1552 Broadway Retail Owner LLC v. McDonald's Corp.

54 Misc. 3d 1206A
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 2017
Docket2017 NYSlipOp 50011(U)
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Misc. 3d 1206A (1552 Broadway Retail Owner LLC v. McDonald's Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1552 Broadway Retail Owner LLC v. McDonald's Corp., 54 Misc. 3d 1206A (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

<partyblock>

<br><table width="75%" border="1" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="4" align="center"><tr><td>

<br><div align="center"><b><font size="+1">1552

Broadway Retail Owner LLC, Petitioner,

<br><br>against<br><br>McDonald's Corporation,

Respondent.</font></b></div>

<br><br>

</td></tr></table><br><br>651884/2014

<br><br>Stempel Bennett Claman &amp; Hochberg, P.C., for petitioner.<br><br>Morrison Cohen LLP, for respondent.

<br>Shirley Werner Kornreich, J.

<p>Petitioner 1552 Broadway Retail Owner LLC (Landlord) moves, pursuant to CPLR

7511, to vacate a February 23, 2016 arbitration award (the Award). Respondent

McDonald's Corporation (Tenant) opposes and cross-moves, pursuant to CPLR 7510, to

confirm the Award.<sup><a href="#1FN" name="1CASE"><b>[FN1]</b></a></sup>

For the reasons that follow, Landlord's motion is denied and Tenant's cross-motion is

granted.</p>

<br><br><i>I. Background &amp; Relevant Procedural History</i><p>The facts

pertinent to the instant motions are undisputed.</p>

<p>This case concerns a dispute between Landlord and Tenant over a valuation formula

used to compute rent under a July 29, 1983 commercial lease, as amended on October 28,

1998, for property located at 1560 Broadway in Manhattan, where Tenant operates a

McDonald's restaurant. <i>See</i> Dkt. 84 (the Lease); Dkt. 85 (the 1998

Amendment).<sup><a href="#2FN" name="2CASE"><b>[FN2]</b></a></sup>

Specifically, the parties dispute the fair market value (FMV) amount under section 4(b)(i)

of the 1998 Amendment, which provides that, as applicable here, the Fixed Rent owed

by Tenant for the period June 1, 2014 to May 31, 2019 is:</p>

<blockquote>Ninety Percent (90%) of the fair market rent (the "FMV") for the demised

premises determined as of the date occurring six (6) months prior to June 1, 2014 [the

<font color="FF0000">[*2]</font>"<i>Determination Date</i>"] and which

determination shall be made within a reasonable period of time after the occurrence of

the Determination Date pursuant to the provisions of subsection (e) hereof. <b>The FMV

shall be determined on the basis of the highest and best use of the demised premises and

considering all relevant factors</b>.</blockquote><p><i>See</i> Dkt. 85 at 4-5

(underline in original; bold added for emphasis). Section 4(e) provides that if the parties

cannot agree on the FMV, the issue must be resolved in binding arbitration. <i>See

id.</i> at 5. Various subsections in section 4 address how the arbitrators are to be

selected and how the arbitration is to be conducted. <i>See id.</i> at 5-6. Simply put,

there were to be three arbitrators, one selected by each party and, as applicable here, the

third was selected by the American Arbitration Association. <i>See id.</i></p>

<p>On June 19, 2014, Landlord filed the instant special proceeding by filing a petition

and a motion seeking to disqualify Tenant's proposed party-designated arbitrator.

<i>See</i> Dkt. 1. The court granted the motion by order dated June 27, 2014.

<i>See</i> Dkt. 27; Dkt 28. (6/27/14 Tr.). On October 6, 2014, Tenant commenced a

separate plenary action against Landlord by filing a complaint seeking a declaratory

judgment regarding the parties' competing interpretations of section 4(b)(i) of the 1998

Amendment. <i>See McDonalds's Corp. v 1552 Broadway Retail Owner LLC</i>, Index

No. 653045/2014. The parties each moved for summary judgment on the merits and on

whether the issues raised by Tenant could be decided by the court or were arbitrable.

Tenant took the position that an arbitration over FMV was impracticable without the

court first deciding certain issues. Tenant argued:</p>

<blockquote>If the valuation process is allowed to move forward without the Court

declaring the factors that must be considered in valuing the demised premises, <b>the

entire process necessarily will be fatally flawed</b> because the written valuations of the

two party-appointed arbitrators will proceed from a fundamentally divergent assumption

and, therefore, the third, neutral arbitrator will be forced to choose between the parties'

competing interpretations of what the Lease requires, <b>a determination that is within

the exclusive jurisdiction of this Court</b>. If the Court fails to make the requested

declaration at this stage, any subsequent arbitration proceedings would be subject to

judicial vacatur by the Court.</blockquote>

<p class="auto-style1"><i>See</i> Dkt. 71 at 15 (emphasis added). According to

Tenant, the critical issue was whether the "highest and best use of the demised premises"

meant use as a McDonalds's restaurant, as opposed to any possible use. Landlord (and,

initially, the court) averred that such issue was for the arbitrators to decide.  

</p>

<p>At the January 16, 2015 oral argument, Tenant's counsel <sup><a href="#3FN" name="3CASE"><b>[FN3]</b></a></sup>

repeatedly protested that arbitration would be impracticable if the parties' competing

FMV valuations were premised on different concepts of value. <i>See, e.g.,</i> Dkt. 69

(1/16/15 Tr. at 15) ("the determination of the meaning of this contract provision is

beyond the scope of what the arbitrators may decide. The only thing we said the

arbitrators may decide   [is] the [FMV] of the demised premises."); <i>see also id.</i> at

32 (same). By extensively arguing the merits and contending the issue was not <font color="FF0000">[*3]</font>arbitrable, Tenant waived its right to arbitration.<sup><a href="#4FN" name="4CASE"><b>[FN4]</b></a></sup>

Indeed, in the end, the court accepted Tenant's arguments that a threshold ruling on the

"highest and best use" was necessary for arbitration and reached the merits. Thus, at

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Bluebook (online)
54 Misc. 3d 1206A, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1552-broadway-retail-owner-llc-v-mcdonalds-corp-nysupct-2017.