[J-5-2019]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
EASTERN DISTRICT
SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.
GAMESA ENERGY USA, LLC AND : No. 28 EAP 2018
GAMESA TECHNOLOGY :
CORPORATION INC., : Appeal from the Judgment of Superior
: Court entered on March 19, 2018 at
Appellants : No. 1635 EDA 2016 affirming in part
: and reversing in part the Order
: entered on May 20, 2016 in the Court
v. : of Common Pleas, Philadelphia
: County, Civil Division at No. 03768
: March Term, 2013.
TEN PENN CENTER ASSOCIATES, L.P. :
AND SAP V TEN PENN CENTER NF G.P. : ARGUED: March 5, 2019
L.L.C., :
:
Appellees :
OPINION
JUSTICE DOUGHERTY DECIDED: September 26, 2019
We granted discretionary review of this commercial landlord and tenant dispute to
determine whether the Superior Court erred in holding the tenant was limited to damages
for breach of contract and could not also recover the rent it paid following the landlord’s
breach, despite prevailing on its claims for both remedies at trial. After careful review, for
the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I. Background
In 2008, Appellants, Gamesa Energy USA, LLC and Gamesa Technology
Corporation, Inc. (Gamesa), entered into a commercial lease agreement (the Lease) to
rent 35,000 square feet of office space in Philadelphia (the Premises) from Appellees,
Ten Penn Center Associates, L.P. and SAP V Ten Penn Center NF G.P. L.L.C.
(collectively Ten Penn Center). The base terms of the Lease provided for a ten-year term
ending September 2018, with annual rent escalating from $1,113,805 in year one to
$1,144,470 in year ten, and a “tenant improvement allowance,” or per-square-foot credit,
for Gamesa to build out the office space to its specifications.1
Additional relevant provisions of the Lease are its terms setting forth criteria for
subleasing and default. The Lease permitted Gamesa to sublease the premises, as long
as Ten Penn Center approved of the arrangement. Specifically, the Lease provided, in
pertinent part:
Tenant shall not . . . sublet all or any part of the Premises or permit the
same to be occupied or used by anyone other than Tenant or its
employees without Landlord’s prior written approval, which approval
shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed. . . .
Lease, Art. 20.1 (emphasis added). The Lease required Gamesa to submit its sublease
requests to Ten Penn Center in writing, including the following components: the proposed
sub-lessee’s name and address, a description of its business, its “most recent financial
statement and other evidence of its financial responsibility,” its intended use of the
premises, and the terms and conditions of the proposed sublease. Id. at Art. 20.2. Upon
receipt of such a request, the Lease required Ten Penn Center to grant or refuse its
consent to the proposed sublease within thirty days. Id. With regard to default, the Lease
provided, in relevant part, “[i]t shall be an ‘Event of Default’ under this Lease if . . . Tenant
1 The Lease initially provided an annual rent schedule of $1,113,805 in year one, then
$1,011,589 in year two, escalating to $1,232,235 in year ten, and a tenant improvement
allowance crediting Gamesa with $58.76 per square foot to improve the leased office
space. See Lease, dated January 23, 2008, at 2-4. In 2009, the parties made minor
amendments to the Lease, which incorporated the Lease, gave full effect to a majority of
the Lease terms, and included a reduction of the annual minimum rent schedule to
$939,332 in year two escalating to $1,144,470 in year ten, and the credit to $45 per
square foot. See First Amended Lease, dated January 1, 2009, at 2.
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vacates the Premises or attempts to remove or manifests an intention to remove any or
all of Tenant’s property from the Premises otherwise than in the ordinary and usual course
of business . . . .” Id. at Art. 22 (emphasis in original). In the event of a default by Gamesa,
the Lease entitled Ten Penn Center to terminate the lease, repossess the premises,
accelerate the amount of rent owed for the remainder of the ten-year lease term, charge
interest on overdue rent, and recover related attorney’s fees. Id. at Art. 23.
In May 2011, following Gamesa’s submission of the information required under
Article 20.2 of the Lease, Ten Penn Center approved a request to sublease approximately
15,000 square feet, or forty percent of the Premises, to Viridity Energy, Inc. (Viridity)
through August of 2018. N.T. 10/14/15, at 66-69. Ten Penn Center allowed Gamesa to
use a portion of its improvement allowance to outfit the space for Viridity, after which point
Gamesa’s remaining credit balance was approximately $391,000. Id. at 73.
In April 2012, Gamesa informed Ten Penn Center it would be moving out of the
Premises as part of a corporate consolidation, and would continue to pay its monthly rent
and attempt to find a sub-lessee for the open space. Id. at 92-93. Gamesa vacated the
Premises on May 18, 2012. Id. at 94-95. Viridity remained in the Premises under the
terms of its sublease with Gamesa. Though Gamesa submitted its June 2012 rent
payment eighteen days late, and its July rent two days late, the parties agree Gamesa
continued to make all of its rent payments on time thereafter. Id. at 118, 139.
On June 12, 2012, Gamesa submitted a request to Ten Penn Center for consent
to sublease 5,200 square feet of the Premises to Business Services International, LLC
(BSI), a business entity comprised of two foreign corporations formed for the particular
purpose of subleasing office space through Gamesa. Id. at 89-90; Trial Court Findings
of Fact and Conclusions of Law, dated February 23, 2016, at 4 ¶13. The proposed BSI
sublease anticipated rental payments totaling $265,460 over a three-year term. N.T.
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10/15/15, at 17-18. Ten Penn Center responded on June 26th, informing Gamesa it was
in default of the Lease for vacating the Premises and, as a result, Ten Penn Center had
no obligation to entertain the request to sublease. N.T. 10/14/15, at 102-104; Letter dated
June 26, 2012, Trial Court Exhibit P-9. Ten Penn Center also noted Gamesa’s late rent
payment for June. Id. Nevertheless, Ten Penn Center provided comments and questions
about the proposed BSI sublease, and requested BSI’s financials, which had not been
included with the initial request. Id; see Email and Attachments dated June 12, 2012,
Trial Court Exhibit P-7. Via letter dated July 5th, Gamesa objected to the assertion a
default had occurred, but provided Ten Penn Center with the requested information.
