Chillas, D. v. Reedy, M. ( 2020 )


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  • J-A25024-19
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    DEBRA K. CHILLAS, LORI A.                 :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    MCNAUGHTON AND MICHELE S.                 :         PENNSYLVANIA
    ACHEY                                     :
    :
    :
    v.                           :
    :
    :
    MICHAEL B. REEDY                          :    No. 548 MDA 2019
    :
    Appellant              :
    Appeal from the Order Entered March 13, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Lebanon County Civil Division at No(s):
    2015-01290
    BEFORE: STABILE, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and MUSMANNO, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.:                     FILED OCTOBER 15, 2020
    Michael B. Reedy (“Reedy”) appeals from the order granting declaratory
    judgment in favor of Debra K. Chillas, Lori A. McNaughton, and Michele S.
    Achey’s (collectively, “Sisters”). We affirm.
    The parties to this action are siblings. Their parents, Marlin and Guianna
    Reedy (“Father” and ”Mother,” respectively), owned 120 acres of land in
    Newmanstown, Pennsylvania (“the Property”). The Property included two
    houses and approximately 45 acres of tillable farmland.
    In March 2010, Father executed a trust agreement (the “Trust
    Agreement”) creating the Pine Hill Farms Trust (the “Trust”). Under the Trust
    Agreement, Mother and Father transferred their interest in the Property into
    the Trust, with Father, Mother, and Reedy serving as Trustees. The Trust
    Agreement provided that upon Father’s death, the Sisters would become
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    additional Trustees, and Mother would continue to live on the Property with
    the Trust providing for her expenses. Upon Mother’s death, the Trust would
    be divided into equal shares among Reedy and the Sisters. The Trust
    Agreement further stipulated that the Property was subject to a lease
    agreement (the “Lease Agreement”), described more fully below, between
    Father, Mother, and Reedy. The Sisters did not take part in the creation,
    negotiation, or execution of either the Trust Agreement or the Lease
    Agreement.
    Father, Mother, and Reedy then entered into the Lease Agreement, with
    Father and Mother as landlords and Reedy as tenant. The Lease Agreement
    provided Reedy the right during its term to farm and reside on the Property.
    The term of the Lease Agreement was to continue until one of three conditions
    occurred: (1) Reedy failed to use the Property for farming directly or indirectly
    for one year; (2) Reedy died; or (3) 29 years passed. The Lease Agreement
    did not require Reedy to pay rent. It also provided that Father and Mother
    would continue to reside in the main house on the property, but upon their
    deaths, Reedy could then collect any rents from sub-letting either the house
    they occupied or the house he lived in.
    The Lease Agreement further specified that, during Father’s lifetime, he
    would be responsible for the payment of the costs and expenses associated
    with the Property, including real estate taxes, assessments, insurance,
    utilities, maintenance, and repairs. However, upon Father’s death, Reedy
    would assume responsibility for the cost of maintenance and ordinary repairs
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    to the Property, while the landlord, as defined in the Lease Agreement, would
    remain   liable   for   real   estate   taxes,   assessments,   insurance,   capital
    improvements, and extraordinary repairs.
    The Lease Agreement further provided that the lease would be assumed
    by the Trustees of the Trust Agreement upon the death of the surviving
    parent. Specifically, the Lease Agreement stated:
    This Lease shall not be assignable but will be assumed by
    the Trustees of the Pine Street Trust upon the death of the
    surviving Landlord. Upon such assumption said Trustees
    shall become the Landlord and shall have all of the rights,
    duties and responsibilities as if the original Landlord herein.
    Lease Agreement, at para. 14(f). Thus, the Trustees, which included Reedy
    and the Sisters, would assume the role of landlords of the Property upon the
    death of the surviving parent.
    In October 2014, following the deaths of Father and Mother and in
    accordance with the Trust Agreement, the Property, subject to the Lease
    Agreement, was distributed to the Sisters and Reedy in fee simple as tenants
    in common, with each receiving an equal share. As a result, the Sisters and
    Reedy became successor landlords of the Property, and thus became liable for
    real estate taxes, assessments, insurance, capital improvements, and
    extraordinary repairs on the Property. Under the Lease Agreement, the
    Sisters, as successor landlords, are not entitled to any rents or other profits
    from the Property.
