Opinion
The plaintiff, South Sea Company, Inc., appeals from the judgment of the trial court, rendered following the granting of the motion filed by the defendant, Global Turbine Component Technologies, LLC, to dismiss the plaintiffs summary process complaint. The defendant contended in its motion that the court had no jurisdiction because the notice to quit possession served on the defendant on October 29, 2004, for “nonpayment of rent when due” was premature. We reverse the judgment of the trial court.
Although the defendant filed a motion to dismiss on the basis of a lack of jurisdiction, neither the parties nor the court treated the case as one involving a dispute as to either personal or subject matter jurisdiction, neither of which was disputed during the hearing held by the court. In this case, the plaintiff landlord served a notice to quit possession on October 29, 2004, giving notice to the defendant tenant to quit possession of the leased premises on or before November 3, 2004, for nonpayment of rent when due and giving notice that if the defendant had not moved from the premises by then, an eviction action may be initiated. A complaint seeking a judgment for immediate possession, dated November 4, 2004, was filed, with a return date of November 15, 2004. The defendant did not answer the complaint but instead filed a motion to dismiss on November 15, 2004, claiming that the notice to quit was ineffective because it was served after the defendant had “tendered rent,” and, therefore, the court was “without jurisdiction . . . .”
“Subject matter jurisdiction involves the authority of a court to adjudicate the type of controversy presented
by the action before it.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Rock Rimmon Grange
#
142, Inc.
v.
The Bible Speaks Ministries, Inc.,
Although a notice to quit is a condition precedent to instituting a summary process action, no claim is made by either party that any of the statutory requirements for the action were lacking. Compare
HUD/Willow Street Apartments
v.
Gonzalez,
There is no question that the plaintiff complied with both subsections of the statute. A motion to dismiss, claiming lack of jurisdiction because of a defective notice, must be denied if there has been compliance with the statute. Cf.
Thomas E. Golden Realty Co.
v.
Society for Savings,
Ordinarily, the determination of whether subject matter jurisdiction exists does not permit a court to determine the merits of the case. See
Manifold
v.
Ragaglia,
The relevant facts and procedural background of this case are included in a stipulation of facts and a supplemental stipulation of facts signed by the plaintiff and the defendant. The parties executed a written lease of commercial property that contained an option to the defendant, as lessee, to renew it for a five year period, an option that the defendant exercised.
A dispute regarding the amount of the additional fixed rent due under the option existed between the parties. This dispute involved two different inteipretations of the lease. The plaintiff contends that the defendant owed an additional fixed rent of $965.05 per month, on the basis of an increase in the cost of living from the beginning of the original lease. According to the defendant, it owed only $668 per month, on the basis of an increase in the cost of living from the first amendment to the lease, dated August 1, 1999. The parties agree that the only rent due and owing from the defendant, as of October 27, 2004, was the additional fixed rent for the months of August, September and October, 2004. As of October 28, 2004, the monthly rent for November was not yet due. They also agree that, as of October 28, 2004, the amount of unpaid additional fixed rent for three months was less than $5188. The check dated October 28,2004, in the amount of $5188, had a notation on it, “PE 10-04.” The defendant intended by it to pay the fixed rent due for November, 2004. On October 29, 2004, the plaintiff issued a notice to quit possession and served the notice on the defendant’s president.
The stipulation of the parties included letters from the defendant’s attorney dated November 1, 2004, and November 4, 2004. In the first letter, he stated that arrearages for August, September, October and November “in the amount you have claimed will be paid by November 10, 2004 under separate cover. These payments are being made without prejudice. . . . My client will continue to pay the rent with arrearages as you have calculated. If a court determines that our interpretation is right, we will have a claim for damages. If not, your client will have no damages and, therefore, cannot attempt to evict.” The second letter was sent with a check for the disputed amount, namely, $3860, and acknowledged the return of the defendant’s check dated October 28, 2004. 4
The stipulation also included letters faxed from the plaintiffs attorney, dated
The issue is whether the plaintiff, as lessor, could apply the check dated October 28, 2004, to either the basic rent or to the additional fixed rent past due for the months of August, September and October. If the plaintiff had to apply the check to the disputed portion of the rent, at the time the notice to quit possession was served and the November rent was not yet due, then the plaintiff would not be entitled to possession. If, however, the plaintiff was required, or was permitted, to apply it to the November rent, there would be rent due in the disputed amount for the three previous months, and the notice to quit possession would not be premature, entitling the plaintiff to obtain possession.
The plaintiff asserts that the check did not constitute a tender of the past due additional fixed rent. In support of its claim, the plaintiff claims that all of the facts and circumstances surrounding the plaintiff’s receipt of the check indicate that the defendant directed that it be applied to the November rent obligation and not to the disputed additional fixed rent that had gone unpaid for the months of August, September and October. The plaintiff argues that the subsequent facts confirm this interpretation of the circumstances surrounding its receipt of the check. Specifically, the plaintiff refers to the fact that the defendant’s attorney, in a letter dated November 1, 2004, identified the check as “November’s rent” and, later, a check was sent on November 4, 2004, specifically to pay the disputed additional fixed rent. The defendant claims that, despite its intention that the check be applied to the November rent obligation, there was nothing that the defendant did and nothing written on the check that would preclude the plaintiff from directing it toward the past due additional fixed rent.
