D
Darkheart
Guest
Stockton, California, 30 Sept 2000. We closed an Espresso Cafe' due to losing our lease. The landlord whom I was subleasing from and I had a written contract to pay $1500 rent for the month of Sept.
However employees witnessed (They have since moved to North Carolina I cannot get them back for testimony) and some customers witnessed (No address of course) that the landlord who had a business immediatly next door was directing customers to buy their Coffees elsewhere. The resulting sales for the month of Sept. were a total crash. (BEP $6,000 Gross sales $1,800= <$5,200>) This created a large enough gap to be unable to make the rent.
We had other resources but the primary car that I drove to work (75 miles), broke. We had to replace the engine.
Knowing that I was in trouble financially (House was near foreclosure) I wrote the landlord a letter, in a somewhat fustrated tone, telling him that I will pay $100 per month until I can pay it off.
He has cashed checks and mailed back receipts showing payment made and no objection in the envelope or on the paper. I was served about 12 days ago (4/13/2001) for the full amount.
The last receipt shows that he is charging for the Small Claims fileing minus the $100. Though I am in breach of the original contract with the letter and the regular $100 payments (And I REALLY NEED that $100) does this constitute an implied contract and good faith effort to settle this? Am I in a defensible position or shall I tell the family to start packing? (Losing will do damage untold.)
Thank you.
A very
Darkheart
However employees witnessed (They have since moved to North Carolina I cannot get them back for testimony) and some customers witnessed (No address of course) that the landlord who had a business immediatly next door was directing customers to buy their Coffees elsewhere. The resulting sales for the month of Sept. were a total crash. (BEP $6,000 Gross sales $1,800= <$5,200>) This created a large enough gap to be unable to make the rent.
We had other resources but the primary car that I drove to work (75 miles), broke. We had to replace the engine.
Knowing that I was in trouble financially (House was near foreclosure) I wrote the landlord a letter, in a somewhat fustrated tone, telling him that I will pay $100 per month until I can pay it off.
He has cashed checks and mailed back receipts showing payment made and no objection in the envelope or on the paper. I was served about 12 days ago (4/13/2001) for the full amount.
The last receipt shows that he is charging for the Small Claims fileing minus the $100. Though I am in breach of the original contract with the letter and the regular $100 payments (And I REALLY NEED that $100) does this constitute an implied contract and good faith effort to settle this? Am I in a defensible position or shall I tell the family to start packing? (Losing will do damage untold.)
Thank you.
A very
Darkheart