The Lamar Cos. v. Brad Aric, LLC

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 7, 2015
Docket1694 MDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of The Lamar Cos. v. Brad Aric, LLC (The Lamar Cos. v. Brad Aric, LLC) 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
The Lamar Cos. v. Brad Aric, LLC, (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-S31033-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

THE LAMAR COMPANIES IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

BRAD ARIC, L.L.C., PRIME DIVERSIFIED SERVICES, L.L.C. AND GLORY DAYS INVESTMENTS, L.L.C.

Appellants No. 1694 MDA 2014

Appeal from the Order Entered on September 8, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County Civil Division at No.: 11-22196

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., ALLEN, J., and WECHT, J.

MEMORANDUM BY WECHT, J.: FILED AUGUST 07, 2015

Prime Diversified Services, L.L.C., and Glory Days Investments, L.L.C.

(collectively, “PDS”),1 appeal the trial court’s September 8, 2014 order

granting summary judgment to Appellee Lamar Companies’ (“Lamar”) in its

claim for specific performance of a lease agreement (“the Lease”) granting

____________________________________________

1 Although these parties are denominated separately, and in certain particulars behaved as distinct parties in the trial court, they have the same attorney and have acted in unison together before the trial court and this Court in most particulars. As well, as the trial court relates and neither appellant disputes, Prime Diversified and Glory Days “share a common owner and/or common corporate officers and/or corporate directors including a common corporate ‘President[.’]” See Trial Court Opinion, 11/26/2014, at 4 ¶ 8. Insofar as they appear in relevant part to have acted in concert in connection with the events that precipitated this litigation and brief their appeal as one, we treat them as one entity. J-S31033-15

them the option to purchase a perpetual easement over a property upon

which they maintained a billboard (“the Property”). The trial court

determined that, because PDS knew or should have known that Lamar was a

tenant in possession of the Property when PDS purchased all of the assets of

Brad Aric, L.L.C. (“Brad Aric”), including the Property, they were not bona-

fide purchasers for value with legal priority over Lamar. Thus, Lamar’s

option under the Lease to purchase a perpetual easement upon the Property

from Brad Aric survived PDS’s acquisitions of Brad Aric’s assets, binding PDS

and entitling Lamar to the easement it sought as a matter of law. We

affirm.

The trial court presented the following facts as undisputed:

1. In March 2008 [Brad Aric] entered into a lease with [Lamar,] which granted Lamar’s right to access, maintain and update an already existing outdoor advertising billboard (“the [S]ign”) on [PDS’s] property for a period of ten (10) years. . . .

2. The [Sign] has an advertising sign surface of approximately two hundred forty[-]seven and a half (247.5) square feet in size in its current configuration. Included on the Sign is an advertising logo with Lamar’s name on it.

3. [Brad Aric] formerly did business at 1402 N. 9th Street, Reading, PA 19604 prior to the sale of all assets of Brad Aric to [PDS] on January 19, 2011. [Brad Aric] has no current business address, as [Brad Aric] has not done any business since the transfer of all its assets.

****

5. Mariano Sfameni and Peter Sfameni Jr[.] are the sole surviving members of the Brad Aric [sic]. Both were present at various times at the Property when the representatives of [PDS] visited the Property. [PDS], through their above-referenced representatives[,] were informed of the Lease . . . and they were

-2- J-S31033-15

shown the billboard sign which Lamar has on the Property during the course of their visits/inspections. Additionally, [PDS’s representative,] Chris Mahmood[,] had discussions with Peter Sfameni Jr. in which he stated that the lease payments from [Lamar] were inadequate and [PDS] were going to force Lamar to pay more for the [L]ease.

6. Brad Aric believes that Chris Mahmood, Edna Mahmood and Zia Mahmood visited, inspected, and/or examined the Property on behalf of [PDS] prior to January [1]9, 2011.[2]

7. [PDS] acquired ownership of the Property on January 19, 2011 from Brad Aric.

9. No [w]ritten [n]otice of the pending sale, as required by the Lease, was provided [to Lamar].

10. [PDS] admits that a sign was present on the [P]roperty at the time of the final closing.

11. [PDS] did not contact [Lamar] concerning either the Sign or the Property prior to January 19, 2011.

12. The first written notification Lamar receive[d] about the sale of the property [was] on March 2011 [sic] when their rent check [was] returned.

13. [PDS] did not notify [Lamar] of the existence of [PDS’s] agreement to purchase the [P]roperty prior to March 30, 2011.

14. [PDS] did not notify [Lamar] of the final closing and settlement on the conveyance of the [P]roperty to [PDS] prior to March 30, 2011.

15. Subsequent to March 30, 2011[,] and prior to the commencement of this [l]awsuit, [PDS] notified [Lamar] that

2 The facts in paragraphs 5, 6, and elsewhere, which are cited as “undisputed” by the trial court, are derived from discovery responses provided by Brad Aric. Brad Aric declined to participate in this appeal. PDS does dispute certain averments that the trial court erroneously characterized as undisputed.

-3- J-S31033-15

[PDS] considered the Lease to be entirely invalid and/or unenforceable against [PDS].

16. On April 26, 2011 [PDS] received [Lamar’s] April 25, 2011 correspondence notifying [PDS] of [Lamar’s] intention to exercise its option to purchase a perpetual easement pursuant to the terms of the Lease.

17. The above notification to exercise their right to the purchase option was within 30 days [of the notice of sale] as required by the Lease.

18. [PDS] received [Lamar’s] May 20, 2011 correspondence notifying [PDS] that settlement and closing on the transfer of the perpetual easement which is the subject of this lawsuit was scheduled to occur on May 25, 2011[,] and further notifying [PDS] of the location where the settlement and closing would occur.

19. [Lamar] tendered a check for the amount of [the] 2011 annual rental payment which was due and [owing] under the Lease to [PDS] prior to commencement of this [l]awsuit.

20. [PDS] made an independent and voluntary decision not to cash or deposit the check tendered by [Lamar] . . . .

21. [Lamar] timely tendered a check for the 2012 annual rental payment which may have been due and owing under the Lease to [PDS] subsequent to the commencement of this [l]awsuit.

22. [PDS] made an independent and voluntary decision not to cash or deposit the check . . . .

23. [Lamar] timely tendered a check for the 2013 annual rental payment . . . to [PDS] . . . .

24. [PDS] made an independent and voluntary decision not to cash or deposit the check . . . .

28. [PDS] did not notify [Lamar] of [PDS’s] acquisition of Brad Aric and/or any of Brad Aric’s assets prior to March 30, 2011.

29. [PDS] admits that a sign was present on the Property[] prior to the execution of any agreement of sale for the [P]roperty and at the time of the final closing.

-4- J-S31033-15

31. [PDS] refused and is continuing to refuse to convey a perpetual easement burdening the Property of the type and nature sought in [Lamar’s] [c]omplaint pursuant to the terms of the Lease notwithstanding [Lamar’s] written demand that [PDS convey such an easement.

Trial Court Opinion (“T.C.O.”), 11/26/2014, at 3-7 (unnumbered) (record

citations omitted).

Based on these events, on September 28, 2011, Lamar filed the

complaint that commenced the instant litigation. Therein, Lamar sought, at

count I, declaratory judgment to establish that all of Lamar’s rights under

the Lease survived the transfer of the Property to PDS; at count II, specific

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