J-A23039-18
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
ALLURE HAIR DESIGNS AND MINI SPA, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
INC. OF PENNSYLVANIA
APPELLEES
v.
JOHN S. GEORGE, JR. AND JAAM REAL
ESTATE HOLDINGS, LLC,
APPELLANTS No. 588 WDA 2018
Appeal from the Order April 18, 2018
In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
Civil Division at No: GD16-005896
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ALLURE HAIR DESIGNS AND MINI SPA, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
INC. OF PENNSYLVANIA
APPELLANTS
v.
JOHN S. GEORGE, JR. AND JAAM REAL
ESTATE HOLDINGS, LLC,
APPELLEES
No. 629 WDA 2018
Appeal from the Order Entered April 18, 2018
In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
Civil Division at No: GD16-005896
BEFORE: BOWES, SHOGAN AND STABILE, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED APRIL 11, 2019
J-A23039-18
These consolidated appeals arise from a landlord-tenant dispute in
which the tenant, Allure Hair Designs and Mini Spa, Inc. (“Allure”), sued the
landlord, John S. George, Jr. (“George”), and a limited liability company
owned by George, Jaam Real Estate Holdings, LLC (“Jaam”), for breach of
contract and fraud. The trial court, sitting without a jury, entered a
memorandum and decision in Allure’s favor on the contract claim.
Unfortunately, the memorandum did not address many of the issues raised by
the parties in their cross-appeals. Moreover, following the cross-appeals, the
court failed to file a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion. To remedy these omissions,
we remand with directions for the trial court to prepare a detailed opinion on
all issues raised by the parties in their cross-appeals.
On August 6, 2004, George leased Allure 1,309 square feet within a
shopping center located at 171 Wexford Bayne Road in Wexford,
Pennsylvania. The lease provided that Allure leased
those certain premises designated on the attached Exhibit “A” as
Tenant Suite No. 1 containing one thousand three hundred nine
(1,309) square feet (“Leased Square Feet”) of space (hereinafter
the “Premises”), within a commercial building located at 171
Wexford-Bayne Road (hereinafter referred to as “Building”) in
Wexford, Pennsylvania. The premises represent 21.4 percent of
the total occupiable square footage of the Building.
Lease, 8/6/04, at 1. The lease included a Noncompetition Clause that
provided that Allure would be the only hair salon in the Premises: “Lessor shall
not lease, rent or permit any tenant or occupant of the Premises, other than
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the lessee, to conduct any activity on the premises which consists of skin care,
pedicure, manicure, or hair design/styling services.” Id. at 15.
The trial court wrote:
The Lease was initially for a five (5) year term expiring October
31, 2009. Although Allure had options to renew the Lease for
additional five (5) year periods after the expiration of the initial
term, it declined to exercise such options. Instead, Allure
preferred to enter into one (1) year lease extensions in each of
the next seven (7) years following the initial term. The most
recent extension was executed by the parties on or about
September 21 2015 and covered the period November 1, 2015
through October 31, 2016. On April 14, 2016, George notified
Allure that he was terminating the Lease at the expiration of the
current extension (i.e., October 31, 2016). He also indicated he
would consider negotiating a new lease with Allure as long as the
new lease did not contain a non-competition clause. At the time
of the hearing in this matter, the parties had not negotiated a new
lease and the Allure Lease expired on October 31, 2016.
Defendant [Jaam] is a limited liability company owned by George.
Jaam acquired property situated at 181 Wexford-Bayne Road,
which is adjacent to the property owned by George at 171
Wexford-Bayne Road, by deed dated November 16, 2010 and
recorded January 6, 2011. The 181 Wexford-Bayne Road property
has been developed by [George and Jaam] almost identical[ly] to
the 171 Wexford-Bayne Road property in terms of appearance and
design. The two properties have separate buildings, but they
share a curb cut (as well as parking and common area expenses),
and the properties have been consolidated into a single lot and
block number on the Allegheny County real estate website.
Allure’s owners began to hear rumors in 2015 of a new salon
locating to [the 181 Wexford-Bayne Road] property and
confronted George about it prior to entering into their current one-
year lease extension. George denied entering into a lease with a
competing tenant, despite the fact that he had been negotiating
with Sola Salon, a business that provides hair salon services
similar to Allure but on a larger scale. On November 10, 2015,
[Jaam] entered into a ten (10) year lease with Eleven Eleven
Pennsylvania, LLC (d/b/a Sola Salon Studios) for a portion of the
building constructed on 181 Wexford-Bayne Road. Sola Salon has
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constructed substantial tenant improvements totaling $663,000 in
the property and is paying annual rent to Jaam in the amount of
$135,450. When Allure learned of Sola Salon Opening in the
adjacent building, Allure asked to be released from the remaining
eight (8) months of its lease so it could pursue other space in the
area, but Defendants refused.
Trial Court Memorandum, 2/2/18, at 1-3.
Allure filed a complaint against George and Jaam alleging breach of
contract and later amended its complaint to add a count for fraud. Allure
alleged in its contract claim that George and Jaam breached the
Noncompetition Clause in Allure’s lease by entering a lease with a competing
hair salon, Sola Salon, for space in the building next door to Allure. Allure
alleged in its fraud claim that George fraudulently induced Allure to renew its
lease by lying that he was not negotiating a lease with a rival salon.
