Lead Opinion
Pursuant to a written commercial lease agreement executed in 1995, RadioShack Corporation leases space at a shopping mall owned by Cascade Crossing II, LLC. That agreement contains an exclusivity clause, which permits RadioShack either to reduce its rent payments or to terminate the agreement if Cascade leases space at the mall to another tenant for a business which is similar to RadioShack’s. The lease agreement also authorizes the prevailing party in any legal action to recover all reasonable expenses including attorney’s fees. In 2000, RadioShack informed Cascade that its 1996 lease with another tenant violated the exclusivity clause. RadioShack also purported to exercise its right to reduce its rent payments retroactively.
Cascade brought suit against RadioShack in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia for declaratory judgment, back rent, and attorney’s fees and costs. On appeal from the grant of partial summary judgment, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit determined that RadioShack had waived all of its rights under the exclusivity clause and that Cascade, as the only prevailing party, was entitled to attorney’s fees and costs. Cascade Crossings II v. RadioShack Corp., 131 FAppx. 191 (11th Cir. 2005). On remand, the parties agreed that the amount of back rent owed was $172,039, and the district court awarded Cascade the full amount of its attorney’s fees and costs, which was approximately $280,000. On a second appeal, the Eleventh Circuit required the district court to explain the basis for its conclusion that OCGA § 13-1-11 (a) (2) did not limit attorney’s fees to 15% of the first $500 collected and 10% of the remaining amount. Cascade Crossing II v. RadioShack Corp., 171 FAppx. 329 (11th Cir. 2006). On the second remand, the district court explained that OCGA § 13-1-11 did not apply because Cascade sought not only past due rent, but also a declaration of rights under the lease agreement, as in Insurance Indus. Consultants v. Essex Investments,
Whether OCGA § 13-1-11 applies to and limits the award of attorneys’ fees and costs in this particular case •— where the landlord under a commercial lease agreement filed suit against a tenant seeking the collection of past due rent as well as a declaration of other contractual rights of the parties — and, therefore, precludes an award of full attorneys’ fees and costs as provided in the lease agreement.
By its terms, OCGA§ 13-1-11 (a) applies to “[obligations to pay attorney’s fees upon any note or other evidence of indebtedness” which is collected through an attorney after maturity. We must first address whether a lease comes within this language, because the dissent has raised that issue and urged us to depart from settled Georgia law. Since the issue was first addressed in 1977, the Court of Appeals has repeatedly held that a lease constitutes an “evidence of indebtedness” under OCGA § 13-1-11. Ranwal Properties v. John H. Harland Co.,
This three-decade long line of consistent, uncontradicted precedent should not be swept aside based merely on a new analysis of the text and purpose of OCGA § 13-1-11 which differs from that enumerated in the many decisions cited above. We are not writing on a clean slate and, once the appellate courts interpret a statute,
“ ‘ “ ‘the interpretation... has become an integral part of the statute.’ (Cits.) This having been done, (over a long period of history) any subsequent ‘reinterpretation’ would be no different in effect from a judicial alteration of language that the General Assembly itself placed in the statute. ...” (Cit.)’ (Cit.)” [Cit.]
Harvey v. J. H. Harvey Co.,
Where a statute has, by a long series of decisions, received a judicial construction in which the General Assembly has acquiesced and thereby given its implicit legislative approval, the courts should not disturb that settled construction. [Cits.] “(E)ven those who regard ‘stare decisis’ with something less than enthusiasm recognize that the principle has even greater weight where the precedent relates to interpretation of a statute.” [Cit.] A reinterpretation of a statute after the General Assembly’s implicit acceptance of the original interpretation would constitute a judicial usurpation of the legislative function.
Abernathy v. City of Albany, supra at 90. Accordingly, a “reinterpretation” of OCGA § 13-1-11, accomplished through the failure to adhere to the long line of cases applying that provision to leases, would constitute an unauthorized change in an “integral” part of the statute. See Abernathy v. City of Albany, supra. If OCGA§ 13-1-11 is to be revised so as to exclude “commercial leases,” “the General Assembly, rather than the courts, must take that action.” Harvey v. J. H. Harvey Co., supra at 764.
