What is the Fair Market Value of a Used Walk-in Cooler?

August 29, 2012

R.J. Suarez Enterprises owned a sandwich shop, which was operated out of a leased location owned by PNYX.  After notifying PNYX that it would not renew the lease, Suarez vacated the premises, but claimed that it was entitled to take the walk-in cooler, walk-in freezer, sandwich unit, beverage cooler, and ice machine. PNYX disagreed. Suarez sued for conversion, and won.  The trial court, however, awarded no damages because Suarez failed to present evidence of the property’s fair market value.

The Court of Appeals sustained the decision, finding that “even when there is evidence supporting a finding of conversion, there must be evidence of fair market value of the converted property to support a damages award.”  Suarez, it held, did not present any evidence of the property’s fair market value, and instead only offered as damages evidence of the property’s replacement cost.  This was insufficient, as replacement value and fair market value are not interchangeable.

R.J. Suarez Enterprises, Inc. v. PNYX LP, et al., No. 05-11-00934