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ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION III
No. CV-16-552
PREFERRED MEDICAL ASSOCIATES, Opinion Delivered April 26, 2017
LLC; ADAM WOZNIAK, M.D.; AND
DIANNA OWEN APPEAL FROM THE BAXTER
APPELLANTS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
[NO. 03CV-10-282]
V.
HONORABLE GORDON WEBB,
THE ABRAHAM FAMILY TRUST, JUDGE
SIMON ABRAHAM, M.D., AND
ANNIE ABRAHAM, TRUSTEES
APPELLEES AFFIRMED
PHILLIP T. WHITEAKER, Judge
Preferred Medical Associates, LLC (“PMA”), Dr. Adam Wozniak, and Dianna Owen
appeal from a judgment holding them liable for breach of a commercial lease. We affirm.
I. Background
PMA is a limited-liability medical practice of which Dr. Adam Wozniak is a member
and Dianna Owen is an employee. In February 2010, PMA was in the market for leasing
office space. Dr. Simon Abraham practiced medicine in Mountain Home, Arkansas, under
the name Abraham Medical Center. PMA negotiated a lease for office space in the same
facility that housed Dr. Abraham’s practice, and the lease contemplated that the two doctors
would coexist and share certain medical equipment. PMA agreed to pay a $20,000 deposit
Cite as 2017 Ark. App. 260
and rent of $10,000 per month for a term of eighteen months. The lease was signed by Dr.
Abraham and his wife, Annie Abraham, as lessors; by Dr. Wozniak individually and on behalf
of PMA; and by Ms. Owen individually.1
Five and a half months into the lease, appellants vacated the leased premises. As a result,
the Abrahams sued appellants for breach of the lease and sought $125,000 in rent due under
the remaining twelve and a half months of the lease term, plus incidental damages. Appellants
responded that their decision to vacate was justified because Dr. Abraham’s conduct toward
them amounted to a constructive eviction from the premises.
A bench trial began in January 2013, but the proceedings were halted when appellants
discovered that the Abrahams did not own the leased premises. The Abrahams had previously
created a revocable trust, the Abraham Family Trust (“the Trust”), and had funded the Trust
with the leased premises. As a result, the Trust owned the facility where the leased premises
was located. The Abrahams took the position that this information was not detrimental
because they were the sole trustees of the Trust with full authority to execute a lease of Trust
property. Appellants argued that, in light of this new information, the Abrahams lacked
standing to enforce the lease because they filed suit as individuals rather than as trustees.
Appellants also argued that the lease contract was invalid because the Abrahams failed to
identify themselves as trustees thereon. The trial court asked for briefs on the issue and, after
considering the parties’ arguments, ruled that the lease was valid and enforceable.
1
The lease was also signed by another PMA employee, Carmen Kruse. Ms. Kruse is not a
party to this appeal.
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The trial resumed, and appellants presented evidence on their claim of constructive
eviction. Dr. Wozniak and Ms. Owen testified that Dr. Abraham made such unreasonable
demands and placed such unreasonable restrictions on them during their occupancy that he
deprived them of the use and benefit of the leasehold. By contrast, Dr. Abraham testified that
the lease arrangement was working fine, with only minor adjustments being required. After
hearing the evidence, the court found that Dr. Abraham’s conduct did not rise to the level
of constructive eviction, despite the “numerous relatively petty conflicts” that developed
between the parties during their five and a half months of shared occupancy. The court
therefore ruled that appellants breached the lease without justification and owed the remaining
twelve and a half months of rent in the amount of $125,000, less the $20,000 deposit, for a
total of $105,000. The court also found that Dr. Abraham acted reasonably to mitigate the
damages and that all defendants, including the individual signatories on the lease, were jointly
and severally liable for the damages award.
Appellants filed this appeal and present ten arguments for our consideration. For
convenience, we have grouped their arguments into four categories: (1) standing to sue and
authority to execute the lease; (2) constructive eviction; (3) mitigation of damages; and (4)
liability of individual signatories.