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    The Sisters filed this suit in July 2015, seeking a declaration that the
    Lease Agreement is void due to, inter alia, unconscionability and lack of
    consideration. Reedy later moved for summary judgment in March 2017, and
    the trial court denied the motion. The court ultimately held a hearing and
    granted declaratory judgment in favor of the Sisters, in March 2019, and
    declared the Lease Agreement unconscionable and lacking consideration. This
    timely appeal followed. Reedy has raised the following issues for our review:
    1. Whether the Lower Court erred as a matter of law in
    declaring  the      Lease    Agreement      invalid    and
    unenforceable, including based on [the Sisters’] claims of
    unconscionability, lack of consideration, and illusory[?]
    2. Whether the Lower Court erred in denying Mr. Reedy’s
    Motion for Summary Judgment because there is no
    material issue of fact or law whether there is no merit to
    [the Sisters’] claims that the terms of the [L]ease
    [A]greement are unconscionable, illusory, lacking
    consideration; and impose an unreasonable restraint on
    alienation of the [P]roperty[?]
    3. Whether the Lower Court erred when it did not rule/opine
    on Mr. Reedy’s affirmative defense of laches in his Motion
    for Summary Judgment[?]
    Reedy’s Br. at 6 (suggested answers omitted).
    “In reviewing a declaratory judgment action, we are limited to
    determining whether the trial court clearly abused its discretion or committed
    an error of law.” Murphy v. Martini, 
    884 A.2d 262
    , 265 (Pa.Super. 2005)
    (quoting Bianchi v. Bianchi, 
    859 A.2d 511
    , 515 (Pa.Super. 2004)). “[W]e
    will review the decision of the lower court as we would a decree in equity and
    set aside the factual conclusions of that court only where they are not
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    supported by adequate evidence.” 
    Id.
     (quoting White v. Keystone Ins. Co.,
    
    775 A.2d 812
    , 813 (Pa.Super. 2001)). However, the application of the law is
    always subject to our review. 
    Id.
    Reedy first contends that the trial court erred in declaring the Lease
    Agreement invalid and unenforceable based on the Sisters’ claims of
    unconscionability and lack of consideration. Reedy argues that the Lease
    Agreement was freely entered into between Father, Mother, and Reedy and
    that there was no evidence that Father, Mother, and Reedy were on unequal
    ground or not competent at the time that the Lease Agreement was executed.
    Reedy’s Br. at 15, 21-22. Reedy further contends that the Sisters voluntarily
    accepted ownership of the Property with full knowledge of the Lease
    Agreement and that their ownership of the Property would be subject to the
    Lease Agreement. Id. at 22. Reedy cites to Section 250.104 of Pennsylvania’s
    Landlord-Tenant Act, which states that “[a]ny person who acquires title to real
    property by descent or purchase shall be liable to the same duties and shall
    have the same rights, powers and remedies in relation to the property as the
    person from whom title was acquired.” 68 P.S. § 250.104. According to Reedy,
    since the Sisters acquired the Property (that was subject to the Lease
    Agreement) through descent, they are bound by the terms of the Lease
    Agreement pursuant to 68 P.S. § 250.104. Reedy’s Br. at 17.
    Further, Reedy asserts that there was adequate consideration in the
    Lease Agreement, namely that each party committed itself to do something -
    Reedy was to continue to farm the Property and Father and Mother, among
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    other things, bore the responsibility for certain expenses of the Property. Id.
    at 25. Reedy asserts that upon the death of his parents and his Sisters’
    acceptance of ownership of the Property, he and his Sisters became the
    landlords under the Lease Agreement. Id. at 28. Reedy argues that his
    obligations under the Lease Agreement are not optional – if he does not
    continue to farm the Property, he is in breach of the Lease Agreement. Id.
    Therefore, according to Reedy, the Lease Agreement is not lacking in
    consideration. Id.
    Conversely,    the   Sisters   contend   that   the   Lease   Agreement   is
    procedurally unconscionable because they had no input in the formation of the
    Lease Agreement. Sisters’ Br. at 11. The Sisters maintain that the Lease
    Agreement was entered into without them having any meaningful choice,
    since they had no part in its creation, negotiation, or execution, as the Lease
    Agreement was between Reedy, Father and Mother. Id. at 7. The Sisters
    assert that they did not assent to any of the contract terms; rather, the Trust
    and Lease Agreements, by operation of law, placed the Sisters in the position
    of landlords. Id. at 9-10.
    The Sisters further argue that Lease Agreement is substantively
    unconscionable because the terms of the Lease Agreement grossly favor
    Reedy. Id. at 10. Specifically, the Sisters contend that the Lease Agreement
    allows Reedy to live on the Property for free while the Sisters are responsible
    for 75% of the taxes and undefined capital improvements. Id. The Sisters
    state that they unreasonably receive no benefit while they subsidize Reedy’s
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    farming of the land. Id. Therefore, according to the Sisters, the Lease
    Agreement is unconscionable because it gives Reedy as tenant the ability to
    farm the Property for 29 years without paying rent while the Sisters must bear
    significant expenses. Id. at 7.
