1002 E. 87th Street, LLC v. Midway Broadcasting Corp.
1002 E. 87th Street, LLC v. Midway Broadcasting Corp.
Opinion
¶ 1 Does a new landlord have standing to sue a tenant for rent that accrued before purchasing the property?
¶ 2 Plaintiff, 1002 E. 87th Street, LLC (87th Street), filed a verified complaint, seeking to evict defendant, Midway Broadcasting Corporation (Midway), for unpaid rent. 87th Street also sought to collect on the guaranty signed by Melody Spann Cooper and Pierre Cooper. The trial court dismissed 87th Street's complaint, finding that 87th Street lacked standing to recover rent that accrued before it owned the property. Under the terms of the lease, the trial court granted Midway attorney's fees and denied 87th Street attorney's fees.
¶ 3 87th Street argues the trial court erred in dismissing the verified complaint because (i) the trial court failed to follow the appropriate legal standard on the motion to dismiss, (ii) the lease established 87th Street's standing, (iii) Midway filed counterclaims against 87th Street on the basis of 87th Street's "standing," and (iv) the trial court had no legal support for its decision. 87th Street also contends the trial *871 court should not have awarded attorney's fees to Midway or to the guarantors and instead, should have awarded it attorney's fees as the prevailing party to Midway's counterclaims. Lastly, 87th Street asserts the trial court should have modified the agreed order on use and occupancy payments to match the lease's terms.
¶ 4 We affirm the trial court's dismissal of 87th Street's complaint for lack of standing. Under the lease, 87th Street is not entitled to bring suit for rent that accrued before it owned the property. We affirm the award of attorney's fees to Midway and the denial of 87th Street's attorney's fees, as 87th Street was not a prevailing party. And we affirm the trial court's decision not to modify the agreed order for use and occupancy payments because 87th Street failed to provide a sufficiently complete record.
¶ 5 Background
¶ 6 The facts are relatively simple. Midway operated a radio station at 1002 E. 87th Street, Chicago, leasing the space from Jeff BV Commercial, LLC (Jeff BV). Melody Spann-Cooper and Pierre Cooper signed the lease as guarantors. Jeff BV sold the property to Glass Management Services, Inc., which then sold it to 1002 E. 87th Street, LLC. The lease provides that Midway will pay rent "without abatement, demand, deduction or offset whatsoever * * *." The lease also indicates that the landlord "shall include the party named as such in the first paragraph thereof, its representatives, assigns and successors in title to the Premises." When an original owner conveys the property, the "[t]enant agrees to attorn to such new owner." This section further specifies that, when the original landlord conveys the property, all liabilities and obligations "accrued thereafter are terminated" and all liabilities and obligations of the original landlord "shall be binding upon the new owner." Finally, the lease provides that the prevailing party in enforcing the lease "shall be entitled to recover from the nonprevailing party any costs, expenses and reasonable attorney's fees incurred."
¶ 7 In January 2015, after Jeff BV sold the property, Midway sent two checks to Chicago Real Estate Resources (CRER), the property agent, paid to "Glass Management" for January rent. CRER returned the checks and demanded $72,810, the amount in past due rent it claimed Midway owed Jeff BV before Jeff BV sold the property. Midway denied that it owed past due rent, claiming that Jeff BV failed to maintain the property and that 87th Street was not the owner of the property when the past due rent allegedly accrued.
¶ 8 Later that month, 87th Street filed its verified complaint for eviction and possession of the property. The trial court entered an agreed order on use and occupancy payments. Midway counterclaimed, alleging that 87th Street stood in the shoes of Jeff BV, and was now liable for breach of contract for failing to maintain the property. The counterclaim also alleged civil conspiracy against Midway, tortious interference with contract, and tortious interference with a prospective financial advantage.
¶ 9 Two years later, Midway filed a motion to dismiss the complaint under section 2-619 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) ( 735 ILCS 5/2-619 (West 2014) ), claiming 87th Street lacked standing to claim the past due rent. At the same time, 87th Street moved for summary judgment under section 2-1005 of the Code ( id. § 2-1005), alleging that Midway could not dispute failing to pay rent to Jeff BV and, accordingly, defaulted under the lease. The trial court granted Midway's motion to dismiss and denied 87th Street's motion for summary judgment.