II. Standards of Review
In an appeal from a bench trial, we will not reverse the circuit court’s findings of fact
unless they are clearly erroneous or clearly against the preponderance of the evidence.
Academy, Inc. v. Paradigm Bldg., LLC, 2017 Ark. App. 79, ___ S.W.3d ___. On questions of
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law, such as the issue of standing discussed below, our review is de novo. Bibbs v. Cmty. Bank,
101 Ark. App. 462, 278 S.W.3d 564 (2008).
III. Standing to Sue and Authority to Execute the Lease
Appellants argue first that the Abrahams lacked standing to sue because they filed their
complaint in their individual capacities rather than as trustees. We disagree. The suit was for
breach of a lease involving property owned by the Trust estate. The Abrahams are the settlors
and sole trustees of the Trust, and the Trust grants them the express authority to lease Trust
property and “litigate any claim.” Moreover, our rules of civil procedure provide that the
trustees of an express trust may sue in their own names without joining the party for whose
benefit the action is being brought. Ark. R. Civ. P. 17(a) (2016). Rule 17(a) further
contemplates that the name of the “real party in interest” may be substituted and that such
substitution shall have the same effect as if the action had been commenced in that party’s
name. See id.
In the present case, the trial court substituted “The Abraham Family Trust, Simon
Abraham and Annie Abraham, Trustees” as the plaintiff before entering final judgment. This
was done without objection by appellants. Given these circumstances, we see no reason for
reversal on this point.
Appellants also argue that they are excused from performing the lease because Dr. and
Mrs. Abraham signed the lease without identifying themselves as trustees. We find this
argument unpersuasive. The Abrahams, as trustees of the property in question, had the power
under the Arkansas Trust Code to enter into the lease. Ark. Code Ann. § 28-73-816(9) (Repl.
2012). Similarly, the trust document in this case granted the Abrahams broad powers with
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respect to the Trust property—they could lease or otherwise manage the property in the
manner they deemed appropriate and “exercise any additional powers in the management of
the trust property which an individual owner of such property could exercise.” Finally, our
law assumes that persons in the Abrahams’ position have acted in accordance with their status
as trustees, even if that status is not disclosed. See generally Oliver v. Culpepper, 209 Ark. 326,
190 S.W.2d 457 (1945); Lanigan v. Sweany, 53 Ark. 185, 13 S.W. 740 (1890).
The trial court, based on the above authorities and the evidence before it, saw no
reason to disturb the assumption that the Abrahams, as trustees, executed a valid lease of the
Trust property. Upon our review of the same evidence and authorities, we cannot say that
the court clearly erred.2
IV. Constructive Eviction
Appellants contend that Dr. Abraham constructively evicted them from the leased
premises. Conduct by a landlord that effectively deprives the tenant of the use and benefit of
the premises amounts to a constructive eviction. Fairpark, LLC v. Healthcare Essentials, Inc.,
2011 Ark. App. 146, 381 S.W.3d 852. The landlord’s conduct must be such that it will
prevent the tenant’s use of the premises for the particular purposes for which it was leased. Id.
The particular acts or omissions by a landlord that amount to a constructive eviction cannot
be defined by a general rule and depend on the facts of each case. See id.
2
Appellants make additional arguments regarding the merger of legal and equitable
interests in trust property and other matters that were either not raised below or are not
germane to our analysis. We therefore decline to address the merits of those arguments.