Email dated July 5, 2012, Trial Court Exhibit P-13. On July 13th, Ten Penn Center
reiterated its position asserting Gamesa was in default for vacating the Premises;
however, Ten Penn Center proposed it would grant consent to the BSI sublease if
Gamesa forfeited its remaining tenant improvement allowance. N.T. 10/14/15, at 124-25,
140-41. Thereafter, negotiations between the parties stalled, and the proposed sublease
with BSI never materialized.
On March 23, 2013, Gamesa filed a complaint against Ten Penn Center, asserting
claims of breach of contract, tortious interference in business relationships, and unjust
enrichment. Complaint at 9-14. Gamesa alleged Ten Penn Center materially breached
the Lease by declaring Gamesa in default without basis; failing to accept or reject the
sublease proposal within thirty days as required by the Lease; and unreasonably
withholding or conditioning its consent to the sublease. Gamesa sought a declaration the
Lease had been terminated as of the date Ten Penn Center declared Gamesa in default,
and damages reflecting, inter alia, lost revenue associated with the proposed BSI
sublease and return of all rent payments Gamesa made to Ten Penn Center since July
2012. In 2015, prior to trial, Ten Penn Center provided Gamesa with the remainder of its
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tenant improvement allowance, and Gamesa improved the unfinished portion of the
Premises. N.T. 10/14/15, at 154, 178. Until and through the trial, Gamesa continued to
pay its rent, accept sub-rent from Viridity, and attempt to recruit potential sub-lessees,
including hiring brokers, developing marketing materials, and coordinating building
access for prospective sub-lessees. Id. at 176-80.
Following a non-jury trial, the trial court entered a verdict in favor of Gamesa,
determining Ten Penn Center had breached the Lease in three specific ways: first, by
advising Gamesa it was in default; second, by failing to approve or reject the proposed
BSI sublease within thirty days of receipt of the request; and third, by unreasonably
withholding, conditioning, or delaying its approval. Trial Court Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law dated February 23, 2016, at 6, ¶¶24-25. The court noted Ten Penn
Center did not declare a default of the Lease in April 2012 when it learned Gamesa would
move out of the Premises, nor when it actually moved out on May 18, 2012, but declared
the default only after receiving Gamesa’s request for the BSI sublease, on June 26, 2012.
Id. at ¶¶10-12, 22. The court found Gamesa had submitted a good faith and reasonable
sublease application for BSI, noting the foreign corporations comprising BSI had a history
of working in the United States and working together as well as with Gamesa, and
provided references from the Governor’s Office of International Business Development in
support of their business development activities within the state. Id. at 4-5, ¶¶14-17, 20-
21. The court further found Ten Penn Center’s continuing claim Gamesa was in default
resulted in Gamesa’s reasonable belief it could not acquire a new subtenant while the
validity of its own lease was unresolved. Id. at 6, ¶24.
With specific regard to Ten Penn Center’s declaration of default and its purported
failure to accept or reject the sublease application within thirty days, the trial court
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concluded these defaults by Ten Penn Center constituted a material breach, as they
prevented Gamesa from obtaining any additional subtenant, while Ten Penn Center
continued to collect rent from Gamesa. Id. at 8, ¶3. In reaching this result, the court first
determined Gamesa did not default on the Lease as it “did not have the requisite intent
to abandon the Premises,” and continued to pay rent and occupy the Premises through
its subtenant Virdity. Id. at 7-8, ¶2. In addition, the court concluded Ten Penn Center’s
conduct — specifically, its delay of subtenant approval, its attempt to renegotiate the
tenant improvement allowance, its operating under a self-declared default without
demanding immediate repossession of the Premises, and its continued collection of the
full rent — did not conform to standards of good faith and fair dealing, and thus was
relevant to determining the materiality of the breach. Id. at 8-9, ¶3, citing Restatement
(Second) of Contracts §241(e) (“In determining whether a failure to render or to offer
performance is material, the following circumstances are significant . . . (e) the extent to
which the behavior of the party failing to perform or to offer to perform comports with
standards of good faith and fair dealing.”). As a result, the court determined Ten Penn
Center’s breach was material and sufficient to terminate the Lease retroactively to July
22, 2012, the date when, by the trial court’s calculation, Ten Penn Center failed to reject
or approve the proposed BSI sublease after it had also wrongfully declared Gamesa in
default.2 Id. at 9, ¶4. For breach of contract, the court awarded Gamesa damages equal
to the amount it would have received under the proposed three-year BSI sublease
2 Despite ruling Gamesa’s Lease with Ten Penn Center was terminated on July 22, 2012,
the trial court left Gamesa’s sublease with Virdity intact, directing full payment of rent be
made to Ten Penn Center for Viridity’s portion of the Premises. See Trial Court Findings
of Fact and Conclusions of Law dated February 23, 2016, at 9 ¶4.
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(totaling $265,463 plus pre-judgment interest). The court also concluded Ten Penn
Center was unjustly enriched in the amount of rent paid by Gamesa to Ten Penn Center
from the July 22, 2012 Lease termination until the conclusion of trial, and awarded
Gamesa additional damages of $3,639,202.87, i.e., the reimbursement of rents paid from
July 22, 2012 through the end of trial. See id. at 9-10, ¶¶5-6.
Both parties filed post-trial motions. Gamesa requested the court mold the verdict
to include pre- and post- judgment interest, which the trial court granted. Ten Penn Center
requested to supplement the trial record with evidence Gamesa had subleased space in
the building after trial, and requested the court vacate judgment against it, but the trial
court denied both requests. Ten Penn Center filed a praecipe to enter judgment on the
entire verdict amount including damages for breach of contract and termination; judgment
was entered, and Ten Penn Center timely appealed to the Superior Court.
In its published opinion, a three-judge panel of the Superior Court affirmed the trial
court’s award of damages to Gamesa based on breach of contract by Ten Penn Center,
i.e., the value of the BSI sublease, but reversed the retroactive termination of the Lease
and resultant award of rents paid after July 22, 2012 based on unjust enrichment. See
Gamesa Energy USA, LLC v. Ten Penn Center Associates, L.P. 181 A.3d 1188 (Pa.
