Slania Enterprises, Inc. v. Appledore Medical Group, Inc.
Slania Enterprises, Inc. v. Appledore Medical Group, Inc.
Opinion
The plaintiff, Slania Enterprises, Inc. (Slania), appeals a decision by the Superior Court ( Howard , J.) granting the motion of the defendant, Appledore Medical Group, Inc. (Appledore), to dismiss as time-barred a petition to recover damages stemming from an alleged breach of a commercial real estate lease. We reverse in part, vacate in part, and remand.
The trial court recited, or the plaintiff alleged, the following facts. In October 2012, Slania, as the lessor, and Appledore, as the lessee, entered into a commercial real estate lease for an initial fixed term that ended on April 30, 2015. However, Appledore never took possession of the premises.
Appledore paid rent due through January 2013, but then stopped doing so. In March 2013, Appledore communicated to Slania that it wished to terminate the lease. On April 12, 2013, Slania notified Appledore that it was in default on its rental payments. Appledore did not pay. On April 22, 2013, at the expiration of the 10-day cure period, Slania notified Appledore that, pursuant to Section 13.1(b) of the lease, it was electing, as its remedy upon default, to "keep the lease in effect *224 and recover rent and other charges due [from Appledore] less the amount [Slania] may recover by re[-]letting the premises." Slania re-let the premises from February 2015 through the end of the initial term of the lease, April 2015, for a lesser monthly amount.
On April 29, 2016, Slania filed a breach of contract action against Appledore for $82,527.87 in damages, which included rent, late fees, and utility costs due from May 2013 through April 2015. Appledore moved to dismiss, asserting that because the lease was breached no later than April 22, 2013, the claim was barred by the three-year statute of limitations under RSA 508:4, I (2010). Slania objected, arguing that the lease was an installment contract, and, therefore, the statute of limitations did not bar a suit to recover payments due within three years of the date the complaint was filed.
The trial court granted Appledore's motion to dismiss, ruling that, because "a real estate lease of the type involved here is not an installment contract as that term is contemplated in the statute of limitations context," the so-called "installment contract rule," under which the statute of limitations runs only against each installment when it becomes due, did not apply.
See
General Theraphysical, Inc. v. Dupuis
,
In addition, the trial court decided that, although the lease "provided Slania with the choice to continue the Lease and calculate damages in a certain manner as a remedy to Appledore's breach[,] ... Slania's unilateral choice of remedies cannot serve to extend the time in which Appledore's initial breach occurred." The trial court concluded that when Appledore "failed to cure the default by April 22, 2013, the cause of action had arisen for purposes of the statute of limitations." The trial court denied Slania's motion for reconsideration. This appeal followed.
In reviewing the trial court's grant of a motion to dismiss, our standard of review is whether the allegations in the plaintiff's pleadings are reasonably susceptible of a construction that would permit recovery.
Plaisted v. LaBrie
,
Slania first argues that the trial court erred when it decided that commercial real estate leases cannot be installment contracts for purposes of the installment contract rule. We agree with Slania: a commercial real estate lease can be an installment contract. An installment contract is "[a] contract requiring or authorizing the delivery of goods in separate lots, or payments in separate increments, to be separately accepted." Black's Law Dictionary 395 (10th ed. 2014). So too is a lease, in which a month's use of the lessor's property is compensated by a monthly rent payment. Thus, a commercial real estate lease that calls for separate payments, separately accepted, is an installment contract.
*225
Slania further argues that because a commercial real estate lease is an installment contract, the installment contract rule applies. Under New Hampshire law, "when an obligation is to be paid in installments[,] the statute of limitations runs only against each installment as it becomes due even though the creditor has the option to declare the whole sum due on default of an installment, unless he exercises that option."
General Theraphysical, Inc.
,
Appledore counters that the installment contract rule does not apply to commercial real estate leases because a lease does not convey a final possessory interest. Appledore cites no support for this proposition. Nor have we found any. Indeed, we have applied the installment contract rule to contracts for the lease of goods, which similarly do not deliver a "final possessory interest."
See
General Theraphysical, Inc.
,
Appledore next contends that the installment contract rule does not apply to real estate leases because leases are regulated by statute.
See
RSA ch. 540 (2007 & Supp. 2017); RSA ch. 540-A (2007 & Supp. 2017). The installment contract rule is a common law rule.
See
General Theraphysical, Inc.
