The Gulfstream Café v. Palmetto Industrial

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 3, 2022
Docket2019-000885
StatusPublished

This text of The Gulfstream Café v. Palmetto Industrial (The Gulfstream Café v. Palmetto Industrial) 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
The Gulfstream Café v. Palmetto Industrial, (S.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

The Gulfstream Café, Inc., Appellant,

v.

Palmetto Industrial Development, LLC, Respondent.

Appellate Case No. 2019-000885

Appeal from Georgetown County Benjamin H. Culbertson, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 5935 Heard March 16, 2022 – Filed August 10, 2022

AFFIRMED

Robert P. Wood and Sean Matthew Foerster, both of Rogers Townsend LLC, of Columbia; and Simon H. Bloom, Adam D. Nugent, and Andrea J. Pearson, all of Atlanta, Georgia, for Appellant.

Henrietta U. Golding, of Burr & Forman LLP, of Myrtle Beach, for Respondent.

LOCKEMY, A.J.: The Gulfstream Café, Inc. (Gulfstream) appeals the circuit court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Palmetto Industrial Development, LLC (Palmetto) on Gulfstream's request for attorneys' fees based on a warranty provision in its easements. On appeal, Gulfstream argues the circuit court erred in denying it attorneys' fees. We affirm. FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Gulfstream and Palmetto are neighbors in Murrells Inlet with a relationship that is tenuous at best. Gulfstream is a restaurant that is part of the Marlin Quay Marina Development. Next door to Gulfstream, Palmetto owns a marina, a store, a parking lot, and a property where a restaurant was previously located. J. Mark Lawhon (Mark) owns Palmetto.

In 1986 and 1990, Marlin Quay Marina Corporation, Palmetto's predecessor, granted Gulfstream four joint, non-exclusive easements. The 1990 easement specifically gave Gulfstream:

A non-exclusive perpetual easement appurtenant to the premises of [Gulfstream] hereinafter described for the full and free right of ingress and egress on, over and across the following described property of [Marlin Quay Marina Corporation], together with the rights of vehicular parking on and vehicular and pedestrian access to, all in accordance with all governmental rules, regulations, ordinances or laws, the premises of the [Marlin Quay Marina Corporation] hereinafter described, and also for the purpose of maintenance, repair, alteration and/or improvements to [Gulfstream's] hereinafter described property. It is anticipated by the parties that while they will each have joint and non-exclusive use at all times of the area covered by this easement that the [Marlin Quay Marina Corporation] will utilize the premises primarily during the daytime regular business hours of [Marlin Quay Marina Corporation] and [Gulfstream] will utilize the premises primarily in the evening regular business hours of [Gulfstream.] Gulfstream and Palmetto's relationship began to sour in 2016 when Palmetto demolished and started to rebuild its building. In that same year, Gulfstream sued Palmetto and Mark for interfering with its easement and received a temporary injunction which restrained Palmetto from interfering with Gulfstream's easement rights. Palmetto was subsequently held in criminal contempt for willfully violating the injunction. On February 23, 2018, Gulfstream filed a complaint against Palmetto, seeking (1) a declaratory judgment requiring Palmetto to defend Gulfstream in Gulfstream's trial against Palmetto based on Palmetto's interference with the easements and (2) a finding that Palmetto breached its warranty to Gulfstream. Gulfstream also levied allegations regarding Palmetto's conduct, including the demolition and construction of Palmetto's building, incidents regarding window washers, and other various hostilities between the parties. Later that year, the circuit court conducted a trial in the 2016 action, and a jury found for Gulfstream on its claim of interference with the easement against Palmetto.

Gulfstream's February 23, 2018 complaint also included the properties' recorded easements and plats, and all of the easements included a general warranty provision. In the 1990 easement, Palmetto's predecessor specifically warranted:

[T]he said Marlin Quay Marina Corporation does hereby bind itself and its successors and assigns, to warrant and forever defend, all and singular, the said easement unto the said The Gulfstream Café, its successors and assigns, against itself and its successors and assigns and all others whomsoever lawfully claiming, or to claim the same or any part thereof.1

Gulfstream further attached a letter that it sent to Palmetto and Mark, demanding Palmetto provide a defense for, and indemnification of, Gulfstream. Gulfstream requested the circuit court to award "attorneys' fees and costs for the prosecution of this action as well as those attorneys' fees and costs incurred in other actions and venues to defend its rights as necessitated by and due to Palmetto's breaches thereof." Gulfstream moved for summary judgment, arguing the plain language of the warranties provided for Palmetto's obligation to defend Gulfstream and Palmetto breached its obligations. Gulfstream included an affidavit of Edward Cribb, Jr., the president of Gulfstream from 1986 to 1996, who stated he would not have

1 This language is consistent with the language for a general warranty as set forth in section 27-7-10 of the South Carolina Code (2007). See generally Martin v. Floyd, 282 S.C. 47, 51, 317 S.E.2d 133, 136 (Ct. App. 1984) ("A South Carolina general warranty deed embraces all of the following five covenants usually inserted in fee simple conveyances by English conveyors: (1) that the seller is seized in fee; (2) that he has a right to convey; (3) that the purchaser, his heirs and assigns, shall quietly enjoy the land; (4) that the land is free from all encumbrances; and (5) for further assurances."). signed the 1986 and 1990 easements without the warranties and he and the grantor intended for the grantor to pay "for Gulfstream's attorney's fees and costs incurred in defending or bringing litigation to protect Gulfstream's use of the [p]arking [l]ot or its easement rights if those rights were challenged by anyone, including the [g]rantor." Palmetto also moved for summary judgment and opposed Gulfstream's summary judgment motion. Relying upon the plain language of the warranty provisions and Black v. Patel, 2 Palmetto asserted it did not have a duty to indemnify Gulfstream. Palmetto further argued that under Black, "Gulfstream would be entitled to recover under the warranty provisions only if a court determined that it in fact did not have an easement and that the grant from Marlin Quay Marina Corporation was ineffective in some manner." Additionally, Palmetto contended Cribb's affidavit was insufficient because Cribb did not provide any information about how he knew what the grantor intended. Gulfstream responded to Palmetto's motion for summary judgment, reasserting its prior arguments and alleging that Black recognized an exception to the general rule involving successful claims against the grantee: when "the grantor's own wrongful act gives rise to the litigation, then the grantor's obligation to defend is not limited to successful claims." Moreover, Gulfstream asserted there was a "critical" distinction between a regular warranty deed and an easement because for a normal title transfer, the "grantor has no future rights or relationship with the grantee," but for an easement, there is "an ongoing relationship." The circuit court heard arguments on the summary judgment motions. On May 6, 2019, the circuit court filed a formal order, finding Black governed this case and thus, "Palmetto [wa]s not required to warrant and defend the easement from the claims made in the prior litigation between Gulfstream and Palmetto." This appeal followed.

ISSUE ON APPEAL

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The Gulfstream Café v. Palmetto Industrial, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-gulfstream-cafe-v-palmetto-industrial-scctapp-2022.