Because the parties have stipulated to the facts, we review their claims de novo. “[T]he legal inferences properly to be drawn from [a] definitive stipulation of facts raise questions of law rather than of
Where a debtor has two or more obligations to the same creditor, the debtor possesses the power to direct the manner in which his payment is to be applied. See
Sagal
v.
Mann,
The court found and the parties agree that “[w]hen the defendant sent the check dated October 28, 2004, to the plaintiff, it intended to pay the fixed rent due for November, 2004, but [the check] did not include the disputed “ ‘additional fixed rent.’ ” Under the circumstances in this case, the plaintiff could infer only that the defendant was directing the plaintiff to apply the check to the defendant’s November rent obligation.
6
Prior to August 1, 2004, the monthly fixed rent due under the lease was $5188. On August 1, 2004, the monthly fixed rent increased by an amount, which is disputed by the parties. Despite agreeing that it had an increased obligation as of August 1, 2004, the defendant sent checks in the amount of $5188 for the purpose of paying rent for the months of August, September and October. The defendant sent a check in the amount of $5188, less than its obligation, for August. The plaintiff notified the defendant of its failure to pay the full August obligation. The defendant, nevertheless, sent a check
in the amount of $5188, less than its obligation, for September and October. In October, the plaintiff again notified the defendant of its failure to pay its full obligation for August, September and October. Having not received any of the additional fixed rent under the lease,
7
It was clear from the nature of the defendant’s performance that the check was to be applied to its November rent obligation. The facts of this case leave no doubt as to whether the defendant directed the plaintiff to apply the check to a particular obligation. In their course of dealing, the defendant sent checks to the plaintiff in the amount of $5188 in three prior months. The plaintiff applied each check to the defendant’s monthly rent obligation. As the months passed, the defendant’s debt for additional fixed rent accrued. In two letters, the plaintiff notified the defendant of his failure to pay the additional fixed rent. Despite having information that the plaintiff was applying the checks to the defendant’s basic rent obligation for the next month, the defendant failed to give the plaintiff a contrary direction with regard to which obligation his checks should be applied. In fact, the defendant openly admits that it intended that the check be applied to the November rent obligation.
Because there is no ambiguity as to whether the defendant directed the plaintiff to apply the October 28, 2004 check to the November rent obligation, we need not consider the fact that applying the check to the disputed additional fixed rent would have been more advantageous to the defendant. Furthermore, the defendant fails to make any argument as to why these circumstances should be considered so extreme that the particular application should not be permitted. The defendant, in fact, argues only that the plaintiff was free to apply the check to the past due additional rents. The law does not permit the creditor to override the direction of the debtor. See
Sagal
v.
Mann,
supra,
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the plaintiff.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“Summary process is a special statutory procedure designed to provide an expeditious remedy. ... It enables a landlord to obtain possession of leased premises without the delay associated with common-law actions.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Western Boot & Clothing Co.
v.
L’Enfance Magique, Inc.,
This was the last of several amendments to the original lease. Because the prior amendments have no relevance to the present appeal, we need not discuss them.
In this opinion, we will refer to the difference between the rent prior to renewal and the rent after the renewal as “additional fixed rent.”
The check issued by the defendant in the amount of $3860 was in payment of the disputed additional fixed rent for the months of August, September, October and November, 2004.
Comment (a) provides in relevant part: “As a general rule, an obligor has the power to direct the obligee’s application of a payment or other performance. The direction is effective immediately on the obligee’s acceptance of the performance, the performance is considered to be applied as directed, and the obligor’s duty is discharged accordingly. . . . The obligor can effectively direct that a performance be applied to a duty that is not matured, to one that is unsecured, and even to one that is unenforceable on grounds of public policy.” 2 Restatement (Second), supra, § 258, comment (a).
We note that the rectitude of this inference was later supported by the letter from the defendant’s attorney dated November 1, 2004, as well as the papers filed by the defendant in the trial court and in this court. In this letter, the defendant’s attorney stated that the check received by the plaintiff was for November rent and that a check for the disputed additional rent for August, September, October and November would be forthcoming. In its court filings, the defendant admits that it intended that the check be applied to its November rent obligation.
In a letter dated October 20, 2004, the defendant’s attorney admitted that the defendant was responsible for arrearages, but disputed the amount of those arrearages. The defendant claimed that the option rent increase related back to 1999 rather than 1996, resulting in a monthly rent of $5856 instead of the $6152.05 monthly rent claimed by the plaintiff. Despite being aware that it had past due additional fixed rents, at no time did the defendant claim that the plaintiff applied the prior checks to the rental obligation for the next month inappropriately.