Super. 2018).
Reviewing the express language of the Lease, which provided, “[i]t shall be an
‘Event of Default’ under this Lease if . . . (ii) [Gamesa] vacates the Premises[,]” the panel
first determined the trial court erred in concluding Gamesa had not defaulted by vacating
the Premises. Id. at 1192-1193, quoting Lease at Art. 22 (emphasis in original). Because
the Lease clearly specified Gamesa would be in default if it vacated the premises, and
[J-5-2019] - 7
Gamesa undisputedly moved out on May 18, 2012, the panel determined Gamesa did
vacate the premises and thus did default on the Lease; however, since Ten Penn Center
chose not to terminate the Lease, as allowed under its terms, and did not seek any
damages as a result of Gamesa’s default, the panel further determined — and Ten Penn
Center acknowledged at trial — Ten Penn Center waived any legal remedies it had due
to breach of contract by Gamesa. Id.
Next, the Superior Court panel reviewed the trial court’s finding Ten Penn Center
breached its duties under Articles 20.1 and 20.2 of the Lease. Id. at 1193. The panel
considered the Lease’s proviso that Gamesa was not permitted to sublet portions of the
Premises to another party “without [Ten Penn Center's] prior written approval, which
approval shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed.” Id., quoting Lease
at Art. 20.1. The panel further observed that, upon Gamesa’s written request including
the proposed sub-lessee’s “most recent financial statement and other evidence of
financial responsibility,” Ten Penn Center was required to approve or deny the request
within thirty days. Id., quoting Lease at Art. 20.2.
The panel determined the trial court’s finding Ten Penn Center unreasonably and
impermissibly delayed its consent was factually and legally erroneous. Id. On its review
of the record, the panel noted Gamesa, despite making its first request for approval of the
BSI sublease on June 12, 2012, did not provide BSI’s most recent financial statement to
Ten Penn Center until July 5, 2012; thus, under the thirty-day deadline provision in Article
20.2 of the Lease, Ten Penn Center’s approval or denial was required by August 4, 2012
[J-5-2019] - 8
and not, as the trial court calculated, July 22, 2012.3 Id. The panel reasoned Ten Penn
Center’s response on July 13th, proposing Gamesa forfeit its remaining tenant
improvement allowance in exchange for approval of the BSI sublease, was a counter-
offer — and therefore a rejection — of the original offer which placed a new offer on the
table for Gamesa to consider. Id., citing Yarnall v. Almy, 703 A.2d 535, 539 (Pa. Super.
1997) (“[A] reply which . . . changes the terms of the offer, is not an acceptance, but,
rather, is a counter-offer, which has the effect of terminating the original offer.”) (citations
omitted). Concluding Ten Penn Center rejected the proposed BSI sublease within thirty
days, the Superior Court panel rejected the trial court’s ruling Ten Penn Center failed to
timely accept or reject the sublease. Id.
However, regarding Ten Penn Center’s conditioning of its approval of the sublease
on forfeiture of Gamesa’s tenant improvement credit, the Superior Court panel affirmed
the trial court’s conclusion the condition was unreasonable. The panel explained the
record reflected a credibility determination by the trial court, which rejected Ten Penn
Center’s claim it reasonably conditioned sublease approval upon Gamesa’s default and
BSI’s poor financials, and specifically found Gamesa’s request was made in good faith.
The panel declined to disturb this credibility determination, noting an appellate court lacks
authority to do so. Id. at 1192, 1194, quoting Ruthrauff, Inc. v. Ravin, Inc., 914 A.2d 880,
888 (Pa. Super. 2006) (“Issues of credibility and conflicts in evidence are for the trial court
3As the Superior Court panel noted, the trial court’s calculations and its resulting orders
appear also to include a scrivener’s error. See Gamesa, 187 A.3d at 1193, n.2.
Gamesa’s first request to Ten Penn Center for approval of its BSI sublease was made on
June 12, 2012. Assuming as the trial court did, though erroneously, the sublease
application was complete as of June 12, the 30-day time period for approval would have
been July 12, 2012, not July 22, 2012.
[J-5-2019] - 9
to resolve; [the Superior Court] is not permitted to reexamine the weight and credibility
determinations or substitute our judgment for that of the factfinder.”) (citations omitted).
Thus the panel discerned no error in the trial court’s finding Ten Penn Center
unreasonably withheld or conditioned its consent to sublease, thereby breaching one of
its duties under the Lease. Id. at 1194. The Superior Court therefore affirmed the award
to Gamesa of damages for breach of contract, i.e., the loss of the BSI sublease.
Turning to the question of whether the trial court properly considered the Lease
was terminated by Ten Penn Center’s breach, such that Gamesa should be entitled to
reimbursement of rent paid after that termination, the panel determined the trial court
erred. The panel reasoned Gamesa had “elected its remedy” of damages for breach of
contract, instead of reimbursement of rents paid after termination, by continuing to
perform and benefit under the Lease after the date of breach, i.e., Gamesa made all of
its rent payments, continued to collect rent from Viridity and seek other subtenants, and
used its remaining tenant improvement credit to build out the office space. Id. at 1194-
95. Therefore, the panel reasoned, Gamesa could not achieve a double recovery through
reimbursement of rent paid after Ten Penn Center breached the Lease in addition to
damages for the breach. Id. at 1195, quoting Wedgewood Diner, Inc. v. Good, 534 A.2d
537, 538 (Pa. Super. 1987) (doctrine of election of remedies denotes “the act of choosing
between two or more different and coexisting modes of procedure and relief allowed by
the law on the same state of facts[;]” a party’s unequivocal choice of “one of two or more
inconsistent remedial rights” precludes any benefit from the other remedies) and
McCausland v. Wagner, 78 A.3d 1093, 1102 (Pa. Super. 2013) (“[i]n a breach of contract
suit, the plaintiff either may rescind the contract and seek restitution or enforce the
[J-5-2019] - 10
contract and recover damages based on expectation. . . . [T]he inconsistent nature of
those actions is obvious — one cannot attempt to terminate his contractual obligations
and, at the same time, seek to enforce the contract and enjoy its full benefits in an action
for breach.”) (citations omitted, emphasis in original).
