PER CURIAM.
Following a non-jury trial in the Special Civil Part, Judge Allen J. Littlefield entered judgment for possession in favor of plaintiff-landlord Margate Towers, Inc., against defendants-tenants, Jim and John Plamantouras. Defendants' subsequent motion for reconsideration was denied. We briefly summarize the evidence at trial.
Plaintiff owns Margate Towers, a mixed-use building that contains seven commercial storefronts on the ground floor with residential condominium units above. The parties first entered into written lease agreements for three of the commercial units, Units 105, 106, and 107, beginning in 2008 (the 2008 leases). Plaintiff's property manager, Charles Conant, testified that the three leases had different start dates, roughly six months apart. Defendants made various modifications inside the units to accommodate their restaurant, which was located in two of the units with the third housing defendants' office space.
The initial lease for Unit 107 was for a three-year term with an option to renew for a fourth and fifth year at a five percent rent increase. The leases for the other units had similar renewal terms. At some point after defendants took possession, the parties executed an addendum to the lease for Unit 107, in which the majority of the restaurant was situated. The addendum included a renewal option for two additional five-year terms which defendants could exercise at the end of the existing lease.
In July 2011, defendants sent notice of their intention to exercise their option and renew the lease for Unit 107 only. The testimony revealed that plaintiff wanted defendants to renew leases for all three units, but defendants resisted, claiming their largest investment was in Unit 107. In any event, in fall 2011, the parties entered into renegotiations of the existing leases. Conant said this was done because defendants were having financial difficulties.
Defendants rejected plaintiff's first proposed lease, which incorporated all three units into one document. However, the parties apparently agreed to three separate leases, one for each unit (the 2011 leases). Each of the 2011 leases was for a one-year term beginning October 1, 2011, and ending September 30, 2012,
Defendants executed the new leases, but in doing so, they forwarded executed addenda that purported to incorporate the terms of the addendum to the 2008 leases, i.e., an option to renew for two additional five-year terms.
Defendants paid rent in accordance with the terms of the 2011 leases and, in 2012, exercised their option to renew in accordance with the terms of those leases. In June 2013, plaintiff served defendants with a notice to quit and demanded possession, effective September 30, 2013. Defendants responded by notifying plaintiff that they were exercising their option to renew for "two (2) consecutive five-year periods" and that the "Notice to Quit and Demand for Possession is of no consequence or effect." In October 2013, plaintiff rejected defendants' rent payments and on October 11, plaintiff filed its eviction complaint.
At trial, defendants essentially argued that the 2011 leases were actually continuations of the original 2008 leases. They contended that the one-year term plus one-year renewal option in the 2011 leases meant a possible total term of five years, the same maximum term if they had exercised their options contained in the 2008 leases. Defendants' principal testified that the reduction in rent was a negotiated accommodation for habitability issues. Defendants contended that without any specific cancellation of the terms of the addenda, they remained in full force and effect under the 2008 leases, entitling defendants to exercise their option to renew for the first of the two five-year terms.
Plaintiff contended that the 2011 leases terminated and replaced the 2008 leases. It also argued that defendants' claims were debunked by the fact that they paid the reduced rent for two years and knew that plaintiff's board refused to consider the proposed addendum at the time of the execution of the 2011 leases.
Judge Littlefield found that defendants agreed to the terms of the 2011 leases and counteroffered with the proposed addenda. He reasoned the counteroffer was rejected by plaintiff, thereby nullifying defendants' acceptance. The judge rejected defendants' claim that the 2011 leases were merely continuations of the 2008 leases, noting that defendants proposed
Defendants' motion for reconsideration provided no new arguments. In a short written statement of reasons, Judge Littlefield concluded that he had not "misstated the law, nor. . . failed to consider evidence [that] . . . should have [been] considered in [his] prior ruling." He denied defendants' motion and this appeal followed.
Before us, defendants contend plaintiff unilaterally modified the proposed 2011 leases, and absent an agreement, the parties relationship was governed by the 2008 leases. Since the 2008 lease for Unit 107 provided defendants with an option to renew for two five-year terms which they timely invoked, defendants argue the judgment of possession for Unit 107 should be reversed. Having considered these arguments in light of the record and applicable legal standards, we affirm.
Our Standard of review is well settled:
"`[W]e do not weigh the evidence, assess the credibility of witnesses, or make conclusions about the evidence.'"
"The interpretation of contracts and their construction are matters of law for the court subject to de novo review."
If an agreement is reached through an offer and acceptance and is sufficiently definite so that the performance to be rendered by each party can be ascertained with reasonable certainty, a contract arises.
"An offeree may manifest assent to the terms of an offer through words, creating an express contract, or by conduct, creating a contract implied-in-fact."
Judge Littlefield properly applied these basic tenets to the credible testimony in the record. Defendants argue that the legal effect of this determination was that the parties remained governed by the 2008 leases which were still in effect. This of course ignores what actually happened.
"[W]hen an offeree accepts the offeror's services without expressing any objection to the offer's essential terms, the offeree has manifested assent to those terms."
Here, plaintiff rejected defendants' counteroffer and executed the 2011 leases. Judge Littlefield found as a fact that defendants were aware of plaintiff's rejection of their counteroffer and the board's approval of the 2011 leases as originally submitted. Thereafter, defendants did not protest. Instead, their actions indicated acceptance of the 2011 lease terms, and they performed in accordance with those terms for nearly two years. Indeed, defendants exercised the option to renew the 2011 leases for an additional year in 2012 and did so in accordance with the terms of the 2011 leases.
We agree with Judge Littlefield that defendants accepted the terms of the 2011 leases through their subsequent conduct without protest. The judgment of possession was properly entered.
Affirmed.