12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu// Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet v. Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet// 12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 2021
Docket03-19-00078-CV
StatusPublished

This text of 12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu// Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet v. Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet// 12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu (12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu// Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet v. Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet// 12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu// Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet v. Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet// 12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-19-00078-CV

Appellants, 12636 Research Ltd.; Hsu Realty Company, Inc.; and Chi-kao Hsu // Cross-Appellant, Indian Brothers, Inc. d/b/a Oak Liquor Cabinet

v.

Appellee, Indian Brothers, Inc. d/b/a Oak Liquor Cabinet // Cross-Appellees, 12636 Research Ltd.; Hsu Realty Company, Inc.; and Chi-kao Hsu

FROM THE 345TH DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. D-1-GN-17-000755, THE HONORABLE JAN SOIFER, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal of a judgment, entered after a bench trial, in a commercial

landlord–tenant lease dispute. The judgment awarded some relief to each side—injunctive,

declaratory, and monetary relief to the tenant, Indian Brothers, Inc., d/b/a Oak Liquor Cabinet, and

a monetary offset to the landlord, 12636 Research Ltd. (Landlord), and its fellow aligned parties.1

Landlord owns the subject property, in which tenant Indian Brothers runs a liquor store.

In nine issues, Landlord, Chi-kao Hsu, and Hsu Realty Company, Inc. (collectively,

the Hsu Parties) challenge some of the trial court’s rulings, reflected in its findings of fact and

conclusions of law. In a sole cross-issue, Indian Brothers challenges the monetary offset awarded

1 Landlord is a limited partnership in which Chi-kao Hsu individually and Hsu Realty Company, Inc. are partners. Hsu is the managing shareholder of Hsu Realty. Hsu Realty is also the property-management company for Landlord’s properties. to the Hsu Parties. We reverse the portion of the trial court’s judgment awarding Indian Brothers

expert fees but affirm the rest of the judgment.

BACKGROUND2

The Lease and Indian Brothers’ history on the property. In early 2007, Indian

Brothers and Landlord entered into a lease under which Indian Brothers rented two adjoining suites

in a commercial complex along U.S. Highway 183 in northwest Austin (the Lease). The complex

includes several other suites, leased to other businesses, and common areas for use by all tenants,

including portions of the parking lot.

Indian Brothers, owned and operated by Raju Malik, had been running its liquor

store in the complex for some time. It began by leasing one suite in 1999 from Landlord’s

predecessor-in-interest. Customer parking in the complex was a problem. According to Malik,

“[b]asically our parking [was] taken by restaurants,” so he asked the then-landlord about parking

spots. In 2000, Indian Brothers put in two red-and-white signs in front of the two parking spots

immediately outside its store’s front door to designate the spots as reserved for its customers. The

landlord at the time gave Indian Brothers permission for the signs via fax. Also by 2000, in front

of each of the same two parking spots, there were concrete wheel-stops, painted white with dark

lettering and displaying the liquor store’s name.

Landlord bought the complex in 2002. In 2004, Landlord and Indian Brothers

entered into an amendment to the 1999 lease—their first agreement together. Indian Brothers’

wheel-stops and two parking signs were still in place, and, as part of the 2004 lease amendment,

2 The information in this section is taken from the evidence admitted at trial: exhibits admitted and testimony by Malik, Hsu, their experts, and others.

2 Indian Brothers sought a third parking spot. Handwritten on the amendment, and initialed by

both Malik and Hsu, is: “one addl. reserved Parking Space between 3:00pm to 9:00pm every

Wednesday and Friday.” Indian Brothers therefore added a third red-and-white parking sign.

In 2007, Indian Brothers and Landlord entered into the Lease. It became effective

May 1, 2007, replacing the 1999 lease and 2004 amendment. Under the Lease, Indian Brothers

expanded by renting a second, adjoining suite in the complex. Indian Brothers added near the new

suite five more wheel-stops like the existing ones, for a new total of eight designated parking spots,

the number it has today. Malik asked Hsu about the added parking spots and signage for them.

According to Malik, Hsu gave “[v]erbal permission” for the added spots and signage, which Malik

acted on even though he did not get written permission. Malik recognized that the Lease required

written permission for certain signage and that he did not have it. By contrast, Hsu said that he

has never given Indian Brothers permission for the signage. When he would visit the property

from time to time, he saw the signs himself and would then tell Malik to remove them.

Also in 2007, Indian Brothers put up an exterior LED sign. According to Malik,

(1) Hsu gave oral permission for the LED sign too, and (2) the Hsu Parties never asked that he

remove the LED sign until after Indian Brothers filed this suit.

In 2009, a Lease provision requiring Indian Brothers to pay Landlord a share of

Common Area Maintenance—CAM charges—became an issue. Hsu Realty demanded $4,928 in

unpaid CAM charges for 2007–2008. It claimed that $984 remained unpaid from 2007 and that

although Indian Brothers paid $6,576 in 2008, Indian Brothers’ share of the actual expense was

$10,520, leaving $3,944 unpaid for that year. In hindsight, Hsu admitted that he miscalculated the

amounts. Indian Brothers’ attorney requested “material that would substantiate” what Hsu Realty

claimed that it incurred to maintain the common areas and what it claimed that Indian Brothers

3 owed. Neither Indian Brothers nor its attorney received a response. Hsu explained why: he said

to himself, “just forget it,” and considered the amount demanded to be “very minimal additional

income,” so “it just wasn’t worth it” to press the issue, and he “just never follow[ed] up.”

In 2010, Indian Brothers emailed Hsu a proposal for a new sign for the liquor store

on the side of the building. Hsu rejected the proposal because the building’s façade could not bear

the load, so Indian Brothers sent a proposal for a sign on the complex’s marquee. The proposal

depicted the marquee sign’s proposed location and the existing LED sign. Hsu responded and

conditioned his approval of the new marquee sign on Indian Brothers’ paying certain outstanding

charges, the costs to change the existing marquee, and extra related utilities. Indian Brothers

abandoned the proposed marquee sign because Malik felt that Hsu’s conditions amounted to

paying for a new marquee for the complex. One attachment to Hsu’s email response was a colored

picture of the liquor store in which the LED sign was “[c]learly visible.”

Around 2013, Hsu had the wheel-stops with the liquor store’s name painted over.

Soon after, Indian Brothers repainted them to again mark the spots as reserved for its customers.

History surrounding Lease renewal versus a new proposed lease. The Lease

includes a 10-year renewal option, which Indian Brothers could exercise provided that it was “not

in default” under the Lease. In September 2016, Malik emailed Hsu Realty personnel to exercise

the option. In October, Malik sent a second message to exercise the option. Hsu Realty personnel

stamped and initialed the October message as “received.” Malik did not hear back about his

renewal messages until November at the earliest. Hsu later admitted that the renewal messages

were “timely . . . to renew under” the Lease’s renewal option. Before these messages, Hsu had

never given Malik any notice that he considered Malik to be in default under the Lease.

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12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu// Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet v. Indian Brothers, Inc. D/B/A Oak Liquor Cabinet// 12636 Research Ltd. Hsu Realty Company, Inc. And Chi-Kao Hsu, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/12636-research-ltd-hsu-realty-company-inc-and-chi-kao-hsu-indian-texapp-2021.