¶ 10 The trial court also awarded attorney's fees to Midway as the prevailing *872 party and denied 87th Street's request for attorney's fees. Midway then filed a second motion to modify the agreed order on use and occupancy payments, arguing that it should be modified to reflect the annual rent adjustments under the lease. The trial court denied the motion.
¶ 11 Analysis
¶ 12 Standard of Review
¶ 13 A motion to dismiss a claim based on section 2-619 of the Code (
id.
§ 2-619 ) admits the legal sufficiency of the plaintiff's allegations but asserts affirmative matter that avoids or defeats the claim.
DeLuna v. Burciaga
,
¶ 14 Standing
¶ 15 87th Street contends the lease established its standing. 87th Street claims the lease entitles it to demand strict compliance with the past due rent provision. 87th Street also claims rent accrual is a chose in action and, thus, freely assignable. Midway counters that 87th Street only has standing to sue for rent that comes due after it became the landlord, and not for past due rent that accrued before then. Additionally, Midway counters that rent in arrears is a chose in action that is not assignable to a new property owner.
¶ 16 A lack of standing is considered an affirmative defense under section 2-619(a)(9) of the Code.
In re Estate of Schlenker
,
¶ 17 In general, a landlord has standing to sue for unpaid rent. 735 ILCS 5/9-209 (West 2014) ;
American Management Consultant, LLC v. Carter
,
*873 ¶ 18 87th Street contends that it has standing to sue under the provision in the lease providing, "[n]o failure of landlord to exercise any power * * * or to insist upon strict compliance * * * and no custom or practice of the parties * * * shall constitute a waiver of Landlord's right to demand exact compliance with the terms * * *." 87th Street believes that, as landlord, it can enforce the lease through this nonwaiver clause, regardless of Jeff BV's action or inaction. 87th Street also asserts that Jeff BV's inaction does not prevent 87th Street from demanding exact compliance with the lease. But, a demand for exact compliance with the lease does not include a nonexistent right to collect rent due before it owned the property. 87th Street cites no cases, and we have found none, stating that a new owner can use a nonwaiver clause to enforce a tenant's obligations to a previous owner. The nonwaiver clause does not allow 87th Street to demand compliance with obligations that were owed to Jeff BV.
¶ 19 87th Street further argues that Midway's counterclaims concede that 87th Street has standing. The counterclaims plead that (i) 87th Street "now stands in the place of Jeff BV, as per the terms of the Lease Agreement, and it is responsible for Jeff BV's actions and inaction as they pertain to the Lease Agreement" and (ii) 87th Street is responsible for the previous owner's breach of the lease and must accept full liability or payment of capital expenses in place of rent. According to 87th Street, the "mend the hold" doctrine precludes Midway from changing strategies and arguing a position that is inconsistent with its original position.
¶ 20 The mend the hold doctrine, which Illinois has recognized for over a century, provides that " '[w]here a party gives a reason for his conduct and decision touching anything involved in a controversy, he [or she] cannot, after litigation has begun, change his [or her] ground and put his [or her] conduct upon another and different consideration. He [or she] is not permitted thus to amend his [or her] hold. He [or she] is estopped from doing it by a settled principle of law.' "
Trossman v. Philipsborn
,
¶ 21 In light of Larson and similar cases, 87th Street's argument that the mend the hold doctrine applies is not persuasive. No evidence in the record demonstrates that Midway "tried on" the defense that 87th Street is liable for the previous landlord's failure to maintain the premises, found that defense was likely to fail, and then raised lack of standing. At most, Midway tried alternative theories and was not acting in bad faith when it raised lack of standing as a defense. The mend the hold doctrine does not apply.
¶ 22 87th Street principally relies on distinguishing
A.M. Realty Western
from the facts here. Its attempt fails as well.
A.M. Realty Western
involved debt that accrued
*874
by the tenant during the landlord's ownership of the property.
A.M. Realty Western
,
¶ 23 Alternatively, 87th Street asks us to follow
Unifund CCR Partners
,
¶ 24 87th Street also argues that
Dasenbrock
has no bearing because 87th Street is a successor to a lease and not trying to recover rents incident to the land. This argument has no merit. Unlike credit card debt and future rent due that can be assigned, Illinois courts routinely hold that rent in arrears is not assignable.
