Accepting Rent After Taking Steps Toward Eviction

Q: My tenant’s retail business is in trouble, but instead of closing, the tenant is trying to find a buyer. I had previously obtained an eviction order because the tenant had defaulted on its rent obligations. Now, the tenant has offered to pay the back rent, plus an additional amount in exchange for me allowing it to stay in the space until it has a buyer. Is there any danger in such a scenario?

Q: My tenant’s retail business is in trouble, but instead of closing, the tenant is trying to find a buyer. I had previously obtained an eviction order because the tenant had defaulted on its rent obligations. Now, the tenant has offered to pay the back rent, plus an additional amount in exchange for me allowing it to stay in the space until it has a buyer. Is there any danger in such a scenario?

A: Yes. “Landlords should be aware that accepting rent—regardless of the scenario or who is paying it—after terminating a lease, and certainly after obtaining an eviction order, might compromise the landlord’s position and have the unintended result of reviving the tenant’s rights to the space,” say Chicago attorneys Robert C. Linton and C. Harrison Cooper. A recent case on point demonstrates one of the possible risks—that a tenant could use that time and access to the space to remove valuable items, such as fixtures. And a court could decide that the tenant is within its rights to do so.

In that case, a restaurant tenant faced with an eviction order offered the owner of the space $40,000 to extend the time it could use the space after it was supposed to vacate. The tenant wanted to use the extra time to work out a deal with a potential buyer of the restaurant, who planned to use the same space. The deal fell through, however. In the meantime, the tenant tried to remove some of its trade fixtures and equipment; the owner’s representative refused to allow this. The tenant sued the owner for conversion—that is, essentially taking its belongings without its consent. The tenant and the owner each asked a trial court for a judgment in its favor without a trial. The trial court ruled in favor of the owner. The tenant appealed.

A Georgia appeals court reversed as to the conversion claim, ruling that the tenant could remove the fixtures during the unofficial extension period. The appeals court concluded that a genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether the owner, in exchange for the $40,000 payment from the tenant, had inadvertently agreed to extend the tenant’s time of possession—and thereby its right to the trade fixtures and the option to remove them during that time period. A trial was needed to make that determination [Heany v. Bennett Street Properties, LP, March 2016].

Insider Sources

C. Harrison Cooper, Esq.: Attorney, Dykema, 10 South Wacker Dr., Ste. 2300, Chicago, IL 60606; www.dykema.com.

Robert C. Linton, Esq.: Member, Dykema, 10 South Wacker Dr., Ste. 2300, Chicago, IL 60606; www.dykema.com.

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