Accordingly, while the panel affirmed the trial court’s award of damages to Gamesa
for breach of contract arising from its inability to sublease to BSI, the panel reversed the
trial court’s decision retroactively terminating the Lease and awarding damages based on
rent payments made after Ten Penn Center’s breach.4
Both parties sought allowance of appeal and we granted discretionary review of
the following questions as stated by Gamesa:
a. May a litigant simultaneously pursue inconsistent, alternative remedies in a
civil action in Pennsylvania prior to the entry of final judgment?
b. When one party to a contract breaches, should the non-breaching party be
permitted to continue performance, if reasonable under the circumstances,
and to maintain, in the alternative, causes of action for termination of the
agreement if material, or if not material, for damages from the breach?
Gamesa Energy USA, LLC v. Ten Penn Center Associates, L.P., 191 A.3d 749 (Pa.
2018).5 The questions presented are issues of law, our standard of review is de novo,
and our scope of review is plenary. Schwartz v. Rockey, 932 A.2d 885, 891 (Pa. 2007).
Notwithstanding the precise terms of the two questions accepted for review, the parties
focus their arguments on the doctrine of election of remedies, and its interpretation and
4 The Superior Court also resolved issues raised by Ten Penn Center regarding the trial
court’s computation of damages and admission of certain evidence, which are not
relevant to this appeal. See Gamesa 181 A.3d at 1194.
5In the same per curiam order, we denied Ten Penn Center’s Cross Petition for Allowance
of Appeal challenging that portion of the Superior Court’s decision affirming damages for
breach of contract. Gamesa Energy USA, LLC v. Ten Penn Center Associates, L.P., 191
A.3d 749 (Pa. 2018).
[J-5-2019] - 11
application to the present factual scenario. “The primary substantive application of the
doctrine has been to prevent double recovery for a single injury . . . and thus, an election
should be required among inconsistent remedies at some point prior to the entry of a final
judgment.” Id. at 892 citing 25 Am.Jur.2d Election of Remedies §3 (2007) (“The purpose
of the doctrine of election of remedies is not to prevent recourse to any remedy, or to
alternative remedies, but to prevent double recoveries or redress for a single wrong.”).
See also Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining “election of remedies” as “a
claimant’s act of choosing between two or more concurrent but inconsistent remedies
based on a single set of facts,” and stating, “a claimant cannot simultaneously recover
damages based on two different liability findings if the injury is the same for both claims,
thus creating a double recovery.”).
Gamesa first argues the Superior Court’s determination Gamesa was bound by its
continued performance of its Lease obligations to seek damages for breach of contract
only — rather than the concurrent remedy of Lease termination and return of rent
payments — created a rule which operates to preclude litigants from pursuing
inconsistent alternative remedies in a civil action. Gamesa contends this rule is unduly
strict, forcing all of the risk upon a non-breaching party who must guess whether the
factfinder will determine if a breach is material. Gamesa notes a plaintiff who makes an
early “election of remedies” is bound to pursue that chosen remedy to the exclusion of all
other inconsistent remedies and, though legitimately aggrieved, risks recovering nothing
by selecting the wrong theory to advance in litigation. See Appellant’s Brief at 29-30, citing
Umbelina v. Adams, 34 A.3d 151 (Pa. Super. 2011) (where plaintiff made pre-trial election
to pursue rescission of contract for construction of home but did not prove material
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breach, trial court erred by awarding damages for plaintiff’s abandoned breach of
warranty claim despite defective workmanship). Observing the primary objective of the
election of remedies doctrine is to prevent double recovery, not to prevent a party from
pursuing alternative claims, Gamesa submits a plaintiff should not be required to elect its
remedy until after the verdict, i.e., after a factfinder has determined if a breach is material,
but prior to the entry of judgment. Gamesa relies on Schwartz, 932 A.2d 885, which
explained, “an early election may operate to the prejudice of an innocent party, given the
inability to predict the course of the litigation relative to any particular claim for relief[,]”
and “an election should be required among inconsistent remedies at some point prior to
the entry of a final judgment.” See Appellant’s Brief at 31, 36, quoting Schwartz, 932 A.2d
at 892-93. Gamesa argues it did not seek double recovery from the trial court, but instead
brought alternative claims for either termination of the Lease or damages for partial
breach, and was thwarted from electing its remedy prior to judgment as a result of Ten
Penn Center’s filing of a praecipe for judgment.
Alternatively, Gamesa argues the appropriate standard for assessing the
significance of non-breaching parties’ post-breach conduct is whether their continued
performance was commercially reasonable; if it was, then continued performance does
not waive a cause of action for material breach, and the non-breaching party may maintain
causes of action for both material and non-material breach. Analogizing commercial
leases to the sale of goods as governed by the Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”), and
noting both types of transactions share similarities by virtue of their long-term contractual
relationships, Gamesa argues that in certain situations where a purchaser has breached
a contract, the UCC allows a seller of goods the option of completing its performance
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under the contract “in the exercise of reasonable commercial judgment,” and then seeking
damages for its complete performance. See Id. at 40-41, citing Official Comment 1 to
UCC §2-703 (Article 2 of the UCC “rejects any doctrine of election of remedy as a
fundamental policy and thus the remedies are essentially cumulative in nature and include
all of the available remedies for breach. Whether the pursuit of one remedy bars another
depends entirely on the facts of the individual case.”) and Official Comment 2 to UCC §2-
704. Gamesa also relies on Northern Helex Co. v. United States, 455 F.2d 546 (Ct. Cl.
1972), which invoked UCC Sections 2-703 and 2-704 to determine a gas plant’s
continued delivery of helium to the federal government, after the government breached
the parties’ contract by failing to pay, could be commercially reasonable under the
circumstances, and therefore the plant’s post-breach performance did not bar its claim
for material breach at the summary judgment stage.
