TCN Investments, LLC v. Superior Detail, Lonnie Vaught and Julie Vaught

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 2019
DocketWD82342
StatusPublished

This text of TCN Investments, LLC v. Superior Detail, Lonnie Vaught and Julie Vaught (TCN Investments, LLC v. Superior Detail, Lonnie Vaught and Julie Vaught) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TCN Investments, LLC v. Superior Detail, Lonnie Vaught and Julie Vaught, (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

TCN INVESTMENTS, LLC, ) ) Respondent, ) v. ) ) ) SUPERIOR DETAIL, LONNIE VAUGHT ) WD82342 and JULIE VAUGHT, ) ) OPINION FILED: Appellants, ) December 10, 2019 v. ) ) ) TODD C. NEIMEYER, ) ) Respondent. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Boone County, Missouri The Honorable Joshua C. Devine, Judge

Before Special Division: Mark D. Pfeiffer, Presiding Judge, and Edward R. Ardini, Jr., and Thomas N. Chapman, Judges

Superior Detail, LLC (“Superior Detail”), the lessee under a lease agreement with TCN

Investments, LLC (“TCN”), and Mr. Lonnie and Ms. Julie Vaught (“the Vaughts”), personal

guarantors of Superior Detail’s obligations under the lease agreement (jointly “Superior”), appeal

the judgment of the Circuit Court of Boone County, Missouri, ruling in favor of TCN on its breach of lease and guaranty claims against Superior Detail and the Vaughts respectively. We

affirm.

Background1

TCN entered into a commercial lease and guaranty agreement (“the Superior Lease”)

with Superior Detail and the Vaughts on August 23, 2014, for the rental of a portion of TCN’s

commercial building and surrounding premises located in Columbia, Missouri (“the leased

premises”). The Superior Lease was a term lease for an express lease term described in

paragraph 2 of the Superior Lease as “beginning on August 1, 2014, and ending on July 31,

2017.” The Superior Lease provided for escalating rent amounts triggered on each one-year

anniversary through the term of the lease.

Provisions of the Superior Lease relevant to Superior’s appeal are as follows:

Paragraph 12 of the lease governed the alteration and improvement of the leased premises

by Superior Detail, and provided, in relevant part:

Tenant shall not make any alterations or improvements to the Premises without Landlord’s prior written consent, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld so long as any such proposed alterations or improvements do not affect the structural integrity of the building and provided that any such alterations or improvements shall, at Landlord’s option, at the end of the Lease term, become Landlord’s property or, alternatively, be removed by Tenant prior to the end of the Lease term at Tenant’s sole cost and expense. Should any such alterations or improvements be removed by Tenant, Tenant shall repair all damage to the Premises occasioned by such removal.

(Emphasis added.)

Paragraph 16 of the lease governed default, and provided, in relevant part:

It is agreed that (i) if Tenant fails to pay the rent or any part thereof or any other sum due Landlord hereunder when due and such failure continues for five (5) days after written notice thereof from Landlord; or (ii) if Tenant fails to perform in accordance with any other covenant, condition, term, or provision of this Lease

1 “We view the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the judgment and disregard all contrary evidence and inferences.” May v. Williams, 531 S.W.3d 576, 582 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017).

2 to be kept and performed by Tenant and such failure continues for thirty (30) days after written notice thereof is given by Landlord to Tenant; . . . then and in any of such events, Tenant shall be in default hereunder . . . . Should Tenant be in default hereunder, Landlord may: (a) terminate this Lease; or (b) it may from time to time without terminating this Lease, make such alterations and repairs as may be necessary in order to relet the Demised Premises and relet said Demised Premises or any part thereof for such term or terms (which may be for a term extending beyond the term of this Lease) and at such rental or rentals and upon such other terms and conditions as Landlord in its sole discretion may deem advisable. Upon such reletting without termination, all rentals received by Landlord from such reletting shall be applied, first to the payment of any indebtedness other than rent due hereunder from Tenant to Landlord; second, to the payment of any costs and expenses of such reletting, including brokerage fees and attorneys’ fees and costs of such alterations and repairs; third, to the payment of rent due and payable hereunder and the residue, if any, shall be held by Landlord and applied to the payment of future rents as the same may become due and payable hereunder.[2]

(Emphasis added.) In August 2014, Superior Detail opened its car detailing business at the

leased premises.

In 2015, Superior Detail removed landscaping from the leased premises and replaced the

landscaping with a concrete pad measuring approximately forty feet by sixty feet in front of the

building so that Superior Detail could park cars in that space. Superior Detail did not obtain

prior written consent from TCN for this project and, in fact, TCN never consented to this project.

In December 2015, Superior Detail stopped paying rent, with nineteen months remaining

on the term of the Superior Lease. In February 2016, Superior Detail vacated the leased

premises.

Without terminating the Superior Lease, TCN relet the leased premises by entering into a

new lease with Unifirst Corporation for a term from May 1, 2016, through April 30, 2019, with

an option to extend the lease for an additional three years (“the Unifirst Lease”). Unifirst entered

2 Thus, the design of paragraph 16(b) merely gives TCN the right: (1) to re-enter the leased premises upon default to make alterations and repairs so that the leased premises can be relet to another tenant; and (2) to utilize the offset formula to ensure that Superior Detail will not receive the benefit of having its rental obligations under the Superior Lease reduced until such time as rents received from the relet tenant have first been applied to alterations, repairs, and any other non-rent obligations under the Superior Lease.

3 the Unifirst Lease on the condition that TCN alter the height of the loading dock area and truck

area adjacent to the loading dock area of the leased premises to accommodate Unifirst’s business

needs of loading and unloading large trucks for its uniform cleaning business. TCN incurred the

expense of engineering fees of $1,187.50 to design the required alteration and paid an excavating

and concrete business $19,950 to implement the necessary alteration by excavating near the

existing door and pouring additional concrete to allow Unifirst’s trucks to access the loading

dock. Thus, the total cost related to altering the loading dock height and surrounding loading

area on the leased premises was $21,137.50. TCN received $41,250.00 in rent from Unifirst

from May 1, 2016, through July 31, 2017, the date upon which the lease term expired on the

Superior Lease.

TCN eventually filed a first amended petition for breach of the Superior Lease (including

the lease guaranty terms) on August 18, 2017, which sought unpaid rent and other lease-related

damages from Superior Detail as the lessee and the Vaughts as the guarantors. Superior filed

their answer and asserted both a counterclaim and a cross-claim.

The case proceeded to a bench trial before the trial court and, after hearing the evidence

and arguments of the parties, the trial court issued its judgment in favor of TCN and against

Superior Detail and the Vaughts, jointly and severally, on all claims, counterclaims, and

cross-claims.

After offsetting the total damages under the Superior Lease by the rent received by TCN

from the Unifirst Lease ($41,250) up to the expiration of the term of the Superior Lease on

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Bluebook (online)
TCN Investments, LLC v. Superior Detail, Lonnie Vaught and Julie Vaught, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tcn-investments-llc-v-superior-detail-lonnie-vaught-and-julie-vaught-moctapp-2019.