On February 2, 2018, following a non-jury trial, the trial court entered
a memorandum and order ruling in favor of Allure on its breach of contract
claim in the amount of $20,392.40. Id. at 5. The trial court held that George
and Jaam breached the Noncompetition Clause in Allure’s lease by entering a
lease with a competing hair salon, Sola Salon, for space in the building next
door. The court, however, did not award damages on Allure’s fraud claim,
even though it criticized George’s fraudulent behavior in the course of deciding
the contract claim. Id. at 6 (observing that George “chose . . . to lie to [Allure]
about, or at least conceal, the fact that he was leasing to another hair salon”).
Allure filed post-trial motions in which it complained that the trial court
failed to award various items of damage on the contract claim and failed to
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decide the fraud claim. George and Jaam filed post-trial motions as well. The
trial court denied the parties’ post-trial motions, and they cross-appealed to
this Court at the above captioned numbers. The trial court did not order the
parties to file Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statements and did not file a Pa.R.A.P.
1925(a) opinion. Allure subsequently perfected all appeals by filing a praecipe
for entry of judgment on the decision.
Allure raises the following issues in its appeal at 629 WDA 2018:
I. Whether the trial court erred in denying [Allure]’s Motion for
Post-Trial Relief?
II. Whether the trial court erred in as a matter of law in denying
the issues raised by [Allure]’s Motion for Post-Trial Relief as
follows:
a. The Court did not issue a ruling on the claim of Fraudulent
Misrepresentation, which was added by way of Amended
Complaint on January 5, 2017, and properly before the Court,
especially as the Court found “Defendant George also chose to
either lie to [Allure] about, or at least conceal, the fact that he
was leasing to another hair salon.”
b. Additionally, the Court erred in failing to analyze the
damages through Restatement Second of Property; Landlord &
Tenant 7.2 as prescribed in Teodori v. Werner, 415 A.2d 31,
34 (Pa. 1980).
c. By failing to find that [Allure], as tenant, had the first right
of refusal under the lease and [was] therefore entitled to
remain on the property indefinitely and that the Landlord’s
termination of the lease was impermissible under Section 2 of
the Lease.
III. Whether the Court abused its discretion in ruling against the
weight of the evidence in the following manners:
a. By failing to award lost profits to [Allure] under either of the
following two arguments: 1.) the employees left [Allure] as a
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direct consequence of the Defendants’ actions in leasing the
property to a competitor; and/or 2.) [Allure] was not able to
fill open positions in a timely manner as a result of
Defendant[s] leasing the property to a competitor, leading to
significant lost profits.
b. By failing to rule in favor of the weight of the clear evidence
that [Allure] was unable to fill empty employment positions for
over six months, thereby causing lost profits, as a direct result
of the Defendants’ action.
c. By failing to consider the lost profits as introduced into
evidence at trial by Judy Campbell between the 2016 and 2015
tax returns in the amount of $60,919.00.
d. By failing to award moving and construction costs in light of
evidence presented at trial in the amount of $40,960.20 and
the Restatement Second of Property; Landlord & Tenant 10.2
in light of the evidence presented.
e. The Court’s determination that text messages between
[Allure] and a prospective employee were inadmissible hearsay
and not properly authenticated over [Allure]’s objections that
it was admissible evidence as provided under Commonwealth
v. Mosley, 114 A.3d 1072 (Pa. Super. 2015); see also
Commonwealth v. Koch, 106 A.3d 705 (Pa. 2014). Tamara
McCleary was not permitted to testify as to her own text
messages which she sent and received. This evidence would
have further established [Allure]’s inability to fill critical
positions, i.e., further evidence of lost profits[,] as profits are
generated by having stylists in the salon.
Allure’s Brief at 4-7.
George and Jaam raise the following issues in their cross-appeal at 588
WDA 2018:
I. Whether the court erred as a matter of law in finding that a
lease in after-acquired property was a breach of the non-
competition restrictions.
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II. Whether Landlord/Appellants are entitled to judgment as a
matter of law since the trial court held the damages claimed were
not proven or proximately caused by the actions complained of.
III. Whether the court erred as a matter of law by basing its
decision on its decision on its belief that Landlord “made a poor
business decision in holding [Allure] to the remaining months of
its lease” and therefore awarding rent abatement.
George and Jaam’s Brief at 4.
To review these cross-appeals properly, we require the trial court’s
analysis of all issues raised in the parties’ briefs. The February 2, 2018
memorandum and order implicitly denies Allure’s fraud claim but fails to
provide any reason for this decision. The memorandum and order further did
not explain why the court denied lost profits. Nor did the court file a Pa.R.A.P.
1925 opinion following the parties’ cross-appeals that examined each issue
raised by the parties. A comprehensive trial court opinion that addresses all
issues raised on appeal is essential to the appellate process. The absence of
such an opinion in this case is impeding effective appellate review.
Accordingly, we remand this case with instructions for the trial court to
prepare a detailed opinion on all issues raised in the parties’ briefs. To assist
the trial court in performing this duty, we direct the prothonotary to remand
the certified record to the trial court along with all briefs filed by the parties in
this Court. Within thirty days after receipt of the certified record, the trial
court shall file its opinion with its prothonotary, who shall promptly transmit
the certified record and opinion back to this Court for further review.
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Case remanded for proceedings in accordance with the foregoing
instructions. Jurisdiction retained.
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