Gamesa thereby argues the Superior Court failed to consider the reasonableness
of its continuing to pay rent in light of its duty to its sub-lessee, as well as Ten Penn
Center’s purported bad faith, and the consequences Gamesa would face for abandoning
the Lease, including: liability for material breach and attorneys’ fees if the court did not
agree Ten Penn Center materially breached; acceleration of the full amount of
approximately $5 million in rent due for the entire Lease term; and liability to Viridity in the
event of eviction by Ten Penn Center. Gamesa thus contends it had no choice but to
continue performing under the Lease, and the Superior Court’s holding now precludes
innocent, non-breaching parties from pursuing a valid claim for material breach if they
have performed in any reasonable way after the other party’s breach, and forces innocent
parties to take an immediate position regarding a breach prior to gathering all necessary
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facts through the discovery process and notwithstanding the complexity of the relationship
and amount of money at issue.
Conversely, Ten Penn Center observes a distinction between a “procedural”
election of remedies pertaining to what kind of damages can be simultaneously
recovered, and the contractual, “substantive” election of remedies through which a party’s
continued performance of contract obligations waives its right to restitution for a material
breach by the other party. See Appellees’ Brief at 39-44, citing, e.g., 25 Am. Jur. 2d
Election of Remedies §2 (2014) (“[T]he doctrine . . . is not a rule of substantive law but
one of procedure or judicial administration”); but cf., e.g., 17A Am. Jur. 2d Contracts §710,
(2019) (Regarding an election to treat a breach as total or partial, “[a] party waives the
right to restitution for total breach when it accepts or receives partial performance.”). Ten
Penn Center submits litigants are permitted to plead and pursue inconsistent remedies,
as Gamesa did at trial, but the Superior Court correctly rejected the trial court’s
“retroactive-termination-and-give-back-the-rent remedy” based on Gamesa’s continued
performance that rendered termination of the Lease and reimbursement of rents an
improper remedy. Id. at 40-41.
Specifically, and consistent with the Superior Court’s reasoning, Ten Penn Center
argues settled principles of contract law definitively determine that Gamesa’s continued
payment of rent to Ten Penn Center, as well as its continued possession of the Premises,
acceptance of rent from its sub-lessee, and exhaustion of its tenant improvement credit
to build out the space, affirmed the Lease and surrendered any right it might have had to
terminate the Lease. See id. at 21-29, 54, citing, e.g., Gillard v. Martin, 13 A.3d 482, 487
(Pa. Super. Ct. 2010) (quoting 13 Williston on Contracts §39:32, 4th ed., “When one party
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commits a material breach of contract, the other party has a choice between two
inconsistent rights — it can either elect to allege a total breach, terminate the contract
and bring an action or, instead, elect to keep the contract in force, declare the default only
a partial breach, and recover those damages caused by that partial breach — but the
nonbreaching party, by electing to continue receiving benefits [under] the agreement,
cannot then refuse to perform [its] part of the bargain.”). In reliance on these principles,
Ten Penn Center acknowledges its own expressed remedy under the Lease for
Gamesa’s default-by-vacating was to terminate the Lease and repossess the Premises
— in other words, to declare a material breach and rescind the contract. Ten Penn Center
claims that by not doing so, it elected to continue performing its own obligations under the
contract, and conclusively elected against, or waived, any claim for termination as a result
of Gamesa vacating the premises. Id. at 54-55. Likewise, Ten Penn Center argues,
Gamesa elected to continue paying rent and benefitting from the Lease following Ten
Penn Center’s breach, and therefore also conclusively elected against terminating the
Lease and seeking damages for its rescission. Id.
Ten Penn Center further submits termination or rescission of the contract is a
viable remedy only when both parties can be restored to their original positions, and once
a party receives a benefit under a contract, rescission is barred. Id. at 33-34, quoting
Harold ex rel. Harold v. McCann, 406 F. Supp. 2d 562, 575 (E.D. Pa. 2005) (quoting
Doppler v. Doppler, 574 A.2d 1101, 1106 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1990)) (“It is axiomatic that ‘a
rescission can only be granted where the parties to a contract can be restored to their
original positions with regard to the subject matter of the contract.’”) and Crown Coal &
Coke Co. v. Powhatan Mid-Vol Coal Sales, L.L.C., 929 F. Supp. 2d 460, 472 (W.D. Pa.
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2013) (“The injured party’s retention of any benefit received under the contractual
undertaking bars rescission.”) (additional citations omitted). Ten Penn Center notes the
trial court’s award based upon purported termination or rescission of the Lease actually
deprived it of nearly four years’ rent for a period of time when Gamesa had legal
possession of the Premises, while Gamesa received the windfall double recovery of both
contract damages (for the loss of the BSI sublease) and four years of rent-free tenancy.
Id. at 35-36.
Ten Penn Center distinguishes the circumstances of Northern Helex from its
relationship with Gamesa, as the UCC principles relied on therein provide a remedy to a
seller of goods, a wholly different creature from the lessee in a commercial lease contract.
Id. at 44-45. Ten Penn Center notes a seller of goods may exercise commercial
reasonableness in opting to continue its performance of the contract despite a breach by
the buyer only to the extent the seller cannot otherwise resell the goods. Id. at 45.
Moreover, the factual circumstances of Northern Helex are not analogous: there, it was
physically impossible for the non-breaching chemical plant seller to cease production of
helium, a byproduct of its other operations, and it did not have the capacity to store it;
thus, under those unique circumstances, the plant had no option but to continue delivering
the product even after the buyer failed to pay for it. Id. at 48-49. Contrarily, Ten Penn
Center observes, in the instant case there were no special facts justifying a material
breach claim in spite of continued performance by Gamesa, and it was merely risky, not
impossible, for Gamesa to declare a material breach and insist on termination of the
Lease. Essentially, Ten Penn Center contends the risk Gamesa faced by deciding to
terminate the Lease before knowing whether a breach by Ten Penn Center would be
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legally considered “material” is a risk it should have anticipated in accordance with
contract law principles. Id. at 37-38, citing, e.g., Surgical Laser Techs., Inc. v. Heraeus
Laseronics, Inc., 1995 WL 70535, at *4 (E.D. Pa. Feb. 15, 1995) (plaintiff’s claimed
vulnerability to countersuit for breach if it terminated agreement and court later found
defendant’s breach immaterial did not override established election-of-remedies rule, but
“simply reflect[ed] the risks imposed by Pennsylvania law on the non-breaching party to
a contract.”). Ten Penn Center thus seeks affirmance of the Superior Court’s decision.6
II. Discussion
Preliminarily, we note “a lease is in the nature of a contract and is to be controlled
by principles of contract law.” Pugh v. Holmes, 405 A.2d 897, 903 (Pa. 1979).
