Southeast Diamond Jubilee Investments, LLC, as Successor To Kawal, Inc., D/B/A Gas Express v. UMA Shiv, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 30, 2020
DocketE2019-02141-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Southeast Diamond Jubilee Investments, LLC, as Successor To Kawal, Inc., D/B/A Gas Express v. UMA Shiv, Inc. (Southeast Diamond Jubilee Investments, LLC, as Successor To Kawal, Inc., D/B/A Gas Express v. UMA Shiv, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southeast Diamond Jubilee Investments, LLC, as Successor To Kawal, Inc., D/B/A Gas Express v. UMA Shiv, Inc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

11/30/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs August 3, 2020

SOUTHEAST DIAMOND JUBILEE INVESTMENTS, LLC, AS SUCCESSOR TO KAWAL, INC., D/B/A GAS EXPRESS v. UMA SHIV, INC.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Blount County No. L-19777 David R. Duggan, Judge

No. E2019-02141-COA-R3-CV

In this action involving a commercial lease, the lessor corporation filed an unlawful detainer complaint in the Blount County General Sessions Court (“general sessions court”) seeking termination of the lease and eviction of the lessee corporation, which operated a gas station on the leased premises. Following a bench trial, the general sessions court entered a judgment dismissing the complaint with prejudice. On appeal to the Blount County Circuit Court (“trial court”), the lessor filed an amended complaint alleging several breaches of contract by the lessee. Following a four-day bench trial, the trial court dismissed the lessor’s complaint upon finding, inter alia, that the lessee had not materially breached the lease. Discerning no reversible error, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., and KENNY W. ARMSTRONG, J., joined.

Melanie E. Davis, Maryville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Southeast Diamond Jubilee Investments, LLC, as successor to Kawal, Inc., d/b/a Gas Express.

Kevin C. Stevens and Elijah C. Lovingfoss, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Uma Shiv, Inc.

OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

The commercial lease giving rise to this action was entered into on April 4, 2013, between Kawal, Inc. (“Kawal”), d/b/a Gas Express, as the lessor and the defendant, Uma Shiv, Inc. (“Uma Shiv”), as the lessee for a period of five years with three five-year options to renew the lease. Under the 2013 lease, Kawal, as represented by its proprietor, Aziz Jooma, leased a gas station and convenience store, known as Gas Express (“Gas Express”), to Uma Shiv, through its sole proprietor, Setu Kalariya.1 Gas Express occupied the lower level of a two-story commercial building located at 4510 Airport Highway in Louisville, Tennessee (“the Property”).

In May 2017, Johaina Poonawalla and Zaheer Poonawalla, sister and brother, purchased the Property from Kawal, Inc. Although the record demonstrates that the Poonawallas attempted to persuade Mr. Kalariya to enter into a revised lease in June 2017, it is undisputed that the Poonawallas and Mr. Kalariya never reached an agreement as to lease revisions and that the 2013 lease (“the Lease”) continued to govern the lessor/lessee relationship. See Hughes v. Donlon, 261 S.W. 960, 965 (Tenn. 1924) (stating that when leased premised are sold, “the tenant cannot be deprived of his leasehold by such a sale”). In August 2017, the Poonawallas conveyed the Property via quitclaim deed to a corporation owned by them as fifty-fifty proprietors, Southeast Diamond Jubilee Investments, LLC (“Southeast Diamond”), which is the successor lessor and the plaintiff in the instant action.

On August 29, 2017, Southeast Diamond filed its unlawful detainer complaint in the general sessions court, asserting that Uma Shiv was in wrongful possession of Gas Express because it was in breach of contract as to the Lease. Alleging that Uma Shiv owed $12,600.00 in unpaid rent, Southeast Diamond requested possession of Gas Express and a money judgment for “(a) unpaid rent, (b) damages to the property, (c) attorney fees (if applicable), and (d) all litigation taxes and costs.” Southeast Diamond subsequently filed a nearly identical complaint in the general sessions court on September 5, 2017, except that the second complaint contained no allegation of unpaid rent. In both complaints, Southeast Diamond stated that it had given Uma Shiv written notice to vacate Gas Express on August 1, 2017. Following a bench trial, the general sessions court, with Judge Robert L. Headrick presiding, entered a judgment on November 27, 2017, dismissing Southeast Diamond’s claims with prejudice.

Upon appeal to and with permission from the trial court, Southeast Diamond filed an amended complaint on February 2, 2018. According to the amended complaint, Gas Express comprised the entire downstairs level of the two-story commercial building

1 Mr. Kalariya acknowledged during trial that in signing documents related to Gas Express, he often used the name, Jimmy Patel. He stated that his legal name was Setu Kalariya, and we note that this is the name under which he executed the Lease. We also note that Mr. Kalariya’s surname is sometimes spelled in the record as “Kalaria.” Inasmuch as Mr. Kalariya has for the most part presented his name spelled with a “y” in his own pleadings and documents, we will employ this spelling throughout the opinion. No disrespect is intended. 2 located on the Property. The upstairs level contained five units, including an operational hair salon, three “formerly residential” units, and a vacant office space. Southeast Diamond alleged multiple material breaches of contract committed by Uma Shiv, including: (1) refusal to pay water bills, necessitating payment of the water bills by Southeast Diamond; (2) failure to pay “certain plumbing and electrical repair work” after demand for payment was made by Southeast Diamond; (3) violation of City of Alcoa codes; (4) violation of Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (“TDEC”) regulations; (5) refusal to provide copies of TDEC reports to Southeast Diamond; (6) actions designed to “annoy and pester” the hair salon owner, including “maliciously turn[ing] off the water to the hair salon as a purposeful mischievous act”; and (7) attempts to “pester and annoy” Southeast Diamond by reporting nonexistent water leaks. Also alleging that the multiple breaches of contract violated the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, Southeast Diamond requested that Uma Shiv be ordered to vacate Gas Express and that the Lease be declared of no further effect. Southeast Diamond also requested an award of damages, reasonable attorney’s fees, and costs.

Southeast Diamond attached multiple exhibits to its amended complaint, including, inter alia, the Lease, an asset purchase agreement executed simultaneously with the Lease, and notices of violations on the Property originating with the City of Alcoa (“the City”) and TDEC. Under the Lease, the rent to be paid after the first year and up to the first optional five-year renewal period was $4,200.00 per month, which would then increase to $4,500.00 per month if the renewal option were exercised “for the entire Five (5) year term.” Testimony during trial demonstrated that although the Poonawallas and Southeast Diamond had never directly accepted rent from Uma Shiv due to the Poonawallas’ concern that such would be taken as a waiver of their claims, the rent had been deposited initially into the general sessions court by Uma Shiv and then into its counsel’s trust account to be held for payment to Southeast Diamond. During trial, the trial court entered an agreed order releasing these funds to Southeast Diamond. As the trial court ultimately found in its final judgment, “there [was] no dispute in this case that [Uma Shiv had] paid its rent,” nor was there any dispute that Uma Shiv had “exercised its option to renew for the first additional five (5)-year period.”

In addition to the rent and renewal provisions, the Lease provided the following as pertinent on appeal:

4.

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Southeast Diamond Jubilee Investments, LLC, as Successor To Kawal, Inc., D/B/A Gas Express v. UMA Shiv, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southeast-diamond-jubilee-investments-llc-as-successor-to-kawal-inc-tennctapp-2020.