Stc Two, LLC v. Irma Fox Shulman-Weiner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 30, 2013
DocketA13A1613
StatusPublished

This text of Stc Two, LLC v. Irma Fox Shulman-Weiner (Stc Two, LLC v. Irma Fox Shulman-Weiner) 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
Stc Two, LLC v. Irma Fox Shulman-Weiner, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION ANDREWS, P. J., DILLARD and MCMILLIAN, JJ.

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. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

October 30, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A1613. STC TWO, LLC v. IRMA FOX SHULMAN-WEINER et al.

MCMILLIAN, Judge.

STC Two, LLC appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Irma

Fox Shulman-Weiner (“Weiner”) and Susan Tessel (“Tessel”), as Co-Trustees of the

Irving Shulman Trust (the “Trust”), and Staircase Old National, LLC (“Staircase”)

(collectively “Appellees”) on STC’s complaint arising out of a purported agreement

to modify a longstanding lease agreement.

Summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. OCGA § 9-11-56 (c). A de novo standard of review applies to an appeal from a grant of summary judgment, and we view the evidence, and all reasonable conclusions and inferences drawn from it, in the light most favorable to the nonmovant. (Citation omitted.) 685 Penn, LLC v. Stabilis Fund I, L.P., 316 Ga. App. 210, 210

(728 SE2d 840) (2012).

So viewed, the evidence shows that the Trust and Staircase jointly own real

property in south Fulton County (the “Property”). Weiner, co-trustee of the Trust, and

Stanford Shulman (“Shulman”), the sole member and registered agent for Staircase,

have had an ownership interest in the Property for over 50 years. On June 27, 1997,

Weiner and Shulman, in their individual capacities, entered into a “PCS Site

Agreement” (the “Lease”) with Sprintcom, Inc. (“Sprintcom”). Under the terms of the

Lease, Sprintcom rented a portion of the Property (the “Site”), upon which it

constructed towers and other wireless communication structures. The Lease provided

for four automatic renewals of the original five-year lease term and thus was slated

to expire on June 27, 2022. At the time this dispute arose, Sprintcom and/or STC, as

Sprintcom’s assignee, had exercised the option to renew the lease for two five-year

renewal terms.

The record reflects three subsequent amendments to the Lease, and it appears

that the first two amendments to the Lease also may have been signed by Sprintcom

2 and by Weiner and Shulman in their individual capacities.1 The record contains a

signed copy of a “First Amendment to PCS Site Agreement,” which Appellees

produced in discovery. This amendment was signed by Sprintcom and Weiner and

Shulman in their individual capacities. The record also contains an unsigned copy of

a “Second Amendment to PCS Site Agreement,” apparently from 2001, also produced

by Appellees in discovery. That document, too, contains signature lines for Sprintcom

and for Weiner and Shulman in their individual capacities.2 But the “Third

Amendment to PCS Site Agreement,” executed in February 2010, was signed by STC

on the one hand and Weiner and Tessel, as co-Trustees of the Trust, and by Shulman

on behalf of Staircase on the other. The recitals to the third amendment reflect that

Staircase and the Trust were representing that they were the owners of fee simple title

to the Lease Site and further reflect that Sprintcom had assigned its interest under the

Lease to STC, which in turn had subleased the Site to a third party. The parties

1 We note that Appellees represented below and also represent on appeal that all prior Lease amendments were signed by Staircase and by Weiner and Tessel as co- trustees on behalf of the Trust, but in support of this assertion, they cite only to the third amendment. However, the copies of the other amendments produced by Appellees in discovery appear to belie this representation. 2 The recitals to the third amendment reference a second amendment to the Lease dated August 21, 2001.

3 apparently agree that we should consider STC to be the lessee and the Trust and

Staircase to be the lessors under the Lease.

Subsequently, in April 2011, Chris Felder (“Felder”), a senior land acquisition

specialist for Crown Castle, an affiliate of STC ,3 began contacting Weiner to discuss

the possibility of modifying the Lease to incorporate additional renewal periods.

Based on these discussions, STC proffered to Weiner and Shulman a letter agreement

dated April 7, 2011, which proposed adding six additional lease terms, with a final

expiration date of June 26, 2052, in exchange for $50 in consideration. This proposed

letter agreement defined the term “Lessor” to mean Weiner and Shulman,

individually, without referencing the Trust, Staircase or Tessel, Weiner’s co-trustee.

The signature lines also listed Weiner and Shulman in their individual capacities. The

letter agreement further contemplated that these parties would later enter into a formal

amendment to the Lease. An accompanying e-mail from Felder stated that “we are

only proposing to modify the length of time on the [Lease], and as such, the other

provisions of the [Lease] are not addressed in the letter.”

In response, Weiner and Shulman proposed a change to the $50 consideration

in the April 7 letter. Instead of a one-time $50 payment, they proposed either

3 Crown Castle and STC generally will be referred to jointly herein as “STC.”

4 payments of $250 per year for each year the extension was granted or a one-time

payment of $7,500. STC countered this offer with a revised letter agreement dated

May 26, 2011 (the “Revised Agreement”), which retained the $50 in consideration,

but added the following provision:

[STC] agrees to pay [Weiner and Shulman] the sum of Seven Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($7,500.00) for executing and delivering the Letter Agreement to [STC] by no later than June 1, 2011, and executing and delivering the Lease Amendment to Lessee within ten (10) days of receipt of the executable document(s) (the “Expedite Fee”). [Weiner and Shulman] understand[] time is of the essence and if the signed Lease Amendment is not delivered to [STC] within the specified time period, [Weiner and Shulman] forfeit[] the Expedite Fee. [Shulman and Weiner] further agree[] that if the Lease Amendment is not fully executed for any reason, [Shulman and Weiner] forfeit[] the Expedite Fee. The Expedite Fee is a one-time payment due and payable within sixty (60) days of the full execution of the Lease Amendment.

The Revised Agreement retained the same definition of “Lessor” and the same

signature lines in Weiner’s and Shulman’s individual capacities. It, too, made no

reference to the Trust, Tessel, or Staircase.

After a series of e-mails and letters from Felder prompting Weiner and

Shulman to sign the letter agreement, they finally executed and returned the Revised

5 Agreement on June 1, 2011. However, on or around June 27 and/or June 29, 2011,

Shulman and Weiner appear to have notified STC that they were terminating the

Revised Agreement on the ground that STC was in default by failing to pay the

Expedite Fee and by failing to deliver a proposed lease amendment by June 1, 2011.

Subsequently, on July 6, 2011, counsel for Weiner and Shulman returned to STC as

untimely4 and insufficient, two checks totaling $50 made payable to Weiner and

Shulman. The counsel’s cover letter indicates that although the checks were dated

June 15, 2011, they were received only a few days earlier.

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