Court Opinion

ID: 6458418
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:44:28.861364+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:53:25.154758
License: Public Domain

Smith, J.
Dexter Associates Limited (Dexter) is the owner, since May 24, 1982, of two adjoining buildings on Washington Street in Boston. The smaller of the two buildings, known as the Ditson building, is ten stories high and is located at 449-451 Washington Street. The larger building is eleven stories high and is located at 453-463 Washington Street. It is known as the Dexter building. Worcester Lemer Shops, Inc. (Lemer), is the successor lessee of both properties under a fifty-year lease dated May 28, 1946. After Dexter bought the properties in 1982, a dispute arose between it and Lemer concerning a provision in the lease. The facts that formed the background of the controversy between the parties are not in dispute.
*391At the time the lease was executed in 1946 and for some time thereafter, the upper floors of both buildings were occupied by business tenants. Because of a high vacancy rate in the 1960’s, Lemer decided that it was economically infeasible to continue to sublet space on the upper floors of both buildings and by October 31, 1973, vacated all floors in both buildings except those needed for its operations and those of a restaurant. In order to curtail costs of maintaining the buildings, Lemer disconnected heat, water, and electricity to the vacated portions of the two buildings. Over the years these portions of the buildings that had been vacated deteriorated because of the seepage of water and the effects of lack of heat in the winter season.
Prior to Dexter’s purchase of the buildings on May 24,1982, it inspected both properties on five occasions. On June 18, 1982, it sent a notice of default to Lemer. Among various conditions of default, the letter noted that Lemer had failed to abide by the repair provisions of paragraph six of the lease, set out in the margin.1 Attached to the letter was a schedule intended to set forth generally certain of the main categories of required repairs. Lemer responded by letter that certain repairs had been undertaken, but that the remaining requests were unreasonable and not within the repair obligations of the lease.
Dexter then brought a complaint in the Superior Court against Lemer, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. In its complaint Dexter requested, among other things, a declaration that the lease provision (note 1) “imposes an affirmative duty upon Lemer to repair the [buildings] as required whether those repairs *392be structural, ordinary, extraordinary, or of any other nature.” Dexter also requested a declaration that the lease provision required “Lemer to make all necessary repairs which reasonably would be required to keep the [buildings] in proper, tenantable condition.”
The matter was tried before a judge sitting without jury. After the trial, he filed a memorandum of decision that contained his findings of fact and mlings. The judge rejected any interpretation of the lease which would have required Lemer to make all necessary repairs reasonably required to keep the premises in “proper tenantable condition.” Instead, the judge mled that all Lemer was required to do was “repair as necessary to insure that the buildings are structurally sound and . . . repair and/or replace that which [Lemer] caused to have disconnected in 1973, which includes the electrical, plumbing, heat, and water, and that said repairs and/or replacement be done in accordance with applicable building codes and to prevent waste.” The judge also mled that Lemer must restore heat to the vacant floors in both buildings and remove all debris from the premises and floors that are vacant and keep them broom clean during the remainder of the lease.
Judgment entered on July 25, 1985, in accordance with the judge’s findings. In the judgment he ordered Lemer to file within ninety days, for his approval, “a detailed description of the work which [Lemer] proposes to perform or has performed in order to comply with the terms of this order, including plans or specifications sufficient to enable the defendant to obtain a building permit required for any proposed work not performed within such ninety (90) days” (emphasis in original). Neither party appealed from the judgment.
The ninety-day period was extended by the parties to January 10,1986. On January 9,1986, Lemer filed a document entitled “Description of Work Proposed or Performed by [Lemer] to Comply With Order of July 25,1985.” In that document Lemer reported that “it has performed the work hereinafter described and that, such work constituting full compliance with the terms of the said judgment and the order therein contained, no additional work is proposed.” It listed the work that it had per*393formed. Lemer then filed a motion requesting the judge to review and approve the description of work performed or proposed.