    The Sisters also assert that contrary to Reedy’s contention, they did not
    choose to dissolve the Trust and accept the terms of the Lease Agreement.
    Rather, according to the Sisters, the ownership of the Property as it exists
    today occurred as a matter of law. Id. at 14. The Sisters argue that they had
    no negotiating power at all and that this lack of negotiation power equates to
    the Lease Agreement lacking consideration. Id. at 14-15.
    A lease is a contract and must be interpreted according to the principles
    of contract law. Stein Revocable Trust v. Gen. Felt Indus., Inc., 
    749 A.2d 978
    , 980 (Pa.Super. 2000). “The fundamental rule in interpreting the meaning
    of a contract is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the contracting
    parties.” Murphy v. Duquesne Univ. of the Holy Ghost, 
    777 A.2d 418
    , 429
    (Pa. 2001). “The intent of the parties to a written agreement is to be regarded
    as being embodied in the writing itself.” 
    Id.
     Further, we “do not assume that
    a contract’s language was chosen carelessly, nor do [we] assume that the
    parties were ignorant of the meaning of the language they employed.” 
    Id.
    The doctrine of unconscionability “has generally been recognized to
    include an absence of meaningful choice on the part of one of the parties
    together with contract terms which are unreasonably favorable to the other
    party.” Cardinal v. Kindred Healthcare, Inc., 
    155 A.3d 46
    , 53 (Pa.Super.
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    2017) (quoting MacPherson v. Magee Mem. Hosp. for Convalescence,
    
    128 A.3d 1209
    , 1221 (Pa.Super. 2015) (en banc)). The first element – lack of
    meaningful choice – has become known as procedural unconscionability, while
    the unreasonableness prong is called substantive unconscionability. Salley v.
    Option One Mortg. Corp., 
    925 A.2d 115
    , 119 (Pa. 2007). Whether a contract
    is unconscionable is a question of law for the court. Id. at 120. Our standard
    of review is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary. Thibodeau v.
    Comcast Corp., 
    912 A.2d 874
    , 886 (Pa.Super. 2006).
    Instantly, the trial court found that the Lease Agreement was
    procedurally and substantively unconscionable because the terms of the Lease
    Agreement were starkly unfavorable to the Sisters, and the Sisters had no
    participation in the negotiation or execution of the Lease Agreement. Trial Ct.
    Op., 3/13/19, at 18. The court determined that the Sisters only became aware
    of the Lease Agreement after Father’s death. 
    Id.
     The trial court recognized
    that Father, Mother, and Reedy were the only parties named in the Lease
    Agreement. Id. at 19. The court, however, also determined that the plain
    language of the Lease Agreement anticipated the Sisters’ interests as future
    landlords of the Property. Id. The trial court concluded that the Sisters clearly
    had an interest at the time that the Lease Agreement was negotiated, but had
    no meaningful choice as to the terms of the Lease Agreement. Id.
    Further, the court found that under the Lease Agreement, Reedy is not
    obligated to pay rent and any rent collected upon subletting the Property is
    retained by Reedy. The Sisters are not entitled to any rent even though they
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    are landlords of the Property and are responsible, in part, for the expenses.
    Id. at 24. The trial court considered the testimony of Thomas I. Siegel, who
    was qualified as an expert in accounting and farming. Mr. Siegel testified that
    the Lease Agreement was unusual in that it did not provide for a source of
    income, and stated that he had never seen any type of lease that failed to
    provide some income and obligated the landlord to only pay expenses. Id. at
    9, citing N.T., 1/29/18, at 42. Mr. Siegel stated that the economic impact of
    the Lease Agreement is that the landlord is burdened with paying expenses
    with no offset for income so it is a detriment to value. Id. Accordingly, the
    trial court concluded that the Lease Agreement was unconscionable and
    therefore, unenforceable. Id. at 24.
    We   agree   with   the   trial   court   that   the   Lease   Agreement   is
    unconscionable. It was undisputed that the Sisters had no involvement in the
    formation or execution of the Lease Agreement. As such, they had no
    meaningful choice regarding its terms. Rather, they merely acquired the
    Property and became subject to the lease terms by operation of law. As the
    plain language of the Lease Agreement clearly states, the Sisters assumed the
    lease and they became landlords of the Property after the death of their
    surviving parent. Although they were not original parties to the Lease
    Agreement, they became subject to the Lease Agreement when they were
    placed into the position of landlords of the Property, without having any input
    in the Lease Agreement’s formation or terms.