Moreover, even if this Court could decide anew the proper construction of OCGA § 13-1-11, we would still arrive at the same conclusion as that which has long been expressed by the Court of Appeals. The phrase “evidence of indebtedness” cannot be considered a well defined term of art where, as here, there is an absence of
A broad interpretation of the phrase “evidence of indebtedness” is also entirely consistent with subsection (b) of OCGA § 13-1-11, by which the statute is made applicable to “[obligations to pay attorney’s fees contained in security deeds and bills of sale to secure debt.” The express addition of the word “leases” was simply unnecessary. Leases are normally the only evidence of a tenant’s debt, whereas a bill of sale or “deed to secure a note is probably not an evidence of indebtedness ([cit.]) ” Demere v. Germania Bank,
to provide for the collection of attorney’s fees in cases where sales were made under powers of sale in instruments named____ [Subsection (b)], though not as specific as it might be, means that a liability for attorney’s fees may be established where property is sold under powers of sale, without the necessity of obtaining a judgment for the fees.
Cochran v. Bank of Hancock County,
An analysis of the intent of OCGA § 13-1-11 also indicates that the phrase “evidence of indebtedness” should be construed broadly so as to encompass leases.
[T]his statute is not one which must be strictly construed____ [A]n undertaking to pay attorney’s fees in addition to principal and interest is in the nature of an agreement for a penalty, and the statute under consideration is to take away the penalty in certain cases, and is remedial.
Demere v. Germania Bank, supra. Thus, the purpose of OCGA § 13-1-11 is to prevent a contractual provision for attorney’s fees from constituting a penalty for failure to pay an indebtedness. General Elec. Credit Corp. of Ga. v. Brooks,
Consistent with the statutory intent, our holding encompasses commercial leases as well as residential and other non-commercial leases. Nothing in the language of OCGA § 13-1-11 limits its benefits
Accordingly, we hold that the term “evidence of indebtedness,” as used in OCGA § 13-1-11,
has reference to any printed or written instrument, signed or otherwise executed by the obligor(s), which evidences on its face a legally enforceable obligation to pay money. Such a definition ... does no violence to any of the statute’s specific provisions and accords well with its general purpose ....
Stillwell Enterprises v. Interstate Equipment Co., supra. That definition includes all written leases which impose on the lessee an obligation to pay money. The lease in this case imposed such an obligation on RadioShack, which is being enforced by the federal district court pursuant to a consent order awarding past due rent and interest to Cascade. Thus, OCGA § 13-1-11 is applicable even though Cascade also sought a declaration of contractual rights, and Radio-Shack is continuing to possess and pay rent for the leased property. The statute applies at least where, as here, past due rent is recovered, and the only other relief is declaratory and governs the future enforceability or amount of the tenant’s rent obligation. Compare Insurance Indus. Consultants v. Essex Investments, supra at 844 (4). To hold otherwise would create distinctions that have no basis in the statutory language and purpose. Therefore, OCGA§ 13-1-11 applies to the lease between Cascade and RadioShack and requires that the certified question posed by the Eleventh Circuit be answered in the affirmative.
Certified question answered.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority takes me to task for suggesting that we should independently review the text, history, and purpose of OCGA § 13-1-11 and decide for ourselves the legislative intent of the phrase “any note or other evidence of indebtedness.” According to the majority opinion, once the Court of Appeals has interpreted a statute in a particular manner for a sufficiently long period of time, this Court must defer to that construction as though it had become part of the statutory text. In support of this notion, the opinion relies heavily on
There is a profound difference between recognizing that considerations of stare decisis are at their apex when the General Assembly has arguably approved this Court’s prior construction of specific statutory language, albeit implicitly, and contending, as the majority opinion does, that the Court of Appeals has the power to bind this Court by deciding a question of statutory interpretation incorrectly and then following its own erroneous precedent for a sufficient length of time. The majority opinion’s position on this point contradicts the Georgia Constitution of 1983, which states plainly that “[t]he decisions of the Court of Appeals . . . shall bind all courts except the Supreme Court as precedents,”
The majority opinion responds to this point by arguing that it is merely applying a rule of statutory construction, and that what binds this Court is not the Court of Appeals’ 1977 decision in Burgess v. Clermont Properties, Inc.,
It is undisputed that the General Assemblies convened after 1977 have passed no legislation indicating whether they agree or disagree with the Court of Appeals’ decision in Burgess. I think we would do better to heed the United States Supreme Court’s oft-repeated warning about reading too much into legislative silence and inaction. As the high court has explained:
*848 Legislative silence is a poor beacon to follow in discerning the proper statutory route.... The verdict of quiescent years cannot be invoked to baptize a statutory gloss that is otherwise impermissible. This Court has many times reconsidered statutory constructions that have been passively abided by Congress. Congressional inaction frequently betokens unawareness, preoccupation, or paralysis. “It is at best treacherous to find in Congressional silence alone the adoption of a controlling rule of law.” Girouard v. United States,328 U. S. 61 , 69 (1946). . . . Where, as in the case before us, there is no indication that a subsequent Congress has addressed itself to the particular problem, we are unpersuaded that silence is tantamount to acquiescence, let alone . . . approval. . . .5
Put another way, “[t]o explain the cause of non-action by Congress when Congress itself sheds no light is to venture into speculative unrealities.”
