Defendants assign as error the court’s entry of summary judgment. Summary judgment is properly entered if there is no genuine issue of material fact,
Branch Banking & Trust Co. v. Creasy,
Defendants first argue that there was an issue of material fact as to whether plaintiffs unreasonably refused to consent to the sublease proposed by defendants. Defendants contend this issue is material because an unreasonable refusal would constitute a material breach, by plaintiffs, of the lease agreement and would thereby entitle defendants to terminate the lease and their obligations to pay rent thereunder. Defendants would have us read into the lease agreement an obligation on the part of the lessor not to unreasonably withhold consent to a subtenant proposed by the lessee.
A tenant for an estate for years, however, may be
absolutely
barred from transferring his term by either assignment or sublease if there is an express covenant in the lease forbidding assignments and subletting. J. Webster,
Real Estate Law in North Carolina
§ 70 (1971);
Rogers v. Hall,
The case of
Sanders v. Tropicana,
We hold, therefore, that the record discloses that the defendants breached their agreement with plaintiffs when they refused to make the rental payment which fell due on 17 September 1980, and plaintiffs are entitled as a matter of law to recover damages for such breach.
Defendants argue there is a genuine issue of material fact as to the amount of damages plaintiffs are entitled to recover for any breach. This argument presents the question of how damages are to be computed when a tenant abandons the leased premises and fails to pay rent therefor, in breach of the lease, and the lease agreement contemplates, as here, that the premises will be occupied by a specific type of tenant and will be put exclusively to a specific kind of use. In computing breach of contract damages,
the general rule is that a party who is injured by breach of contract is entitled to compensation for the injury sustained and is entitled to be placed, as near as this can be done in money, in the same position he would have occupied if the contract had been performed. Stated generally, the measure of damages for the breach of a contract is the amount which would have been received if the contract had been performed as made, which means the value of the contract, including the profits and advantages which are its direct results and fruits.
*51
Perkins v. Langdon,
With respect to the question of mitigation of damages, the law in North Carolina is that the nonbreaching party to a lease contract has a duty to mitigate his damages upon breach of such contract.
Weinstein v. Griffin,
While the nonbreaching party is under duty to use reasonable diligence to minimize the loss occasioned by the injuring party’s breach of contract, the burden is on the breaching party to prove that the nonbreaching party failed to exercise reasonable diligence to minimize the loss.
First National Pictures Distributing Corp. v. Seawell,
[t]he space in question has remained vacant since we moved out on May 22, 1980 and as far as I have been able to determine no one, particularly Dr. Isbey or Mr. Morris, has made any effort to rent the space since the termination of our lease on September 17, 1980.
This statement is nothing more than the conclusion of the affiant. The record is devoid of any evidence that the plaintiffs failed to exercise reasonable diligence to relet the premises after the defendants breached the contract. We hold the record discloses no genuine issue of material fact as to defendants’ breach or as to the amount of loss suffered by plaintiffs as a result of such breach.
Affirmed.
