Personal Concierge Md, LLC v. Sg Echo, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 27, 2023
DocketA23A0276
StatusPublished

This text of Personal Concierge Md, LLC v. Sg Echo, LLC (Personal Concierge Md, LLC v. Sg Echo, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Personal Concierge Md, LLC v. Sg Echo, LLC, (Ga. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION RICKMAN, C. J., DILLARD, P. J., and PIPKIN, J.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

June 27, 2023

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A0276. PERSONAL CONCIERGE MD, LLC v. SG ECHO, LLC.

PIPKIN, Judge.

Personal Concierge MD, LLC (“Tenant”) appeals the grant of summary

judgment to SG Echo, LLC (“Landlord”) on Tenant’s claims for breach of contract,

negligence, negligence per se, nuisance, trespass, attorney fees, and punitive

damages; Tenant argues that it, not the Landlord, was entitled to summary judgment

or, alternatively, that genuine issues of material fact preclude the grant of summary

judgment to either party. We agree that the grant of summary judgment on Tenant’s

claims for breach of contract and attorney fees must be reversed but otherwise affirm.

The record shows that in 2018, the parties entered into a lease for office space

(the “Lease”), designated as Suite 110 (“the Premises”), located in a mixed-use development known as Echo at North Point in Alpharetta, Georgia.1 Tenant, through

its principle, Dr. Jason Hayes, planned to operate a medical office on the Premises,

which was the only use permitted under the Lease. At the time the parties entered into

the Lease, the space was unfinished, and it was the responsibility of the Tenant,

subject to the payment of an agreed-upon construction allowance from the Landlord,

to build out the Premises.

In November 2018, Dr. Hayes noticed water leaking from the ceiling in one of

the exam rooms. Dr. Hayes removed the drop down ceiling and noticed dampness and

staining; he notified the Landlord, and Harry Hoffer, the Landlord’s onsite

maintenance manager, investigated the leak. Maintenance workers applied sealant to

a bathroom located in an apartment above the Premises and, when no additional leaks

were detected, both Landlord and Tenant assumed the leak had been fixed. However,

about a week or so later, Dr. Hayes noticed another leak in an adjacent hallway,

sometimes referred to in the record as the Dictation area. Hoffer could not

immediately determine the source of the leak, and several of the Landlord’s

representatives, including Robin Riecke, who oversaw Landlord’s management team,

1 The term mixed-use refers to a building that is comprised of both living space, such as apartments, and commercial space, such as retail or office space.

2 conducted a visual inspection of the affected area but still could not determine the

source of the leak.

Efforts continued to find the source of the leak and sometime around the first

week of January, it was determined that multiple layers of sheetrock in the “firewall”2

ceiling above the Premises needed to be removed to access the pipes in that area.

After cutting away four layers of sheetrock in the firewall ceiling, Hoffer identified

the source of the leak – a crack in the drain pipe that serviced the apartment above the

Premises. Hoffer repaired the pipe on January 8, 2019, and applied Clorox and Kilz

to eradicate and prevent the growth of mold.

Several weeks later, Dr. Hayes e-mailed Landlord’s representatives about a

water stain located between air ducts inside the Premises in the affected area, and he

requested that the Landlord treat the stain to prevent mold accumulation. Landlord

responded by e-mail the next day, stating that the affected area had in fact been

treated and that the area Dr. Hayes was concerned about was simply discolored and

cosmetic in nature. Landlord “reminded” Dr. Hayes that “we are responsible for the

utilities and areas outside your space. You are responsible for the areas and items

2 The “fire” or “true” ceiling is located above the drop down ceiling and consists of four to five layers of fire-rated sheetrock that takes approximately an hour to burn through.

3 inside your space . . . regardless of the source of the damage.” The e-mail went on to

explain that the Landlord had voluntarily treated the areas inside the premises when

it repaired the leak but that the Tenant would be responsible for taking any additional

measures inside the Premises related to the leak.

In March 2019, Dr. Hayes noticed water on the floor in the Premises’ lobby

bathroom, and, when he removed the drop down ceiling tiles, he noticed mold. On

March 12, 2019, Dr. Hayes e-mailed the Landlord about the leak, noting that the

“ceiling and periphery of pipe looks to be riddled with mold.” Hoffer went to the

Premises to investigate and discovered a slow leak emanating from two pipes that

serviced an upstairs apartment that had not been correctly “seated” at the time of the

original construction in 2017. Hoffer also observed mold on the sheetrock, and he cut

out part of the sheet rock and applied bleach and Mildewcide.

The Landlord contacted the construction company that built the building (the

“Builder”) to further assess and remedy any damage from the leak; this work was to

include removal of any mold that may have resulted from the leak. Riecke notified Dr.

Hayes by e-mail on March 14, 2019, that any damage from the leak would be

“addressed appropriately” and that the Builder’s representative would be out to

inspect the area and perform necessary repairs, including mold removal. On March

4 16, 2019, Riecke sent Dr. Hayes another e-mail, informing him that the Builder’s

representative had inspected the area inside the ceiling and that the company had

contracted with SES Environmental (“SES”) to perform any additional work needed

to remove and treat any mold or mold-like substance in the affected area of the

ceiling. She also told Dr. Hayes that the Builder’s representative believed that some

if not all of the affected sheetrock in the ceiling would need to be removed but that

“the final scope-of-work would be determined by SES[.]”

SES inspected the premises on March 19, 2019 “to check for water stained or

damaged interiors, leaks, visible mold growth, and odors.” SES treated the area inside

the hole that had been cut in the firewall to repair the pipe with chemicals designed

to kill and inhibit mold and fungal growth but did not remove or replace any

additional sheetrock. SES returned on March 26 to sample for air quality, and, in a

report dated April 3, 2019, SES reported that there was no visible mold “inside any

of the interior areas inspected” and that the results of air sampling from three points

inside the Premises indicated that the mold concentrations inside the Premises were

significantly lower than those in the ambient air outside the Premises. The report

concluded that “[b]ased on these results and our observations, mold amplification did

not appear to be present within the sampled area at the time of [the] assessment.”

5 Prior to SES completing its work and testing the air, Dr. Hayes decided to have

his own mold inspection performed, and he hired Dr. William F. Kraemer of Atlanta

Mold, LLC, to conduct an inspection on March 13, 2019. Dr. Kraemer submitted a

report, noting that mold and fungal growth were visible in the layers of the firewall

and on the “structural framing material” inside the ceiling of the area affected by the

leak. The report recommended further testing to identify the extent of the problem.

Dr.

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Personal Concierge Md, LLC v. Sg Echo, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/personal-concierge-md-llc-v-sg-echo-llc-gactapp-2023.