I turn now to the question certified to this Court by the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit (“Eleventh Circuit”).
In response, Cascade correctly asserts that this Court has never decided whether a commercial lease constitutes an “evidence of indebtedness” under OCGA § 13-1-11, and the case thus presents a question of first impression in this Court. Cascade also notes that the General Assembly first adopted the relevant statutory language in 1891,
In my view, Cascade has the better argument. The Court of Appeals’ decision in Burgess extended OCGA § 13-1-11 well beyond its intended scope. The phrase “evidence of indebtedness” has the ring of a term of art, a suspicion supported by an examination of the terminology used throughout the rest of the statute. The statute opens with a declaration that an agreement to pay attorney fees “upon any note or other evidence of indebtedness” in addition to interest is valid and enforceable as part of the underlying debt when collected “by or through an attorney after maturity” as long as certain conditions precedent have been met.
The statute provides that if the conditions precedent have been met, then the agreement to pay attorney fees is enforceable. However, even when the agreement is enforceable, the statute limits the amount of attorney fees the holder of the note or other evidence of indebtedness can recover from the debtor. If the debt instrument “provides for attorney’s fees in some specific percent of the principal and interest owing thereon,” the agreement to pay attorney fees is enforceable “up to but not in excess of 15 percent of the principal and interest owing on said note or other evidence of indebtedness .”
It is obvious from context that not every scrap of paper with a writing scribbled on it qualifies as a “note” within the meaning of the statute. The statute’s repeated use of terminology drawn from the world of banking and commercial paper — “principal,” “interest,” “maturity,” “holder,” “maker,” “endorser,” “debtor,” “security deed,” and “debt” — tells us that OCGA§ 13-1-11 employs the word “note” in the far more limited sense of “a written paper acknowledging a debt and promising payment.”
Rejection of RadioShack’s attempt to shoehorn its lease with Cascade into OCGA § 13-1-11 finds further support in the use of the term “evidence of indebtedness” in other legal sources around the time of the statute’s adoption in 1891.
The statute now codified at OCGA § 13-1-11 has been amended only a handful of times since its enactment in 1891, most significantly in 1900 and 1953.
Finally, the construction I would place on OCGA § 13-1-11 better accords with the statute’s established purpose of protecting relatively economically powerless borrowers from sharp dealing by unscrupulous lenders. As this Court explained over a century ago:
Before the passage of this act [in 1891], a stipulation to pay attorney’s fees subjected the debtor to a penalty for a failure to pay his indebtedness, even though he honestly could not pay, and made no resistance to the creditor’s suit. This was the evil at which the act was directed, the remedy being to relieve the debtor from the payment of attorney’s fees except where he litigated with the creditor, and resisted the suit on grounds which were not in any part upheld, except where “a plea [was] filed by the defendant and not sustained.”29
As the Court correctly notes, a tenant sued for past due rent by her landlord may be as deserving of protection from an unfair attorney fees clause as a strapped borrower who takes out a loan from the bank. However, that fact does not provide us with a basis for expanding the scope of OCGA § 13-1-11 beyond what the General
The cardinal rule in statutory interpretation is to discern the legislative intent. In my view, the text, history, and purpose of OCGA § 13-1-11 all point in the same direction: the phrase “any note or other evidence of indebtedness” in OCGA § 13-1-11 was never intended to include routine lease agreements. Accordingly, I would hold that the statute does not apply to leases, disapprove the Court of Appeals’ rulings to the contrary, and answer the Eleventh Circuit’s certified question in the negative.
I am authorized to state that Justice Benham and Justice Thompson join in this dissent.
Notes
Harvey v. J. H. Harvey Co.,
Art. VI, Sec. V, Par. Ill (emphasis supplied).
Art. VI, Sec. VI, Par. VI (emphasis supplied).