Furthermore, we recognize “parties have the right to make their own contract, and it is not
the function of this Court to re-write it, or to give it a construction in conflict with the
accepted and plain meaning of the language used.” Amoco Oil Co. v. Snyder, 478 A.2d
795, 798 (Pa. 1984) (internal formatting omitted). We further recognize the following
lower court determinations — which are not challenged in this appeal and thus are settled
matters for purposes of this case — provide context for our analysis of the issues at hand:
Gamesa first defaulted on the Lease by vacating the Premises in May 2012 and therefore
6 In support of Ten Penn Center, the Philadelphia Real Estate Council, a self-described
real estate industry peer group, filed an amicus curiae brief, largely reiterating Ten Penn
Center’s arguments, but underscoring that reinstatement of the trial court’s order would
vitiate landlords’ ability to cure performance defects for the sake of preserving leases.
According to amicus, such a consequence significantly elevates the landlord’s risk, and
within the context of commercial leases, subjects landlords to the unpredictable prospect
of being forced to provide multiple years of million-dollar tenancies, potentially rent-free.
Amicus contends this result would have a deleterious effect on Pennsylvania’s sizable
commercial real estate market. See Amicus Brief at 15-19.
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Ten Penn Center’s declaration of Gamesa’s default by letter dated June 26, 2012 was
not itself a breach; however, despite continuing to raise the default as an excuse for its
own contractual obligations, Ten Penn Center waived Gamesa’s default by not pursuing
damages or termination of the Lease; Ten Penn Center responded timely to the BSI
sublease request, and did not breach the Lease in that respect; Ten Penn Center did
breach the Lease by unreasonably conditioning its approval of the BSI sublease on
Gamesa’s forfeiture of its tenant improvement credit; and, Gamesa is entitled to damages
for that breach in the amount of sublease rent it would have received from BSI.
As we have noted, the purpose of the doctrine of election of remedies is to prevent
a windfall or double recovery for a single injury. See Schwartz, 932 A.2d at 892, citing 25
Am.Jur.2d Election of Remedies §3 (2007) (“The purpose of the doctrine of election of
remedies is not to prevent recourse to any remedy, or to alternative remedies, but to
prevent double recoveries or redress for a single wrong.”). Moreover, we have observed
there are both procedural and substantive applications of the doctrine. Id.
As a procedural issue, the election of remedies doctrine arises out of fairness to
opposing parties, and relates to whether a party is prevented from pleading and pursuing
inconsistent claims in a civil action. Id. at 892-94 (in absence of demonstrated detrimental
reliance by opposing party, plaintiff may substitute claim with inconsistent remedy in
amended pleading); see also 25 Am.Jur.2d Election of Remedies §3 (2007) (doctrine “is
designed to mitigate possible unfairness to both parties [and] rests on the moral premise
that it is fair to hold people responsible for their choices”). Our courts have consistently
held once a party makes a “binding” election of one remedy over other inconsistent
remedies, it is precluded from thereafter maintaining an action on those inconsistent
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remedies; further, a “binding” election of remedies occurs when there has been a legal
resolution, such as a settlement, a stipulation, a waiver, an expressed withdrawal or
abandonment of claims, a judgment, or application of another exclusionary rule, and in
such circumstances, the electing party may no longer pursue alternative forms of relief
on a given claim. See, e.g., Pittsburgh Union Stock Yards Co. v. Pittsburgh Joint Stock
Yards Co., 163 A. 668, 669 (Pa. 1932) (party invoking contract’s binding arbitration
provision could not later seek court’s merits review of unfavorable judgment; the election,
once made, was irrevocable); Wedgewood Diner, 534 A.2d 537 (plaintiff recovering
breach of contract damages against one defendant was barred from pursuing rescission
of the same contract against a second defendant); Umbelina, 34 A.3d 151 (despite
unsuccessful claim for rescission, plaintiff could not recover damages on breach of
warranty claim where it made pretrial election to abandon breach claim and pursue only
rescission), appeal denied 47 A.3d 848 (Pa. 2012); McCausland v. Wagner, 78 A.3d 1093
(Pa. Super. 2013) (plaintiff who pleaded claims seeking both contract damages and
rescission was barred from pursuing rescission claim after accepting settlement for
damages); but see, e.g., Appeal of Kreiser, 19 P.F. Smith 194 (Pa. 1871) (election not
binding until all circumstances known).
In Schwartz, this Court determined a plaintiff’s initially-pleaded claim for contract-
based damages did not foreclose a subsequent, properly-pleaded substitution of that
claim with one seeking the inconsistent remedy of contract rescission. In allowing the
amendment, the Court reasoned, “an early election may operate to the prejudice of an
innocent party, given the inability to predict the course of the litigation relative to any
particular claim for relief[;]” further, a plaintiff’s access to relevant information may only be
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available via discovery, and plaintiff may otherwise inadvertently waive claims if it cannot
access material facts. Schwartz, 932 A.2d at 893. Moreover, our Rules of Civil Procedure
expressly allow the pleading of alternative causes of action, see Pa.R.C.P. 1020(c), and
further permit liberal amendment of pleadings in order to secure a proper determination
of the merits. See Morrison Informatics, Inc. v. Members 1st Federal Credit Union, 139
A.3d 1241, 1246 (Pa. 2016). Accordingly, a party may generally simultaneously plead
and attempt to prove alternative causes of action seeking damages through inconsistent
remedies supported by the same factual scenario. Gamesa, unencumbered by any
procedurally binding election, was properly permitted to plead and pursue its alternative
claims seeking the inconsistent remedies of damages for breach of contract and for
termination/rescission of the Lease.
