Sea Island Food Group, LLC v. Yaschik Development Company, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 13, 2021
Docket2018-000906
StatusPublished

This text of Sea Island Food Group, LLC v. Yaschik Development Company, Inc. (Sea Island Food Group, LLC v. Yaschik Development Company, Inc.) 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
Sea Island Food Group, LLC v. Yaschik Development Company, Inc., (S.C. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Sea Island Food Group, LLC, d/b/a Squeeze, Plaintiff,

v.

Yaschik Development Company, Inc., d/b/a Yaschik Enterprises, Hilton Smith, East Bay Company, Ltd., Michael J. Quillen Family Limited Partnership, Defendants.

Michael J. Quillen Family Limited Partnership, Third-Party Plaintiff,

Top of the Bay, LLC, Third-Party Defendant.

Top of the Bay, LLC, d/b/a Club Light, Fourth-Party Plaintiff, Respondent,

Yaschik Development Company, Inc., d/b/a Yaschik Enterprises, Fourth-Party Defendant, Appellant.

Appellate Case No. 2018-000906

Appeal From Charleston County Roger M. Young, Sr., Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 5794 Heard December 9, 2020 – Filed January 27, 2021 AFFIRMED

E. Brandon Gaskins, of Moore & Van Allen, PLLC, and Robert Ernest Sumner, IV, of Butler Snow, LLP, both of Charleston; and Charles Robert Scarminach, of Atlanta GA, all for Appellant.

W. Tracy Brown, of The Brown Law Firm, of Summerville, and William Koatesworth Swope, of The Swope Law Firm, PA, of Charleston, for Respondent.

HEWITT, J.: This case arose out of a building owner's decision to terminate the building's master lease after a fire. It comes to us presenting two issues. The first is whether a subtenant may sue the owner for intentionally interfering with a sublease by wrongfully declaring the building "totally destroyed." The second is a multi-pronged challenge to the jury's award of punitive damages.

We affirm. There was evidence upon which the jury could find the owner improperly declared the property "totally destroyed." That declaration, if wrongful, directly interfered with the building's subleases: in lawyer jargon, it constitutes intentional interference with a contract. We also agree with the trial court's thorough review of the jury's punitive damages award.

FACTS

The building in question is located at 213 East Bay Street in downtown Charleston. Yashick Development Co. purchased the property in 2003 for approximately $1.8 million. It leased the building to a limited partnership (the Master Tenant). The Master Tenant rented space to subtenants.

A fire started on the building's second floor one night in April 2013. The fire caused extensive damage to the second floor and roof. There was less damage to the building's other areas. In the following months, the Master Tenant hired a company to secure the building and begin the clean-up process. It also hired a company to perform architectural and engineering services for the building's repair. Within months, the stakeholders became aware of issues related to restoring the building and complying with the applicable earthquake building code. The Master Tenant notified Yaschik of these challenges in June 2013. The Master Tenant also said it believed the total cost of reconstruction would "certainly" exceed the insurance; possibly by "a significant amount." The Master Tenant had a $1 million insurance policy for the property. Yaschik paid substantially more than $1 million when it purchased the building, but $1 million was all the insurance the master lease required.

In August 2013, the Master Tenant notified Yaschik again that reconstruction would require significant additional finances because the repair work would exceed the insurance proceeds. The Master Tenant estimated it could cost between $1.5 and $1.8 million in addition to the $500,000 already spent out of the $1 million insurance. Email messages from around the same time show that Yaschik and the Master Tenant disputed who had final responsibility to pay for the repair/rebuild.

Things came to a head the next month; five months after the fire. The Master Tenant sent Yaschik a letter advising of several developments, including the insurance company's decision to pay the remaining insurance. The Master Tenant insisted Yaschik approve the structural plans for the building's repair before submitting them to the City of Charleston. About a week later, Yaschik sent the Master Tenant a letter purporting to terminate the master lease, claiming the building was a total loss.

The relevant part of the lease provides:

If premises are totally destroyed by fire or other casualty, this lease shall terminate as of the date of such destruction and rental shall be accounted for as between Landlord and Tenant as of that date. If premises are damaged but not wholly destroyed by fire or other casualty, rent shall abate in such proportion as use of premises has been lost to the Tenant. Landlord shall restore premises to substantially the same condition as prior to damage as speedily as practicable, whereupon full rental shall commence.

The subleases contained language similar to the master lease regarding the building's destruction due to fire. The Master Tenant and the subtenants took the position that the building was not "totally destroyed" and that Yaschik's termination was ineffective. At some point, the Master Tenant and subtenants discovered Yaschik had been negotiating since at least May 2013 to sell the building to a neighboring property owner. May 2013 was a month after the fire, and roughly four months before Yaschik declared the building totally destroyed.

Three months after Yaschik declared the building destroyed, Yaschik and the neighbor reached a contingent agreement for the property's sale. That transaction never closed. Yaschik instead undertook efforts to restore the property on its own.

The resulting lawsuit involved multiple parties and claims. Many of the claims, if not all of them, stemmed from Yaschik terminating the master lease and subleases.

The claim at issue in this appeal is the claim against Yaschik by a subtenant—Top of the Bay, Inc. d/b/a Club Light (Top). Top claimed Yaschik wrongfully terminated the master lease and interfered with Top's sublease with the Master Tenant. Top also sued the Master Tenant, claiming the Master Tenant breached the sublease by not restoring the fire-damaged premises.

Much of Yaschik's argument on appeal is tied to the fact that the trial court granted the Master Tenant a directed verdict on Top's breach of contract claim, finding the Master Tenant's duty to restore the building, if any, expired once Yaschik terminated the master lease. The trial court denied Yaschik's similar motion on Top's intentional interference claim, finding the issue of whether Yaschik was justified in declaring the premises a total loss under the master lease was a jury question.

The jury found Yaschik breached the master lease and interfered with the subleases by improperly declaring the building a total loss. It entered substantial verdicts against Yaschik and in favor of the Master Tenant and the subtenants. On the claim at issue here (intentional interference with Top's sublease), the jury awarded Top $1 in nominal damages and $133,333.33 in punitive damages. Yaschik moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), a new trial, a new trial nisi remittitur, or setoff. The trial court denied these motions in a detailed written order. This appeal followed.

ISSUES

The first issue is whether the trial court erred in failing to grant Yaschik a directed verdict or JNOV on Top's claim for intentional interference with Top's sublease. The second issue is whether the jury's punitive damages award was improper and contrary to law. Yaschik presented the issues somewhat differently in its brief. We have consolidated some of them for the purposes of this opinion.

DIRECTED VERDICT/JNOV

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Sea Island Food Group, LLC v. Yaschik Development Company, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sea-island-food-group-llc-v-yaschik-development-company-inc-scctapp-2021.