Zuber v. Allen,
Helvering v. Hallock,
See Girouard v. United States, supra,
Georgia law authorizes this Court to answer certified questions from any state appellate court, any federal district court or court of appeals, and the United States Supreme Court. Ga. Const. Art. VI, Sec. VI, Par. IV; OCGA § 15-2-9; Ga. Supreme Court Rules 46-48; cf. Uniform Certification of Questions of Law [Act] [Rule] §§ 1-14 (1995), 12 U.L.A. 71-79 (Supp. 1997). For an in-depth discussion of the history, purpose, and proper use of inter-jurisdictional certification procedures, see 17A Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Edward H. Cooper & Vikram David Amar, Federal Practice and Procedure: Jurisdiction and Related Matters § 4248, at 482-516 (3d ed. 2007). See also City of Houston, Tex. v. Hill,
Burgess, supra,
See Logistics Intl. v. RACO/Melaver, LLC,
1890-91 Ga. Laws (vol. 1), p. 221.
OCGA§ 13-1-11 (a).
OCGA§ 13-1-11 (a) (3).
OCGA§ 13-1-11 (a) (3).
OCGA §13-1-11 (a)(1).
OCGA§ 13-1-11 (a) (2).
OCGA§ 13-1-11 (b).
O’Brien’s Irish Pub v. Gerlew Holdings,
The majority opinion erroneously states that “[t]he only terminology in the statute which is ordinarily limited to commercial paper is ‘maker’ and ‘endorser,’ and those terms are only used with the alternative ‘or party sought to be held on said obligation.’ ” The statute also employs the terms “maturity and “holder,” both of which are generally limited to the field of commercial paper when used in connection with writings. See Black’s Law Dictionary 423, 749 (8th ed. 2004) (defining “date of maturity as “Commercial law. The date when a debt falls due, such as a debt on a promissory note or bond,” and “holder” as “[a] person who has legal possession of a negotiable instrument and is entitled to receive payment on it” or “[a] person with legal possession of a document of title or an investment security”).
The legislative history available for the original act itself, such as it is, sheds little light on the question at issue in this case. See Journal of the Senate 48-49 (July 10, 1891).
See, e.g., 1890-91 Ga. Laws (vol. 2), p. 136, § 2 (authorizing transfer of “all the assets, property, obligations to, and evidence of, indebtedness [sic] belonging to [a] private banking company to “the Bank of Sumter incorporated by this charter” and providing that “in said corporate name it may sue for, collect and enforce all such obligations or evidences of indebtedness to said private banking company) (emphasis supplied); 1890-91 Ga. Laws (vol. 1), p. 143, § 6 (relating to “suit[s] . . . brought upon any evidence of indebtedness given for [the purchase of] fertilizer”) (emphasis supplied); 1888-89 Ga. Laws (vol. 2), p. 603, § 5 (incorporating the Rome Banking and Trust Company and authorizing it to “purchase, sell or exchange bonds, stocks, bills of exchange, coin and bullion; to discount and negotiate notes and drafts, hills of exchange and other evidences of debt',... [and] to receive and keep on special deposit all valuables, such as gold, silver or paper money, bullion, precious metals, jewels, plate, certificates of stock or evidence of indebtedness, deeds or muniments of title, or other valuable papers of any kind”) (emphasis supplied); 1878-79 Ga. Laws, p. 184, § 4 (capping interest rate legally chargeable at 8% generally and at 7% absent a special showing “upon any account, note, bond, bill, draft or other evidence of indebtedness”) (emphasis supplied); 1866 Ga. Laws, p. 139, § 1 (providing for establishment of lost or destroyed documents “in all cases where suit may have been instituted on any bond, bill, note, draft, check, or other evidence of indebtedness”) (emphasis supplied).
See, e.g., Brooks v. Fowler,
See, e.g., Nat. Sec. Bank v. Butler,
See, e.g., Ga. Const, of 1868, Art. V, Sec. XVII.
Black’s Law Dictionary 442 (1st ed. 1891).
1968 Ga. Laws, p. 317, § 1; 1957 Ga. Laws, p. 264, § 1; 1953 Ga. Laws (Jan.-Feb. Sess.), pp. 545-547, § 1; 1946 Ga. Laws, p. 766, § 1, Ex. 2-B; 1900 Ga. Laws, p. 53, § 1.
In 1978, the year after the Court of Appeals decidedBMrgess, we thoroughly reviewed the development of the statutory text over time. Gen. Elec. Credit Corp. of Ga. v. Brooks,
OCGA §7-1-4 (18).
Demere v. Germania Bank,
The statute, now codified at OCGA § 44-7-2 (c), provides as follows:
Aprovision for the payment by the tenant of attorney’s fees of the landlord upon the breach of a rental agreement by the tenant, which provision is contained in a contract, lease, license agreement, or similar agreement, oral or written, for the use or rental of real property as a dwelling place shall be void unless the provision also provides for the payment by the landlord of the attorney’s fees of the tenant upon the breach of the rental agreement by the landlord.