However, the substantive application of the election of remedies doctrine operates
to bar windfall judgments or otherwise duplicative recoveries resulting from a single injury;
although such inconsistent remedies may be pleaded and pursued in litigation, damages
calculated pursuant to only one theory may be recovered. Schwartz 932 A.2d at 892-94;
Colonial Trust Co. v. Flanagan, 25 A.2d 728, 730 (Pa. 1942) (“[T]he law will not allow [a
party] to claim by two judgments in the same action, or to reverse his judgment and still
claim by it; or to say I will hold by the one and take all I can get by the other.”); see, e.g.,
Wedgewood Diner, 534 A.2d at 538, quoting 40 A.L.R.4th 627 at §2[a] (“The phrase
[election of remedies denotes] the doctrine that the adoption, by an unequivocal act, of
one of two or more inconsistent remedial rights has the effect of precluding a resort to the
others.”). Logically, as the particular facts and circumstances of a case, including the
conduct of the parties, are relevant in determining which claims fail or succeed, they are
[J-5-2019] - 21
also relevant in determining which one of any inconsistent remedies is the appropriate
award. To the extent a claimant’s conduct may bar recovery of one or more remedies,
the election of remedies doctrine is instructive: within the context of contract law, the
victim of a material breach must elect either to rescind the contract and recover restitution
of what has been paid, or, to continue the contract, treat the breach as partial, and seek
recovery of its damages for the breach. See 25 Am. Jur. 2d Election of Remedies §25
and 17A Am. Jur. 2d Contracts §710; accord Umbelina, 34 A.3d at 157 (Pa. Super. 2011)
(explaining claims for contract rescission and contract damages for breach of the same
contract are essentially inconsistent remedies; “[o]ne may not terminate contractual
obligations and seek the return of his consideration based upon the other party’s promise
through an action for rescission and restitution and at the same time seek the full benefits
of that promise through an action for breach.”).
Pursuant to these principles, it is clear a party waives, or, more aptly, elects
against, the right to recover restitution for total breach when it accepts or receives partial
performance, or continues to perform or benefit under the contract. See 17A Am. Jur. 2d
Contracts §710; 13 Williston on Contracts §39:32 (4th ed.) (“[T]he nonbreaching party, by
electing to continue receiving benefits under the agreement, cannot then refuse to
perform its part of the bargain.”); 13 Williston on Contracts §39:33 (“[E]ven an express
reservation of rights or remedies is generally ineffective once the party put to an election
following a breach of the contract makes its choice. One who continues to receive
benefits under a contract and assert rights under it after learning of a breach that would
justify a refusal to continue performance cannot subsequently urge this breach as an
excuse for its own nonperformance, even though that party has consistently asserted the
[J-5-2019] - 22
excuse from the outset, unless the other party assents to the reservation of rights.”); 14
Williston on Contracts § 43:15 (4th ed.) (“[T]he general rule that one party’s uncured,
material failure of performance will suspend or discharge the other party's duty to perform
does not apply when the latter party, with knowledge of the facts, either performs or
indicates a willingness to do so, despite the breach, or insists that the defaulting party
continue to render future performance.”).
Accordingly, where a non-breaching party opts to continue performing post-breach
and receiving benefits as it would under the contract, the law presumes the non-breaching
party has elected against a remedy of rescission, or retroactive termination, of the
contract, and the non-breaching party cannot recover restitution damages as if the
contract ceased to exist at the time of the breach. Additionally, because the objective of
rescission is to return both parties as nearly as possible to their positions before they
made the contract, a claim seeking a contract’s termination “should be granted only where
the parties to a contract can be placed in their former positions with regard to the subject
matter of the contract.” Umbelina, 34 A.3d at 157; accord 17B C.J.S. Contracts § 651
(2019) (“The restoration of the status quo of the parties is, as a general rule, necessary
for the rescission of a contract. . . . Rescission is generally not available where the parties’
condition as it existed prior to the agreement cannot be restored.”); see also Restatement
(Second) of Contracts §384 (party seeking restitution must be able to return benefit it
received). A claim calling for a contract’s rescission must also be pursued with sufficient
promptitude, including prompt notification to the breaching party. Schwartz, 932 A.2d at
889-90, 895 (home buyers who lived in house for six years and did not promptly seek to
rescind sales contract once they became aware of undisclosed water damage were not
[J-5-2019] - 23
entitled to rescind); see also Fichera v. Gording, 227 A.2d 642, 643–44 (Pa. 1967) (“When
a party discovers facts which warrant rescission of his contract, it is his duty to act
promptly, and in case he elects to rescind, to notify the other party without delay, or within
a reasonable time. . . . [T]he rescission should be made while the parties can still be
restored to their original positions. Failure to rescind within a reasonable time is evidence,
and may be conclusive evidence, of an election to affirm the contract.”), quoting 8
Pennsylvania Law Encyclopedia §258 at 280-81, with approval.
Here, the trial court awarded two kinds of damages to Gamesa, for the single injury
of Ten Penn Center’s breach by unreasonably conditioning its approval of the BSI
sublease. First, it awarded damages for breach of contract in the amount of Gamesa’s
expected rent receipts from its thwarted sublease with BSI. Second, the trial court
retroactively terminated the Lease between Gamesa and Ten Penn Center and awarded
return of Gamesa’s rent payments in the amount the court considered Ten Penn Center
to be “unjustly enriched” after breaching the Lease. This award effectively allowed
Gamesa to continue accruing benefits under the Lease after the Lease had been
terminated, including sub-rents from both Viridity and, in essence, BSI. The damages
awarded by the trial court were thus duplicative and inconsistent, based upon two
separate theories of recovery for the same injury, and Gamesa may recover under only
one. See Schwartz, 932 A.2d at 892; Colonial Trust Co., 25 A.2d at 730. As a result of
the unreasonable condition it placed on approval of the BSI sublease, Ten Penn Center
breached the Lease with Gamesa; however, at no point did Gamesa attempt to treat the
Lease as terminated, but continued to perform and receive benefits under the contract for
over three years following Ten Penn Center’s breach, during which time Ten Penn Center
[J-5-2019] - 24
was unable to use the Premises for any purpose other than its Lease with Gamesa.