Dasenbrock
,
¶ 25 We are not persuaded by any of 87th Street's standing arguments and affirm the trial court's dismissal.
¶ 26 The Guaranty
¶ 27 87th Street argues that when Midway failed to pay rent, Melody Spann Cooper and Pierre Cooper, as guarantors, became liable when the default was not cured. Both 87th Street and Midway note that the rules of contract construction also
*875
apply to contracts of guaranty.
Riley Acquisitions, Inc. v. Drexler
,
¶ 28 Attorney's Fees
¶ 29 87th Street contends the trial court erred in its award of attorney's fees as (i) Midway was not the prevailing party, (ii) the fees awarded were unreasonable, (iii) the fee petition did not have adequate support, and (iv) 87th Street should have been awarded attorney's fees.
¶ 30 Illinois follows the American rule, prohibiting unsuccessful parties from being required to pay the other party's attorney's fees unless the parties contractually agree otherwise.
City of Chicago v. Concordia Evangelical Lutheran Church
,
¶ 31 87th Street argues that Midway cannot be the prevailing party because 87th Street filed for use and occupancy payments and the trial court dismissed Midway's counterclaims. A party can be a "prevailing party" even if it does not succeed on all matters.
Powers v. Rockford Stop-N-Go, Inc.
,
¶ 32 87th Street mistakenly believes that an agreed order on use and occupancy payments makes it a "prevailing party." Courts generally award orders for use and occupancy payments because "a lessee's obligation to pay rent continues as a matter of law, even though the lessee may ultimately establish a right to * * * obtain other relief." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Circle Management, LLC v. Olivier
,
¶ 33 87th Street also contends the trial court improperly awarded attorney's fees to the guarantors, who had no contractual right to them. We agree that the lease did not provide for attorney's fees to the guarantors. But the trial court awarded fees to Midway under the lease provision. While the guarantors were listed with Midway, "collectively" on the defendants' petition for attorney's fees, no evidence suggests the court separately awarded fees to the Coopers as guarantors.
¶ 34 87th Street then argues that Midway's fee request was unreasonable because Midway sought to profit from a two-year delay on its motion to dismiss. Specifically, 87th Street contends that Midway waited two years to file a motion to dismiss on standing grounds while it pursued its counterclaims. The burden of
*876
establishing "reasonable" attorney's fees lies with the requesting party, and the trial court determines the reasonableness of the fees.
Mercado v. Calumet Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n
,
¶ 35 87th Street next asserts that Midway failed to properly support its fee petition. While the trial court retains discretion in its award of attorney's fees, the requesting party must still provide documented evidence of the charges.
¶ 36 Finally, 87th Street argues the trial court should have awarded it attorney's fees because it prevailed when the trial court dismissed Midway's counterclaim with prejudice. Midway filed counts I and IV of its counterclaims against 87th Street. Midway voluntarily dismissed count IV after it prevailed on its motion to dismiss. Count I was dismissed voluntarily with prejudice before 87th Street filed its motion to dismiss. Dismissals with prejudice constitute an adjudication on the merits.
Palm v. 2800 Lake Shore Drive Condominium Ass'n
,
¶ 37 Agreed Order on Use and Occupancy
¶ 38 87th Street contends the trial court abused its discretion in denying its motion to modify the agreed order on use and occupancy. Specifically, 87th Street contends that on March 8, 2015, the trial court entered an agreed order for use and occupancy payments so that Midway would continue to pay rent while the case proceeded. Under the lease, Midway agreed to pay rent according to a yearly schedule of increasing payments. The agreed order did not reflect the increasing annual adjustments indicated in the lease. 87th Street filed two motions to modify the agreed order. The trial court denied the first motion, refusing to rule on ancillary matters at that time. 87th Street filed a second motion to modify the agreed order after the dismissal order, which the court denied. 87th Street contends the trial court should have granted the motion and asks us to direct the trial court to modify the order for use and occupancy to reflect the rent due under the lease.
¶ 39 To support a claim of error, the appellant bears the burden to present a sufficiently complete record.
*877
Foutch v. O'Bryant
,
¶ 40 Affirmed.
Presiding Justice Mason and Justice Pucinski concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- 1002 E. 87TH STREET LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MIDWAY BROADCASTING CORPORATION, Melody Spann Cooper, and Pierre Cooper, Defendants-Appellees.
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Unpublished