65 Mass. App. Ct. 826 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2006
In this commercial lease dispute, all parties appeal from the judgment. A Superior Court judge granted declaratory relief in favor of the plaintiffs (owners) terminating the lease, but at the same time required the plaintiffs to pay restitution to defendant Banknorth, N.A. (Banknorth), a subtenant, for
The owners, as lessors, contend that defendants David L. Katz and The Camera Company, Inc. (collectively tenants), as lessees, breached the lease when they permitted their subtenant, Banknorth, to erect an automated teller machine (ATM) kiosk on the premises without the owners’ consent.
The owners sued, claiming breach of contract and violation of G. L. c. 93A, § 11, and requesting a declaratory judgment that the lease had been terminated. The owners argued that the defendants materially breached the lease by failing to gain their consent before constructing the ATM kiosk. They also argued that the defendants violated c. 93A by falsely representing to the town of Natick that they were the agents of the owners. There was no evidence of any diminution in use or value of the property due to the construction. A Banknorth employee testified that, upon request, the ATM kiosk would be removed when the bank departed the premises.
The jury answered several special questions, finding that the tenants had materially breached the lease, that the owners had not unreasonably withheld consent, and that the tenants and Banknorth had wilfully or knowingly committed unfair or deceptive business practices. However, the jury also found that no damages resulted from either the breach of contract or the unfair or deceptive behavior. Because there were no damages, the judge entered judgment in favor of the defendants on those two claims (counts II and III, respectively). On the claim for declaratory judgment (count I), the judge ruled that the lease terminated due to the material breach, but also ordered restitution to Banknorth in compensation for the improvements already completed.
Discussion. At trial and in posttrial motions, the defendants argued that the ATM kiosk is a trade fixture and therefore, under the terms of the lease, not a structure. This, they contended, meant that there was no breach, because the defendants were only required to get the consent of the owners before constructing structures, not trade fixtures. At trial, the judge declined to rule that the ATM kiosk was a trade fixture as matter of law, but allowed the defendants to argue the question to the jury. In her memorandum of law and order, the judge stated that “[t]he court rejected as a matter of law the defendants’ claim that the kiosk was not a ‘structure’ but, rather, a ‘trade fixture.’ ” This was error. Whether the ATM kiosk is a
We begin our analysis with the language of the contract. We interpret the language of the contract “as a whole, in a reasonable and practical way, consistent with [the contract’s] . . . background[] and purpose.” Vergato v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 50 Mass. App. Ct. 824, 826 (2001), quoting from USM Corp. v. Arthur D. Little Sys., Inc., 28 Mass. App. Ct. 108, 116 (1989). Where not inconsistent with the terms of the contract, we give words their ordinary meaning. See Edmund Wright Ginsberg Corp. v. C. D. Kepner Leather Co., 317 Mass. 581, 587 (1945).
The words “trade fixture” are only used once in the lease in section nine, describing what property will stay with the real estate at the termination of the lease and what will remain the property of the tenants.
Since the lease provides no further definition of trade fixture, we must apply the ordinary meaning of the phrase to determine if the ATM kiosk is a trade fixture. See, e.g., Given v. Commerce Ins. Co., 440 Mass. 207, 212-213 (2003) (use of dictionary to determine ordinary meaning of term in insurance policy). The definitions found in several legal and real estate dictionaries are consistent in theme. See, e.g., Black’s Law Dictionary 669 (8th ed. 2004) (defining trade fixture as “[rjemovable personal property that a tenant attaches to leased land for business purposes, such as a display counter”); Brownstone & Franck, The VNR Real Estate Dictionary 317 (1981) (“A fixture belonging to a lessee of commercial property, used in the normal course of conducting lessee’s business, and considered personal property even though attached to the leased premises).”
Applying the standard definitions, we conclude that the ATM kiosk is a trade fixture under the terms of the lease.
Finally, we briefly address the owners’ remaining claim that,
Insofar as the judgment terminates the lease and requires the plaintiffs to reimburse the defendant Banknorth, N.A., for the cost of improvements, it is vacated, and a new judgment shall enter as to count I declaring that there was no breach of the lease and therefore the lease remains in full force and effect. As to counts II and m, the judgment is affirmed.
So ordered.
The plaintiffs own the commercial property located on Route 9 in Natick that is the subject of the lease. Defendants Katz and The Camera Company, Inc., are the tenants of the property pursuant to a lease beginning on October 17, 1974, with a term of twenty years, and an option for the tenants to renew for up to four successive ten-year periods. Banknorth currently occupies the property as a subtenant.
The lease did not require approval for future improvements or alterations to the property.
Section nine states, in relevant part:
“All buildings, structures, additions, alterations and improvements made by Lessee upon the demised premises shall become and remain the property of Lessor and shall not be removed at the termination of this lease, but shall be delivered up at the end of the term in good repair and condition, reasonable use and wear, and damage by fire or other inevitable accidents only excepted, and free from any and all encumbrances. All trade fixtures installed by Lessee or his assigns or subtenants and used in connection with the business conducted by him or them on said demised premises shall remain their property, as the case may be, and may be removed by Lessee from time to time and at*830 the termination of this lease. Any damage, however, caused by such removal shall be repaired by Lessee.” (Emphasis added.)
See also Friedman, Harris, & Lindeman, Barron’s Dictionary of Real Estate Terms 458 (6th ed. 2004) (“articles placed in rented buildings by the tenant to help carry out trade or business”); Cox, Cox, & Silver-Westrick, Prentice Hall Dictionary of Real Estate 272 (pocket ed. 2001) (“personal property consisting of equipment, furniture, and other systems that are specific to a trade or business that have been placed in or on the premises for a specific purpose associated with the use of the property”).
In Consiglio v. Carey, supra at 137, there was a factual question that needed to be resolved in order to determine whether the item was a fixture or part of the real estate. See Southern Mass. Broadcasters, Inc. v. Duchaine, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 497, 499 (1988) (jury resolved factual dispute regarding trade fixture indicia). Here, however, where there is no dispute regarding the attributes of the ATM kiosk, the issue is the legal interpretation under the contract of the concept of trade fixture.
The owners maintain that it is the definition of the word structure, rather than the term trade fixture, that is important. They contend that the ATM kiosk is a structure under a variety of definitions, including Natick zoning laws, and therefore permission was required. This argument misses the point that, although a broad definition of structure might include many items also considered trade fixtures, the lease specifically distinguishes between the two, meaning that a trade fixture cannot also be a structure under this lease.
On the breach of contract claim, the judge entered judgment for the defendants essentially based on the jury finding that the owners suffered no damages from the breach of contract. Although we affirm the judgment for the
Given our disposition of this appeal, we need not reach the issues of forfeiture and disgorgement or the other claims pressed by the parties.