U.S. Realty 86 Associates v. Security Investment, Ltd.

2002 UT 14, 40 P.3d 586, 442 Utah Adv. Rep. 49, 2002 Utah LEXIS 12, 2002 WL 91880
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 2002
DocketNo. 20000450
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2002 UT 14 (U.S. Realty 86 Associates v. Security Investment, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U.S. Realty 86 Associates v. Security Investment, Ltd., 2002 UT 14, 40 P.3d 586, 442 Utah Adv. Rep. 49, 2002 Utah LEXIS 12, 2002 WL 91880 (Utah 2002).

Opinion

INTRODUCTION

HOWE, Chief Justice.

{1 Plaintiff U.S. Realty 86 Associates ("U.S.Realty") failed to timely exercise options to renew two commercial leases between itself and defendants Security Investment, Ltd., William L. Olson, and Barbara L. Olson (collectively "Security Investment"). U.S. Realty subsequently brought this action against Security Investment seeking a declaratory judgment that U.S. Realty was equitably excused from strict compliance with the renewal provisions of the leases, and that Security Investment had waived its right to receive timely notice under the leases. The trial court ruled in favor of Security Investment on both issues. peals. U.S. Realty now ap-

BACKGROUND

1 2 The two ground leases at issue concern land in Woods Cross, Utah, on which a commercial shopping complex known as the Woods Cross K-Mart Center now sits. Both leases commenced on August 1, 1973. Defendant Security Investment was the original lessor under one of the leases; defendant William L. Olson was the original lessor under the other. Plaintiff U.S. Realty, a New Jersey general partnership in the business of managing shopping centers, acquired by assignment the rights as lessee under the leases on October 15, 1986.

13 Upon acquisition of its rights as lessee, U.S. Realty was entitled to the remainder of the leases' initial twenty-five-year terms. Additionally, the leases gave U.S. Realty options to renew for six consecutive five-year terms. To exercise the first option, the leases required U.S. Realty to notify Security Investment in writing of its intent by March 3, 1998, which was 150 days prior to the expiration of the initial lease terms.

T4 Between 1986 and 1995, U.S. Realty employed a number of agents to manage its holdings, including the K-Mart Center property. In October 1995, U.S. Realty switched agents from the Winding Brook Company to the Garden Homes Group.1 In conjunction with the transfer, attorney Mark Hoffman, Garden Homes' principal asset manager, obtained from Winding Brook all documents necessary for the management of the K-Mart Center, including copies of the leases, the lease abstracts prepared by Winding Brook, the tenant leases, and the maintenance files.

T5 Hoffman assigned Phil Shiffman, an accountant employed by Garden Homes, to enter information contained in the newly acquired documents into U.S. Realty's computer system. In completing this task, Shiffman consulted only the lease abstracts prepared by Winding Brook Company and not the leases themselves. Shiffman also entered the important dates contained in the abstracts into a personal diary he used to remind himself of significant events regarding the leases. Thereafter, Hoffman relied on Shiffman to notify him of the important dates requiring action by U.S. Realty.

T6 In 1996, the Utah Department of Transportation ("UDOT") notified U.S. Realty and Security Investment of its intent to condemn a part of the K Mart Center property for the construction of an access road to an adjacent highway. Upon learning of UDOT's plans, Hoffman reviewed the leases to determine U.S. Realty's rights upon condemnation. He concluded that according to the leases, U.S. Realty had a right to participate in a severance damage award and was [588]*588entitled to future pro rata reductions in rent. Condemnation actions were filed in March 1997 and April 1998. U.S. Realty, Security Investment, and UDOT orally entered into a condemnation settlement agreement. The parties agreed that Security Investment would reduce U.S. Realty's rent in exchange for U.S. Realty's release of its claims in the condemnation proceedings.

17 On April 17, 1998, Hoffman reviewed the leases in order to calculate the reduction in rent that U.S. Realty would receive according to the parties' agreement. Upon examination, he discovered that U.S. Realty had failed to exercise the renewal options within the prescribed renewal period. Hoffman immediately contacted Shiffman, and Shiffman discovered that he did not have the option renewal dates in his personal diary. Hoffman then sent notices to Security Investment of U.S. Realty's intent to exercise the options. Security Investment received the notices on April 22, 1998, and placed them in a file without reading them. Ultimately, U.S. Realty's notices were over forty-five days late.

18 Between April 22, 1998, and July 15, 1998, the parties continued to carry on business as normal. Security Investment contacted U.S. Realty and requested that U.S. Realty pay for a sewer assessment and slope easement through December 1, 1998, approximately five months into the first renewal term of the lease. The parties also continued to discuss the condemnation action settlement, and Security Investment's attorney requested that Hoffman prepare paperwork to reflect the future rent reductions agreed upon by the parties.

19 On July 15, 1998, Security Investment found and read U.S. Realty's untimely notice of its intent to exercise the options. It subsequently informed U.S. Realty that it deemed the exercise of the options untimely and declared the leases terminated as of July 31, 1998. Despite Security Investment's declaration, on July 20, 1998, U.S. Realty tendered the full ground rent for the first year of the renewal period to Security Investment, which Security Investment rejected.

T 10 U.S. Realty brought this action seeking equitable relief in the form of a declaratory judgment that its interest in the K-Mart Center property had not been forfeited as a result of the delayed notices. It further sought a declaratory judgment that Security Investment had waived its right to receive timely notice under the leases. The trial court ruled against U.S. Realty on both issues. U.S. Realty now appeals, contending that the trial court erred as a matter of law by refusing to equitably excuse it from strict compliance and by finding that Security Investment had not waived strict compliance with the notice provisions of the leases.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

{11 The issues of equitable excuse and waiver are mixed questions of fact and law; therefore, we grant broadened disceretion to the findings of the trial court. See State v. Pena, 869 P.2d 932, 938 (1994); Soter's, Inc. v. Deseret Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n, 857 P.2d 935, 938 (Utah 1993).

ANALYSIS

L.

T12 The trial court found that U.S. Realty's untimely exercise of the options resulted from its wilful and gross negligence and, as a result, it did not merit equitable excuse. The court reasoned that because U.S. Realty's employees were professionals, U.S. Realty needed to demonstrate a higher duty of care in the management of its leases than would otherwise be required of an ordinary lessee. U.S. Realty's failure to read the leases until forty-five days after the option deadlines did not, according to the trial court, meet this higher duty of care, and thus constituted wilful and gross negligence. U.S. Realty urges us to reverse the judgment of the trial court, arguing that the court erred in applying a higher standard of care to its management of the leases, and that it qualifies for equitable relief under the correct legal standard.

118 We begin our analysis by referring to our recent decision in Utah Coal & Lumber Restaurant, Inc. v. Outdoor Endeavors Unlimited, 2001 UT 100, 40 P.3d 581, where we detailed the cireumstances in

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Bluebook (online)
2002 UT 14, 40 P.3d 586, 442 Utah Adv. Rep. 49, 2002 Utah LEXIS 12, 2002 WL 91880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/us-realty-86-associates-v-security-investment-ltd-utah-2002.