgment motion and motion to compel settlement based on a Settlement Agreement. Huggins asserts that the Settlement Agreement was intended to resolve only the landlord/tenant claims and that his civil *237 conspiracy and unfair trade practices claims against both Pee Dee Stores and Third-Party Defendant Helena Chemical Company (Helena) survived the Settlement Agreement. As such, Huggins alleges that summary judgment was improper because a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether the parties to the Settlement Agreement intended to extinguish Huggins’ claims against Pee Dee Stores and Helena. We reverse.

FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Pee Dee Stores and Paul E. Doyle, deceased husband of Defendant Carolyn Doyle, 1 d/b/a Pee Dee Farms Company (Doyle), entered into a five-year commercial lease agreement that commenced on March 1, 2000 and was to terminate on February 28, 2005. Doyle used the leased premises to operate a convenience store, gas station, and farm supply retail store. The lease agreement afforded Doyle an option to renew the lease by providing written notice to Pee Dee Stores by December 1, 2004. During the lease term, and pursuant to an agreement with Doyle in late 2003, Huggins began selling farm supplies out of the leased premises in his capacity as a commissioned agent for Helena. 2

Prior to the termination of the lease, Pee Dee Stores represented to Doyle that the lease term would be extended to allow Doyle until December 1, 2005 to consider the option to renew. In addition, Helena represented to Huggins that it intended to purchase Huggins’ farm supply business with all of the attached goodwill. At that time, Huggins, Doyle, and Helena began negotiations. Subsequently, and prior to the December 1, 2005 deadline, Doyle notified Pee Dee Stores in writing of her intention to exercise the option to renew the lease. Pee Dee Stores informed Doyle that she could not exercise the option to renew and asked her to vacate the store.

Pee Dee Stores filed an ejectment action against Doyle in magistrate court, asserting a violation of the lease as well as *238 its expiration as grounds for ejectment. 3 Doyle answered the complaint by denying the material allegations and sought a declaratory judgment that she was the legal tenant under the lease and had properly exercised the option to renew. In’ addition, Pee Dee Stores later filed a separate action for breach of contract against Doyle and Huggins. The complaint also alleged interference with contractual relations and fraud, among other claims.

In response to both the ejectment and breach of contract actions, Doyle and Huggins counterclaimed against Pee Dee Stores seeldng monetary damages for issues related to the landlord/tenant relationship. Further, the parties asserted in a Third-Party Complaint against Helena causes of action for negligent misrepresentation, unfair trade practices, civil conspiracy, promissory estoppel, interference with a contract, and interference with a prospective contract. These causes of action were based upon an alleged conspiracy between Helena and Pee Dee Stores to oust Doyle and Huggins from the property in order to enable Helena to rent the leased premises and take over both parties’ business goodwill without compensation.

Subsequently, Doyle and Huggins brought a motion to consolidate the ejectment and breach of contract actions. The trial court denied the motion to consolidate, ordering the parties to resolve the issues related to the ejectment action first, after which discovery and trial of the remaining issues would occur.

While both actions were pending, Pee Dee Stores, Doyle, and Huggins entered into a Settlement Agreement, which was subtitled as “Relating Only to All Landlord/Tenant Issues.” The record does not indicate which party drafted the Settlement Agreement. All three parties signed the Settlement Agreement. The pertinent provisions of the Settlement Agreement are as follows:

7. The parties shall forever release each other from all claims and/or issues, whenever arising, with each agreeing they will never sue or involve each other in any litigation involving the premises, the store, any business on the premises, and/or the relationship between the Parties, as *239 follows: (1) the Parties agree this is a full and complete release of all claims known and unknown, between Pee Dee Stores, Inc. and Carolyn Doyle, d/b/a Pee Dee Farms Company; and (2) the Parties agree this is a full and complete release of all landlord/tenant claims and issues, known or unknown, between the Parties.
8. Nothing in this agreement shall be construed as in any way effecting [sic] the rights of Billy W. Huggins and/or Huggins Farm Service, Inc. to assert claims against Helena Chemical Company. Nothing in this agreement shall be construed as in any way effecting [sic] the rights of Billy W. Huggins and/or Huggins Farm Service, Inc. to assert claims against Pee Dee Stores, Inc. for claims other than the landlord/tenant claims. Nothing herein shall be construed as a relinquishment, waiver, discharge or release of any claims by Billy W. Huggins and/or Huggins Farm Services, Inc. against Pee Dee Stores, Inc., for any claims other than the landlord/tenant claims.
10. Pee Dee Stores, Inc. and Carolyn Doyle d/b/a Pee Dee Farms Company agree to dismiss all claims against each other, with prejudice, and Pee Dee Stores, Inc. and Billy W. Huggins, individually and Huggins Farm Service, Inc., agree to dismiss only the landlord/tenant claims with prejudice.
(emphasis added).

Pee Dee Stores later moved to enforce the Settlement Agreement. Subsequently, Doyle and Huggins moved to amend their pleadings to remove all of the landlord/tenant claims against Pee Dee Stores that were resolved by the Settlement Agreement, including the declaratory judgment, breach of lease, and negligent misrepresentation claims. Huggins proposed to leave intact the civil conspiracy and unfair trade practices claims against Pee Dee Stores and Helena. Pee Dee Stores also moved to amend its pleadings to reflect the Settlement Agreement and moved for summary judgment.

At the hearing on the various motions, counsel for Pee Dee Stores, Doyle, and Huggins acknowledged that settlement was reached regarding the ejectment action and that the terms *240 were set forth in the Settlement Agreement. The trial court granted Pee Dee Stores’ motion to compel settlement and summary judgment motion, finding the pleadings indicated that all allegations involved landlord/tenant claims and issues “involving the premises, the store, any business on the premises, and/or the relationship between the Parties[,]” and as such were resolved by the Settlement Agreement. Huggins now appeals.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
672 S.E.2d 799, 381 S.C. 234, 2009 S.C. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pee-dee-stores-inc-v-doyle-scctapp-2009.