160 WEST BROADWAY ASSOCIATES, LP VS. 1 MEMORIAL DRIVE, LLC (L-4142-15, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 11, 2021
DocketA-2454-18
StatusPublished

This text of 160 WEST BROADWAY ASSOCIATES, LP VS. 1 MEMORIAL DRIVE, LLC (L-4142-15, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (160 WEST BROADWAY ASSOCIATES, LP VS. 1 MEMORIAL DRIVE, LLC (L-4142-15, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
160 WEST BROADWAY ASSOCIATES, LP VS. 1 MEMORIAL DRIVE, LLC (L-4142-15, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-2454-18

160 WEST BROADWAY ASSOCIATES, LP,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

1 MEMORIAL DRIVE, LLC, APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION March 11, 2021 Defendant-Appellant, APPELLATE DIVISION

and

AMMA CORP., NRVP, LLC, BOULEVARD CORP., and ANTONIO PEREZ,

Defendants. ___________________________

Argued November 16, 2020 – Decided March 11, 2021

Before Judges Messano, Hoffman, and Suter.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Passaic County, Docket No. L-4142-15.

Justin D. Santagata argued the cause for appellant (Kaufman, Semeraro & Leibman, LLP, attorneys; Justin D. Santagata, on the briefs).

Peter R. Bray argued the cause for respondent. The opinion of the court was delivered by

MESSANO, P.J.A.D.

Plaintiff, 160 West Broadway Associates, LP, owned a strip mall in

Paterson and leased part of the premises to defendant Amma, Corp. (Amma),

which operated a supermarket on the site using the trademarked name "Super

Supermarket." Defendant Antonio Perez and his wife Mireya were equal

shareholders in Amma, and both were salaried employees of the corporation;

their son Jeffrey also worked at the supermarket. 1 On April 29, 2014, Amma

served notice that it was terminating the lease the next day and effectively

ceased all business operations.

In June 2013, defendant 1 Memorial Drive, LLC (Memorial), a limited

liability company formed in 2010 and owned equally by Perez, Mireya, and

Jeffrey, opened its business less than one-half mile away, operating a

supermarket also called "Super Supermarket." NRVP, LLC (NRVP), in which

Perez and Mireya had equal interests, owned the real estate, and leased the

store to Memorial.

Plaintiff filed a complaint alleging that Amma violated its lease, and it

sought damages for the unpaid balance of rent for the lease term. Plaintiff also

1 To avoid confusion, we refer to Mireya and Jeffrey by their first names. We intend no disrespect by this informality.

A-2454-18 2 alleged that Perez was "[t]he common thread" between Amma, Memorial, and

the other defendants, and it sought a declaration that Memorial was a

"successor to Amma" and "liable for its debts." Plaintiff further alleged

defendants violated the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (UFTA), N.J.S.A.

25:2-20 to -34.

The balance of plaintiff's complaint was dismissed on summary

judgment prior to trial. 2 Following an extended non-jury trial before a

different judge, the court entered judgment against Memorial "as the

successor" to Amma in the amount of $327,927.11, and also awarded plaintiff

$129,943.75 in counsel fees and costs.

I.

A.

We summarize the trial evidence as necessary to resolve the issues

raised on appeal.

A FineFare supermarket was the anchor store in plaintiff's strip mall. In

1994, Amma purchased the supermarket, approximately 16,000 square feet,

and operated it as "Super Supermarket." The Perez family owned several other

supermarkets throughout New Jersey.

2 Plaintiff has not cross-appealed from that order.

A-2454-18 3 In 1995, Amma executed a fifteen-year lease with plaintiff. However,

disputes arose over the renewal option, leading Amma to file suit and plaintiff

to counterclaim for possession. After a non-jury trial, the judge found in

Amma's favor and ordered the lease renewed for an additional five years, i.e.,

until September 30, 2015. The judge filed an extensive written opinion that

included multiple factual findings based on the trial testimony.

Plaintiff's principal, James Nuckel, testified at this trial that Perez told

him Amma intended to stay for the entire extended term. However, on April

29, 2014, Amma served written notice it would vacate the supermarket the

following day and effectively did. Plaintiff immediately began advertising for

a new tenant, but it was not until November 2014 that Moran Foods, LLC

(Moran) executed a letter of intent to lease the space. In July 2015, plaintiff

signed a lease with Moran but needed to obtain site plan approval from the

Planning Board and building permits to fit out the space for Moran. In late

2015, contemporaneous with the Planning Board's hearing on the application,

Perez, who also owned a car wash on adjacent property, objected. According

to Nuckel, because the permit and approval process took so long, Moran

rescinded the lease, and the space remained vacant through the end of Amma's

lease term.

A-2454-18 4 Perez, Mireya, and Jeffrey formed Memorial in December 2010, and

built a 30,000 square foot supermarket from the ground up on land leased from

NRVP. Construction began in 2012. Jeffrey testified that Memorial obtained

$1.5 million in financing to construct the store from General Trading, a

wholesale food distributor, which also financed the inventory for the new

store. Perez, Mireya, and Jeffrey personally guaranteed the financing.

Memorial began operating the supermarket as Super Supermarket in June

2013, nearly one year before Amma ceased operations.

Jose Bombino, Amma's accountant, testified that Perez and Mireya

decided to dissolve Amma and advised him of their decision during

discussions in March 2014. Perez said the decision was prompted by rising

expenses and falling sales at the store. Bombino testified that Amma's

supermarket was earning a profit, albeit less than other supermarkets the Perez

family operated. Perez and his wife split approximately $66,000 in net annual

income from Amma in 2013, and the corporation formally dissolved in

December 2014.

Bombino identified Amma's total assets as reflected on its federal tax

return at the end of 2013: $411,125 in inventory; $48,000 in other "current

assets," which included lease and utilities security deposits and a liquor

license; and $230,350 in intangible assets, which reflected "goodwill." The

A-2454-18 5 goodwill had been carried as an asset on Amma's books since it purchased the

FineFare.3 At trial, Memorial's expert forensic accountant, Nicolas Cafaro,

explained goodwill was an accounting term that simply reflected the premium

Amma paid when it purchased FineFare's business, i.e., "the amount over and

above the value of the assets purchased." Bombino agreed with this

characterization of the asset.

Memorial produced an expert in trademarks, Daniel Roche, who testified

that a trademark and goodwill are separate assets. Amma applied to register

Super Supermarket as a trademark in 2002, and Amma's insurance agent,

Mario Fernandez, testified the trademark expired in 2009 because Amma failed

to pay for its renewal. Fernandez's efforts to renew the trademark were

initially unsuccessful because the name was too "generic." With the assistance

of counsel, Fernandez succeeded in June 2014 to register Super Supermarket's

trademark. However, the attorney advised Fernandez that the trademark

needed to be registered to an active company; knowing of Amma's impending

dissolution, Fernandez had Amma assign the trademark to Memorial without

compensation.

Roche explained that the initial denial of renewal was significant,

because "descriptive" trademarks, like Super Supermarket, are of little or no

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