Obviously, Ten Penn Center cannot recover use of the Premises for the post-breach time
period, and cannot be returned to its pre-breach position by retroactive termination of the
Lease. Moreover, Gamesa, by continuing to pay rent to Ten Penn Center, and by
continuing to benefit under the Lease — including not only by its receipt of sub-rents, but
also by its continued right of possession of the Premises — thereby behaved as though
the contract was still in effect, affirmed the contract, and conclusively elected to treat the
breach as partial, thus barring any purported claim for rescission.
Yet, notwithstanding the foregoing analysis, Gamesa urges us to consider that an
exception to the doctrinal principles exists when the non-breaching party’s continued
performance of the contract is a commercially reasonable course of conduct, and further,
to determine Gamesa’s particular circumstances place it within such an exception
warranting termination of the Lease and return of its rent payments. Appellant’s Brief at
38-48. We decline Gamesa’s invitation to adopt such a standard because Gamesa’s
analogies to UCC Article 2 and Northern Helex are unavailing. As an initial point of
clarification, UCC Article 2 governs the commercial purchase and sale of goods, and
presently excludes commercial real estate leases from its scope. See UCC §§2-102, 2-
105 (defining “goods” to mean “things . . . which are movable”). Furthermore, the UCC
provision proffered by Gamesa specifically governs the unique circumstance where a
buyer of goods breaches the sale contract prior to the completed manufacture of the
goods; the subject contract of sale bears little similarity to the Lease between Gamesa
[J-5-2019] - 25
and Ten Penn Center, and Gamesa’s attempt to apply the UCC principle here is not
persuasive.7 See UCC §2-704(2).
Likewise, Northern Helex is not binding precedent and is easily distinguishable
from the instant matter. In Northern Helex, a chemical plant contracting with the federal
government produced helium as a byproduct of its other operations; under a statutory
helium conservation program, the government agreed to buy the helium, and the plant
agreed to capture and deliver it to the government’s facilities. See Northern Helex, 455
F.2d at 548. The government stopped making payments under the contract, but the plant
continued to capture and deliver the helium. Id. at 549-50. The government moved for
summary judgment seeking to dismiss the chemical plant’s material breach claim seeking
payment as waived due to its continued performance after the government’s breach. Id.
at 551. The court denied the government’s motion, reasoning nonpayment was a
definitively material breach, it was impossible to cease the helium production, the plant
had no facility suitable to store it, and the plant’s actions were consistent with the helium
conservation program. Id. at 551-56.
To the extent it has persuasive value here, Northern Helex illustrates a case where
the unique circumstances provoking a non-breaching party’s post-breach continued
7 Gamesa further suggests we adopt the “commercial reasonableness” standard
described in UCC Section 2-704, which governs the special circumstance where a buyer
of goods breaches the contract before the goods are finished. There, the seller may
exercise its reasonable commercial judgment in deciding whether to complete the
manufacture and seek payment under the contract, or to cease production and resell the
salvage “or proceed in any other reasonable manner.” UCC §2-704(2). Though we do
not find Gamesa’s analogy to the UCC persuasive, it bears noting, in electing whether to
continue or cease performance of a contract under UCC §2-704, the “reasonable
commercial judgment” anticipates mitigating, rather than accruing and increasing, the
seller’s damages. See Official Comment 2 to UCC §2-704.
[J-5-2019] - 26
performance of a contract were relevant to negate an election favoring remedies for
partial breach, at least insofar as they presented a factual issue overcoming a motion for
summary judgment. We do not foreclose the possibility that the circumstances
surrounding post-breach performance by a non-breaching party might be relevant, and
that they might, in rare instances, prove sufficient to withstand a conclusive election
against a remedy for material breach. See, e.g., Gillard, 13 A.3d at 488-89 (employee
did not waive claim for material breach despite continued performance where employee
disclosed grievances and employer provided written assurance of better future
performance) (quoting 13 Williston on Contracts §39:32, 4th ed. (1990), “[A]lthough a
default unquestionably may be waived by continuing to perform or accepting performance
despite a breach or failure of a condition, where the nondefaulting party brings its
complaints to the defaulting party’s attention, and continues the relationship only on the
assurance of better future performance, he or she will not be barred from asserting her
rights under the contract; in such a case, the successive acceptances of performance do
not justify the belief that the performance of the character tendered was satisfactory, and
a waiver of the right to the promised performance cannot be found.”); Northern Helex,
455 F.2d at 553 (“[C]essation of production was commercially impossible and avoidance
of waste most desirable.”).
Yet, such circumstances contravene the rule and would necessarily be rare; as we
noted in Schwartz, even a fraud would not warrant rescission where the non-breaching
party has full knowledge of the bad behavior and chooses to continue performing the
contract. See Schwartz, 932 A.2d at 893, citing Browning v. Rodman, 111 A. 877, 878
(Pa. 1920) (“[A]cts done in affirmance of the contract can amount to a waiver of the fraud
[J-5-2019] - 27
only where they are done with full knowledge of the fraud and of all material facts, and
with the intention clearly manifested of abiding by the contract.”). Moreover, unlike the
circumstances in Northern Helex, Gamesa has not demonstrated it was impossible to
cease performance — that is, to discontinue making rent payments to Ten Penn Center
and receiving sub-rent payments from Viridity, and to relinquish its possession of the
Premises — only that under the contract terms they bargained for and agreed to, it was
very risky and highly disadvantageous for them to do so given the precarious position
they occupied under the Lease upon moving out of the Premises, which, according to the
Superior Court, sufficiently established the initial default of the parties’ agreement. See
Gamesa, 187 A.3d at 1193.
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, we hold a non-breaching party to a contract may, by its conduct
following a breach, conclusively elect its remedy and be bound by it to one theory for
recovery of damages. The Superior Court correctly determined the trial court erred by
retroactively terminating the lease agreement between the parties, and by awarding
Gamesa damages for both breach of and rescission of the Lease.
Order affirmed.
Justices Baer, Todd, Donohue, Wecht and Mundy join the opinion.
Chief Justice Saylor files a concurring opinion.
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