Prior to the judge’s hearing on the motion, Lemer disconnected some of the elevator service in both buildings. The Dexter building has two passenger elevators and one freight elevator; the Ditson building has one passenger and one freight elevator. The freight elevator in the Dexter building was decommissioned by Lemer in 1986. Lemer then informed Dexter that it planned later to decommission the passenger elevator in the Ditson building.
The judge heard arguments by the parties on May 19, 1987, in regard to Lemer’s motion. During the hearing, Dexter filed a proposed order with the judge in which it requested that the judge order that Lemer repair and restore elevator service in both buildings.
On June 5, 1987, the judge issued his decision in regard to Lemer’s motion to review and approve the description of its work. In his order, the judge mled that Lemer must repair and restore the freight elevator service in the Dexter building. He refused, however, to order Lemer to restore the passenger elevator in the Ditson building. Both parties have appealed from the June 5, 1987, order.
Lemer claims that the judge erred in ordering it to repair and restore elevator service in the Dexter building because that order, issued on June 5, 1987, came after final judgment in the case was entered on July 25, 1985. According to Lemer, a final judgment cannot be modified or changed by a postjudgment order. Dexter contends that the trial judge had retained jurisdiction over the matter and that the July 25, 1985, “judgment was not a final judgment and therefore could be modified by the judge at any time prior to the entry of final judgment.” Thus, Dexter argues, the judge erred in not ordering in his June 5, 1987, order that Lemer repair and restore passenger elevator service in the Ditson building.
According to Mass.R.Civ.P. 54(a), 365 Mass. 820 (1974), the term “final judgment. . . mean[s] the act of the trial court finally adjudicating the rights of the parties affected by the *394judgment... . .” Here, the judgment that entered on July 25, 1985, in response to Dexter’s complaint specifically stated that all that Lemer was required to do under the lease was “to repair and/or replace that which [Lemer] caused to have disconnected in 1973, which includes the electrical, plumbing, heat and water.” The judgment also stated that Lemer was not obligated to put the premises in proper “tenantable condition.” Therefore, with respect to those matters tried, the judgment purported to be and was an “act of the trial court finally adjudicating the rights of the parties affected.” All that remained was the collateral matter of compliance by Lemer with the judge’s declaration of the rights of the parties.
Once final judgment entered on July 25, 1985, any change in it could be made only in accordance with the procedures established for that purpose, such as provided by Mass. R.Civ.P. 52(b), 59, and 60, 365 Mass. 816, 826, and 828 (1974). The only matter before the judge in 1987 was Lemer’s motion requesting a review and approval of its work that had been or would be performed as ordered in the July 25, 1985, judgment. Clearly, it was not a motion to change or amend that judgment.
The July 25, 1985, judgment ordered Lemer to repair and replace that which it had disconnected in 1973. The elevator service that Lemer was ordered to restore in the June 5, 1987, order was not decommissioned in 1973 but in 1986. Therefore, the effect of the postjudgment order was to change the final judgment entered on July 25, 1985. This was error because a postjudgment order cannot attack the underlying final judgment.2 Inmates of the Suffolk County Jail v. Eisenstadt, 494 F.2d 1196, 1199 (1st Cir. 1974).
There is nothing in this record that demonstrates that the judge intended to retain jurisdiction of the case beyond ensuring compliance with his rulings that were made in relation to the July 25, 1985, judgment.
*395The order entered on June 5, 1987, is reversed. The matter is remanded to the Superior Court for the entry of an order approving the work performed by Lemer as constituting full compliance with the terms of the judgment.

So ordered.

 Paragraph six of the lease reads in pertinent part: “Lessee shall make and is hereby given the right to make all repairs, alterations or changes of every kind and nature that it may desire or that may be required to the premises during the term hereof regardless of the extent thereof and whether the same be- structural, ordinary, extraordinary, or of any other nature and regardless of how the same may be necessitated; provided, however, that in no event shall the value of the land and buildings or improvements on said premises be reduced thereby nor during the last fifteen (15) years of the term hereof shall the character thereof be changed from a retail commercial property and office building without the written consent of the Lessor. ”

 A separate action might well lie to address the elevator decommissioning in 1986.