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    As a result, the Sisters must pay 75% of enumerated expenses – real
    estate   taxes,    assessments,   insurance,    capital   improvements,     and
    extraordinary repairs – and receive no immediate benefit, while Reedy
    continues to live on the Property without paying rent and with sole entitlement
    to proceeds from the farm and any subleases. Respectfully, we believe that
    the Dissent’s contention that the Sisters could avoid this situation by
    disclaiming their interest in the property supports our conclusion. The
    Dissent’s position would put Sisters to a choice: either they accept the
    property with responsibility for enumerated expenses and subject to Reedy’s
    possession of it, while receiving no income from Reedy’s leasehold and having
    no possession of the property for years to come, or they disclaim their entire
    interest in the property and in so doing, forgo their inheritance. This is a
    Hobson’s choice.
    Since the terms of the Lease Agreement were starkly unfavorable to the
    Sisters and the Sisters had no meaningful choice regarding the acceptance of
    its provisions, the trial court did not err in finding the Lease Agreement
    unconscionable. Since we affirm the finding of unconscionability, we do not
    address the issue of consideration.
    Reedy next contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for
    summary judgment because “there [was] no material issue of fact or law
    whether there is no merit to [the Sisters’] claims that the terms of the [L]ease
    [A]greement are unconscionable, illusory, lacking consideration; and impose
    an unreasonable restraint on alienation of the [P]roperty.” Reedy’s Br. at 6.
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    Reedy acknowledges that much of his argument relevant to this issue was
    previously set forth in his first issue raised on appeal. Id. at 29. In denying
    Reedy’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court found that there were
    genuine issues of material fact as to the enforceability of the terms of the
    Lease Agreement based on the state of record at that time. Trial Ct. Op.,
    7/13/17, at 10. The court further found that the terms of the Lease Agreement
    were unclear as to the partition of obligations between the parties. Id.
    Therefore, the trial court denied Reedy’s motion for summary judgment. Id.
    Summary judgment is proper where there are no genuine issues of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    Nicolaou v. Martin, 
    195 A.3d 880
    , 891 (Pa. 2018) (citing Pa.R.C.P.
    1035.2(1)). “When considering a motion for summary judgment, the trial
    court must take all facts of record and reasonable inferences therefrom in a
    light most favorable to the non-moving party and must resolve all doubts as
    to the existence of a genuine issue of material fact against the moving party.”
    
    Id.
     “Only when the facts are so clear that reasonable minds could not differ
    can a trial court properly enter summary judgment.” Straw v. Fair, 
    187 A.3d 966
    , 982 (Pa.Super. 2018) (citation omitted).
    Here, the motion for summary judgment was filed almost one year
    before the evidentiary hearing. We agree with the trial court that, at that time,
    there were genuine issues of material fact precluding the entry of summary
    judgment, including disputes regarding the terms of the Lease Agreement
    (such as the parties’ responsibilities for the expenses). Therefore, summary
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    judgment would have been inappropriate at that time, and the trial court did
    not err in denying Reedy’s motion for summary judgment.
    Finally, Reedy contends that the trial court erred when it failed to rule
    on his affirmative defense of laches in his motion for summary judgment.
    Reedy asserts that the Sisters were fully aware of the terms of the Lease
    Agreement while the Trust was still in effect and they knew of the obligations
    associated with ownership of the Property. Reedy’s Br. at 39. Reedy maintains
    that the Sisters agreed to accept ownership of the Property knowing their
    obligations and are simply unhappy with the Lease Agreement. Id. at 39-40.
    The Sisters counter that they were not aware of the terms of the Lease
    Agreement until the death of Father in November 2010 and they were not
    bound to the Lease Agreement until October 2014 when Mother died. Sisters’
    Br. at 15. The Sisters further argue that Reedy has not shown any prejudice
    to him resulting from the Sisters’ alleged failure to bring the lawsuit at an
    earlier time. Id. at 16.
    “The doctrine of laches is an equitable bar to the prosecution of stale
    claims[.]” Fulton v. Fulton, 
    106 A.3d 127
    , 131 (Pa.Super. 2014). Laches
    bars relief when the complaining party delays in bringing a claim, to the
    prejudice of another. 
    Id.
     Reedy has not asserted any claim of that he was
    prejudiced by any delay by the Sisters in bringing their claims. Accordingly,
    this issue is without merit.
    Order affirmed.
    Judge Musmanno joins the Memorandum.
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    Judge Stabile files a Dissenting Memorandum Statement.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 10/15/2020
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