,
Alternatively, Appledore asserts that, "even if the [c]ourt were to conclude the installment [contract] rule generally applies to real estate leases," the rule does not apply here because: (1) Slania's claim is based upon a "single distinct event which has ill effects that continue over time,"
*226
McNamara v. City of Nashua
,
To support the proposition that Slania's claim is time-barred because it is based upon a single, discrete event, Appledore relies upon
McNamara
and upon a non-precedential order of this court.
See
ibr.US_Case_Law.Schema.Case_Body:v1">id
In
Gage
, we stated, in dicta, that the petitioner's lawsuit was "not analogous to a claim for breach of an installment contract" because she had "not sued the New Hampshire judicial retirement plan for individual underpayments of pension benefits," but rather had "claimed that the State failed to properly administer" the plan, thereby impairing her rights under the applicable statute.
Gage
,
Here, by contrast, Slania's claim is based upon Appledore's failure to pay monthly rent. Appledore's failure to pay is not a "single event," but rather a re-occurring contractual breach.
See
Pierce
,
Appledore next asserts that the installment contract rule does not apply to this claim because Appledore never took possession of the property. Appledore cites no authority for the proposition that a tenant must take possession in order for the installment contract rule to apply to a commercial real estate lease. We fail to see how the fact that Appledore did not take possession of the premises is legally relevant.
See
Holiday Furniture Factory Out. Corp.
,
Applying the installment contract rule in this case would mean that Slania's breach of contract claim against Appledore is timely, but that Slania may recover only those damages that accrued within three
*227
years of when this lawsuit was filed.
See
Pierce
,
Appledore did not take possession of the property and clearly indicated its intent not to honor the lease in its communication on March 28, 2013. Further, after Slania gave notice of the breach on April 12, 2013, Appledore did not cure the default within the 10-day period. Unequivocally, this contract action arose no later than April 22, 2013, and needed to be filed within three years of that date. Since it was not, the claim is time-barred.
Slania argues that, because it exercised its contractual right to "keep this Lease in effect and recover monthly" from Appledore, the lease was neither completely breached nor terminated on April 22, 2013. (Quotation omitted.) Accordingly, Slania asserts that its suit is timely because the lease is an installment contract and, therefore, "each month that the rent was not paid was a separate breach of the lease triggering a new three year statute of limitations for each breach."
Appledore counters that the trial court found that Appledore materially breached the lease on or before April 22, 2013, and, therefore, that the material breach triggered the running of the statute of limitations. At oral argument, Appledore asserted that the trial court found that Appledore had unequivocally repudiated the lease on or before April 22, 2013. Appledore further argued that repudiation "take[s] [this case] outside of the installment [rule] discussion altogether," presumably implying that Slania's lawsuit is untimely.
As an initial matter, Appledore also argues that we should affirm because Slania did not develop a sufficient argument in its appellate brief that the trial court's determination of when breach occurred was in error. We disagree and turn to the merits of the parties' arguments.
Under New Hampshire law, "[i]n instances of anticipatory breach, the non-breaching party has the option to treat the repudiation as an immediate breach and maintain an action at once for damages."
LeTarte v. West Side Dev. Group
,
In
LeTarte
, we held that the defendant's "repeated and unjustified failure to make any of the first nineteen payments for more than three years" constituted a "total anticipatory breach" of the parties' installment contract, and allowed the plaintiff to recover damages for such "total ... breach."
Id
. at 295,
However, this court has yet to address whether, if the non-breaching party elects not to sue within three years of the other party's anticipatory breach or repudiation, the non-breaching party's lawsuit is barred by the statute of limitations. Jurisdictions that have decided this issue are divided.
Compare
*228
Bioveris Corp. v. Meso Scale Diagnostics, LLC
, C.A. No. 8692-VCMR,
In rejecting Slania's assertion that it could elect to keep the lease in place and sue for breaches that occurred within three years of the date it filed suit, the trial court did not mention anticipatory repudiation or material breach. This case raises issues of first impression regarding the interplay of the installment contract rule, a party's election of contractual remedies, and anticipatory repudiation or anticipatory breach. It does not appear that these issues were fully explored by the trial court, and jurisdictions are divided on how these issues affect when the statute of limitations accrues. Accordingly, we vacate the trial court's ruling with respect to Slania's argument that, under the terms of the lease, it could keep the lease in effect and bring an action to recover for breaches that occurred no more than three years before the date it filed this suit. We remand for such further proceedings, consistent with this opinion, as the trial court may deem necessary.
Reversed in part; vacated in part; and remanded .
LYNN, C.J., and HICKS and HANTZ MARCONI, JJ., concurred; DALIANIS, C.J., retired, specially assigned under RSA 490:3, concurred.
Reference
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