Sierra North Associates v. KRG Kings

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 23, 2023
Docket598 WDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sierra North Associates v. KRG Kings (Sierra North Associates v. KRG Kings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sierra North Associates v. KRG Kings, (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-A02019-23

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

SIERRA NORTH ASSOCIATES : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LIMITED PA : PENNSYLVANIA : : v. : : : KRG KINGS, LLC. : : No. 598 WDA 2022 Appellant :

Appeal from the Order Entered April 18, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Blair County Civil Division at No(s): No. 2021-GN-3975

BEFORE: BOWES, J., MURRAY, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED: MARCH 23, 2023

KRG Kings, LLC (“Tenant”) appeals from the April 18, 2022 order

denying Tenant’s petition to open a confessed judgment arising from a

commercial ground lease between the parties and declining to issue a rule to

show cause. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

On September 15, 1995, King’s Family Restaurant (“King’s”) entered

into a twenty-year commercial ground lease (“the lease”) with Sierra North

Associates Limited PA (“Landlord”), the owner of certain unimproved real

estate located in Allegheny Township, Blair County, Pennsylvania (“the

premises”), for King’s to construct thereon a building and outside

improvements for use as a restaurant. The lease included additional five-year

and four-year options, and provided for the following graduated rent schedule: ____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A02019-23

Lease Years Total rent for the period Monthly rent payment

1-10 $42,500.00 $3,541.67

11-15 $46,750.00 $3,895.83

16-20 $51,425.00 $4,285.42

21-25 $56,567.00 $4,713.92

26-29 $62,224.00 $5,185.33

See Ground Lease, 9/15/95, at ¶ 8. On April 1, 2015, King’s assigned the

lease to Tenant, with an effective date of April 3, 2015.

In August 2020, Landlord initiated confessed judgment proceedings

against Tenant (“the 2020 proceedings”). The filings related to the 2020

proceedings are not included in the certified record, but it appears that

Landlord terminated the lease shortly before commencing the 2020

proceedings because Tenant had failed to timely pay rent during the COVID-

19 pandemic. Tenant filed a petition to open/strike, which the trial court

denied, and Tenant appealed to this Court. In exchange for Tenant

withdrawing its appeal and Landlord discontinuing the underlying confessed

judgment action, the parties executed an amendment of the lease (“the

amendment”).1 See First Amendment to Lease Agreement, 4/16/21.

____________________________________________

1 The amendment is the only portion of the 2020 proceedings that appears in the certified record.

-2- J-A02019-23

The amendment, which was set to commence retroactively to April 1,

2021, and run until December 31, 2022, addressed Tenant’s outstanding

obligations dating back to July 2020. Of relevance to the instant appeal, ¶ 3

of the lease was amended to provide that, as additional consideration for the

amendment, Tenant was required by April 16, 2021, to pay Landlord a lump

sum of $37,545.00, and Landlord’s attorney a lump sum of $10,000.00.

Regarding rent payments, ¶ 8 from the lease, which set forth the lease’s

rent schedule, was revised to read as follows:

8. Minimum monthly rent shall be $12,814.00 payable on or before the first of each consecutive month, commencing on May 1, 2021 and continuing to and including the October 1, 2021 payment, and commencing with the November 1, 2021 payment, the monthly minimum rent shall be $6,250.00 for the balance of the term. The rent due April 1, 2021 is included in the payment by Tenant under Paragraph 3. Late fees shall continue to be calculated in accordance with the terms of the Lease.

First Amendment to Lease Agreement, 4/16/21, at 2.

Finally, in addition to Tenant withdrawing its appeal and Landlord

withdrawing the underlying confessed judgment action, the parties included

the following release in the amendment:

As a material inducement for Landlord and Tenant (each hereinafter referred to as a “Party”) to enter into this First Amendment, each Party on behalf of itself and all of its respective past, present and future equity owners, officers, employees, agents, affiliates, attorneys, representatives, heirs, successors and assigns, as applicable (collectively, the “Releasing Parties”) remises, releases, acquits, satisfies and forever discharges the other Party, and all of the respective past, present and future officers, directors, employees, agent, attorneys, representatives, participants, heirs, successors and assigns of the other Party (collectively, the “Released Parties”), from any and all manner of

-3- J-A02019-23

liabilities, obligations, expenses, damages, defenses, judgments, executions, claims, demands, actions, and/or causes of action of any nature whatsoever, whether at law or in equity, which any of the Releasing Parties ever had, now has, or which may result from the past or present state of things, from the beginning of time to the effective date of this First Amendment, and expressly excluding the Parties’ obligations under the Lease, as amended, from and after the effective date of this First Amendment, against or related to the Released Parties, including without limitation any and all claims arising from or related to the Lease.

Id. at 1-2.

In December 2021, after Tenant failed to pay the monthly rent for

October, November, and December 2021, as well as the 2021-2022 school

real estate tax, Landlord terminated the amended lease and demanded that

Tenant vacate the premises. Tenant did not vacate the premises. Therefore,

on December 17, 2021, Landlord filed the underlying petition for confession

of judgment for money and possession, seeking ejectment and judgment in

favor of Landlord and against Tenant in the amount of $45,918.13 for the

missed rent payments, school taxes, late fees, and attorney fees.

On March 3, 2022, Tenant filed a petition to open the confessed

judgment and stay execution. Tenant asserted a meritorious defense that it

was not in default at the time Landlord filed the underlying petition for

confessed judgment because it had overpaid Landlord. First, as supported by

attached emails, Tenant averred that the amendment’s $37,545.00 lump-sum

payment to Landlord comprised reimbursement for the 2020 real estate taxes

($19,996.00), 2021 Blair County/Allegheny Township taxes ($5,911.00),

common area maintenance fees ($5,074), and the April 2021 holdover rent

-4- J-A02019-23

payment ($6,564.00). See Petition to Open, 3/3/22, Exhibit 4 at unnumbered

2-3.

Second, Tenant relied on the same email communications to explain the

reason for the amendment’s two-tiered rent schedule. To wit, Tenant claimed

that the amendment provided for new, increased monthly rent payments of

$6,250.00 beginning May 1, 2021. In addition, Tenant was to pay the

outstanding rent for July 20, 2020 through March 31, 2021 ($39,384.04), in

six equal payments of $6,654.00 for each of the first six months of the new

rent schedule. Thus, according to Tenant, the rent payable for the first six

months under the amendment was a total of $12,814.00 per month. See id.

at Exhibit 4 unnumbered 2.

Notwithstanding this agreement, Tenant remitted to Landlord five rent

checks pursuant to the lease’s rent schedule, i.e., $4,713.92, between August

2020 and March 2021, before remitting in May 2021 a rent check pursuant to

the amendment’s new rent schedule, i.e., $12,814.01. See id. at Exhibit 5.

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Sierra North Associates v. KRG Kings, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sierra-north-associates-v-krg-kings-pasuperct-2023.