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At trial, appellants presented evidence that the Abrahams interfered with their use of
the leased premises by restricting their use of the leased space; failing to timely provide them
with a key to the building; not allowing them to put up a sign outside the building; inhibiting
their use and decoration of their office space; and otherwise preventing their full, quiet
enjoyment of the leasehold. However, as the trial court noted, the evidence on this point was
in conflict. Dr. Abraham said that he had received no serious complaints from appellants
during their shared occupancy. In support of his testimony, he cited a letter written to him
by Dr. Wozniak in which Dr. Wozniak stated that appellants were vacating the premises due
to “unforeseen circumstances” and thanked Dr. Abraham for his “cooperation and
hospitality.” Additionally, witness Sam Sparks, who was an employee of both Dr. Abraham
and PMA, testified that he attended a meeting in July 2010 where appellants discussed moving
PMA to another location. According to Sparks, the reason given by appellants was that profits
were down; no other reason was mentioned.
When faced with these differing views, the trial court exercised its prerogative as fact-
finder to resolve the conflicts in the evidence and did so in favor of the Abrahams. See Kuelbs
v. Hill, 2010 Ark. App. 427, 379 S.W.3d 47. We defer to the circuit court’s superior ability
to determine the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be accorded their testimony.
See Academy, Inc., supra.
V. Mitigation of Damages
Appellants argue that Dr. Abraham did not mitigate his damages by re-renting the
leased space after appellants had vacated the premises. A party cannot recover damages
resulting from consequences that he could have reasonably avoided by reasonable care, effort,
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or expenditure. Taylor v. George, 92 Ark. App. 264, 212 S.W.3d 17 (2005). Reasonable
diligence and ordinary care are all that is required. Id. Whether one acted reasonably in
minimizing, mitigating, or avoiding damages is usually a question of fact. Id.
Dr. Abraham testified that he ran an ad in the paper seeking to rent the space vacated
by appellants. He also said that he talked to several doctors, and to other people who knew
doctors, to see if anyone currently in the area, or who might be moving to the area, needed
office space. The court found these mitigation efforts to be reasonable, and appellants offer no
convincing argument to the contrary. We therefore hold that the circuit court did not clearly
err in its finding of fact on this issue.
VI. Liability of Individuals
As mentioned earlier, both Dr. Wozniak and Ms. Owen signed the lease as individuals.
They argue on appeal that they cannot be held personally liable on the lease because the lease
reflects no mutuality of contract.
Mutuality of contract means that an obligation must rest on each party to do or permit
to be done something in consideration of the act or promise of the other; thus neither party
is bound unless both are bound. Estate of Bogar v. Welspun Pipes, Inc., 2014 Ark. App. 536, 444
S.W.3d 405. Dr. Wozniak and Ms. Owen insist that mutuality is wanting in this case because
Dr. and Mrs. Abraham have no obligation on the lease, having executed it in their individual
capacities. In light of our holding that the Abrahams had the authority to execute the lease on
behalf of the Trust and presumably did so as trustees, they do have an obligation on the lease.
Mutuality of contract therefore exists.
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Ms. Owen also argues that the lease is unenforceable as to her because she gave no
consideration for the lease. Her pleadings and testimony indicate otherwise. She filed a
counterclaim stating that the “Plaintiffs and Defendants” entered into the lease, and that she,
along with her co-defendants, was seeking a refund of the security deposit and the rent paid.
She further alleged in a “grievance sheet” attached to her counterclaim that she was “paying
her portion of the lease” and that her husband had put up the $20,000 deposit. She also
testified at trial that she was “part of” the lease.
Additionally, the lease provides in pertinent part:
Lessee covenants and agrees:
a. The undersigned agree to be personally and individually bound for all obligations
contained in this lease.
Ms. Owen is one of the “undersigned,” and she affixed her name to a lease that contemplated
that she would be “personally and individually” liable thereon. Parties are presumed to have
read and understood their contracts. McCaleb v. Nat’l Bank of Commerce, 25 Ark. App. 53, 752
S.W.2d 54 (1988).
Affirmed.
KLAPPENBACH and BROWN, JJ., agree.
Ethredge & Copeland, P.A., by: David L. Ethredge, for appellants.
Jeremy B. Lowrey; and Cooper & Bayless, P.A., by: Mark Cooper, for appellees.
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