Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Contact an Atlanta DUI lawyer | creditor debtor update

Opinions daily, December 9, 2013. Citrus Tower Boulevard imaging Center LLC v. David S Owens M.D. P.C. A 13A1121, A 13A1122 (11/20/2013)
Creditors and debtors rights
The Court of Appeals affirmed the grant of the defendant’s Dr. David S Owens motion for summary judgment on Citrus Tower Boulevard imaging Center LLCs claim seeking to recover from him personally pursuant to a guarantee on a lease for certain magnetic resonance imaging equipment and related services, holding that the express and unambiguous language of the guaranty establish that the guarantor was David S Owens M.D. P.C., not Owens himself. The court held that Owen subsequently withdrawn admission regarding whether he signed the guaranty in his personal capacity, did not create an issue of fact precluding the grant of summary judgment and strongly cautioned trial courts against relying on any decisions employing dicta regarding the meaningless of a corporate guarantee of corporate debt as a justification for imposing personal liability on a signatory to a guarantee when the clear and unambiguous language of such indicates the exact opposite. In case number a 13, a 1122, the court affirm the grant of summary judgment, citrus Tower Boulevard imaging Center LLC on its breach of contract claim seeking to recover rent and other amounts due under the lease, holding that the lease was unambiguous and the trial court properly excluded parole evidence of any alleged oral agreements between the parties. The court also held that the trial court properly found that no genuine issue of fact existed as to whether Owens imaging Center was functionally operational pursuant to the terms of the lease, any error in the trial court’s failure to address Owens’s objection to the affidavit of citrus’ managing member was harmless and David S Owens M.D. P.C. cannot support its affirmative defenses of fraud in the inducement and lack of consideration. At the outset we note that summary judgment is appropriate when the moving party can show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. A movant may meet this burden on the documents affidavits and depositions and other evidence in the record reveal that there is no evidence sufficient to create a jury issue on at least one essential element of the plaintiff’s case. And should the moving party meet this burden the nonmoving party cannot rest on its pleadings but must point to specific evidence giving rise to a triable issue. So viewed, the record shows that Owens, the P.C.’s principal, is a radiologist whose practice focuses on reading and interpreting body scan images made with CRT, MRI, x-ray and other medical equipment. The P.C., according Owens, receives and interprets films from primarily around the southeast.
Citrus, a Georgia LLC, owned and managed a diagnostic imaging Center in Clermont, Florida. On or about December 16, 2008, Citrus and the P.C. enter into the lease agreement (lease) at issue here. Under the terms of this lease, which the parties agreed would be governed by Georgia law, the P.C. leased from Citrus the use of certain imaging equipment and related services. The P.C. initially agreed to pay citrus rent in the amount of 100,000 per month, but that amount was later increased 250,000 per month in a January 2009 amendment to the lease. The term of the lease was 10 years, “commencing on the first day that the imaging center is functionally operational”. The P.C.’s right to use the leased equipment was on a nonexclusive basis, and the rent was payable whether or not the P.C. actually used the leased equipment. On or about December 15, 2008 Owens executed a guarantee agreement also governed by Georgia law pursuant to which the guarantor agreed to guarantee to citrus the full and prompt payment in cash and whenever due all sums now or hereafter payable under the lease. And while it is not disputed that Owens signed the guaranty, the guarantor is designated as David Owens M.D. P.C. in two separate places, with Owens writing David Owens M.D. P.C. on the signature line. Owens also signed his name under the signature line accompanied by what he contends to be and citrus does not dispute, the designation of managing member. In October 2010 the P.C. announced that it was opening a satellite office in Clermont Florida. Owens testified that the Clermont facility began scanning real patients around October 2010 and that the facility open in the autumn of 2010. At the time, Owens and the P.C. began reading MRI scans taken at the Clermont facility. Nevertheless, the P.C. failed to make any rent payments under the lease, and in April 2011, citrus sent a demand letter to Owens and the P.C. requesting payment of past due rent, plus interest, from December 2010 through April 2011. And when no payments were forthcoming, citrus sued the P.C. and Owens in the state court of Fulton County, alleging breach of contract under both the lease and guarantee. The trial court subsequently granted Owens cross motion for summary judgment on citrus’s claims under the guarantee. Citrus appeals from this order in case number a 13A1121. But the trial court granted citrus’s motion for summary judgment against the P.C. as to citrus’s claims on the lease. In case number a 13A1122 the P.C. cross-appeals from this order. As applicable here, former OCGA 24-3-30 provides that without offering the same in evidence, either party may avail himself of allegations or admissions made in the pleadings of the other. 4 in admitting party to contravene its admission the party must first amend the pleadings to withdraw the admission in judicio before such evidence may be submitted. Even so the other party may rely on the original evidence. In other words, although a party may withdraw or strike from the pleadings an admission in judicio by amendment and tender evidence to contravene such admission, the opposite party can tender in evidence the original admission in judicial against such party as an admission against interest. Notwithstanding the foregoing in admission in judicial applies only to the admission of fact and does not apply where the admission is merely the opinion or conclusion of the pleader as to law or fact. Thus where the admission is simply an opinion on the part of the party making it as to the legal effect of the paper the withdrawn admission is not a fact that can be taken advantage of by the opposing party. Notwithstanding the foregoing, in admission in Judiciary applies only to the admission of fact, and in the case sub judice Owens withdrew his admission by amending his answer and so the relevant issue is whether the withdrawn admissions were nevertheless evidence of the fact that precluded the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Owens. And in our view the withdrawn admissions do not constitute such evidence. Owens admission that he executed the guaranty may demonstrate that he signed the guaranty, but that fact is undisputed and in itself does not create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Owens was personally bound thereby. And Owens’s admission that pursuant to the terms of the guarantee he guaranteed payment of all sums owing under the lease is only an opinion or conclusion as to the legal effect of that instrument. The elements of fraud according to the P.C., were established by Olin’s averment that citrus’s representative Franklin trial made false representations to Owens which Owens then relied upon in causing the P.C. to enter the lease, guarantee, and the amendment to the lease. According to Owens Trail falsely represented to him that citrus secured or would secure the elements of functionally operating imaging Center discussed supra, such as adequate patient referral flow agreements and insurance contracts, among other things. The P.C. asserts the jury could find that those representations were made with citrus’s knowledge that the statements were false or with an intent not to perform. Here however the P.C. continue to utilize the services provided by citrus’s Clermont facility even after it realized that the alleged representations were false and it opted not to formally rescind the lease even, according to Owens with the lawsuit coming on. And as we previously explained is incumbent upon a party who attempts to rescind a contract for fraud to repudiate it promptly on discovery of fraud. Thus in as much as the P.C. did not rescind the lease it was bound by the terms contained therein. Accordingly the P.C.’s precluded from relying on representations that were not part of the contract. And as fraud requires a showing of justifiable reliance, the P.C. simply cannot establish that it was fraudulently induced into entering into the lease and shows no grounds for reversal.
Lastly P.C. contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to citrus because there is a genuine issue of material fact as to its affirmative defense of lack of consideration. Once again we disagree the evidence showed that citrus did provide P.C. with the functionally operating imaging Center even though P.C. contends that there was a failure of consideration because it was never functionally operational. Contact an Atlanta DUI lawyer today.