AP Orangevale, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedAugust 8, 2023
Docket23-10687
StatusUnknown

This text of AP Orangevale, LLC (AP Orangevale, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AP Orangevale, LLC, (Del. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE Chapter 11 In re: Case No. 23-10687 (CTG) AP ORANGEVALE, LLC, Related Docket No. 10 Debtor. MEMORANDUM OPINION The issue in this case is whether to grant stay relief to allow an action against the debtor currently pending in the Sacramento County Superior Court in California to go forward. On April 7, 2023, Cable Park filed an unlawful detainer action against debtor AP Orangevale alleging, among other things, that the debtor is unlawfully occupying certain premises owned by Cable Park.1 The crux of Cable Park’s argument is that the debtor is its tenant under a lease that expired last year. In response, the debtor argues that its predecessor-in-interest validly exercised its option to renew the lease through 2052. Because the lease is priced at terms that are substantially below market rates, the debtor has every reason to argue that the term of the lease has been validly extended, while Cable Park, as landlord, has every reason to argue that the lease has expired. Trial on this matter was scheduled to commence May 30, 2023 in the California court, but the debtor filed for bankruptcy protection on May 29, 2023, thus staying the proceeding. The debtor (unsurprisingly) seeks to assume the disputed lease

1 Cable Park Property Owner, LLC is referred to as “Cable Park.” Debtor AP Orangevale, LLC is referred to as either “AP Orangevale” or the “debtor.” pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365. The parties agree that the Court can only grant a motion to assume the lease if that lease in fact remains in place, such that this Court would be required to resolve, in the debtor’s favor, the question otherwise pending in

California in order to grant the debtor’s motion to assume.2 Cable Park filed this motion for relief from stay to allow the California proceeding to go forward. Alternatively, Cable Park asks this Court to stay the debtor’s assumption motion or to abstain from deciding any issues relating to the disputed lease. The Court held an evidentiary hearing on these motions on July 26, 2023 and heard the arguments of counsel on August 1, 2023. For the reasons explained below, the Court will grant the motion for relief from

stay. By agreement of the parties, lifting the stay will serve to hold all remaining motions in abeyance pending the California Superior Court’s resolution of the dispute. Factual and Procedural Background The debtor’s only asset is a purported leasehold interest in certain real property located in California. The debtor acquired that interest through a series of

2 At an earlier hearing, the Court raised the question whether this proposition is necessarily correct. Because assumption operates only to bring into the bankruptcy estate the rights and obligations under a prepetition executory contract that were previously the rights and obligations of the prepetition debtor, the Court suggested that it may be appropriate for the Court to permit assumption even in the face of an unresolved dispute about the scope (or even the existence) of the rights and obligations being assumed. But because both parties agreed that the question whether the debtor had rights and obligations under a lease was logically antecedent to the question whether those rights and obligations may be assumed (such that if the debtor has no rights under an executory contract, a court may not authorize its assumption), the Court is proceeding on the terms agreed to by the parties. transactions dating back thirty years. The following facts relating to those transactions are undisputed. In 1986, Vernon A. Cable and Payless Drug Stores Northwest, Inc. executed a

lease that the parties describe as the “Ground Lease.”3 Pursuant to that lease, Vernon A. Cable, the owner of certain nonresidential real property, leased that property to Payless Drug Stores, the tenant. Cable Park is the (indirect) successor to Vernon A. Cable, having acquired the underlying real property in a 2015 transaction. The debtor is the (indirect) successor to Payless Drug Stores. The merits question is a dispute over when that lease expired. The Ground Lease had a 25-year term (and would have expired in 2012), but

granted the tenant eight, five-year extension options, each exercisable until 60 days before the lease’s expiration.4 In 1996, Payless Drug Stores merged with Thrifty Payless5 and Thrifty became the new tenant under the Ground Lease. In December 1998, Thrifty (seeking to monetize a valuable asset, its interest in a below-market rate lease) sold its interest in the Ground Lease to an entity known as RA3 Orangevale LLC.6 In order to remain as a tenant in the shopping center, however,

Thrifty leased back from RA3 Orangevale the right to occupy the space.7 The parties refer to Thrifty’s lease of the space from RA3 Orangevale as the “Building Lease,” in

3 Cable Park Ex. 16, Ground Lease. Exhibits introduced into evidence in connection with the July 26, 2023, hearing are cited as “Cable Park Ex. _” and “Debtor Ex. _.” 4 Id. § 2(d)-(e). 5 D.I. 10 at 4. Thrifty Payless is referred to as “Thrifty.” 6 RA3 Orangevale is at times referred to in the abbreviated form “RA3.” 7 D.I. 10 at 4. order to distinguish it from the “Ground Lease” under which RA3 Orangevale was now the tenant. In order to carry out the sale-leaseback transaction, the parties executed a

series of documents, including an assumption and assignment agreement (which is dated December 7, 1998 but whose effective date is disputed) through which Thrifty assigned its leasehold interest in the Ground Lease to RA3,8 and the new Building Lease outlining Thrifty and RA3’s roles as sub-lessee and sub-lessor, respectively.9 In addition, in order to finance its purchase of Thrifty’s tenancy interest, RA3 borrowed $4.3 million from PW Real Estate Investments (a Paine Weber affiliate),10 secured by RA3’s newly acquired interest in the Ground Lease.11 In the end, RA3

emerged as the tenant under the Ground Lease and the lessor under the Building Lease. Thrifty, having sold its interest in the Ground Lease, remained in physical possession of the space as the tenant under the Building Lease. The debtor is the ultimate successor to RA3 as the tenant under the Ground Lease and lessor under the Building Lease. As noted above, Cable Park is the ultimate successor to Vernon A. Cable, and is the owner of the underlying real property and lessor under the

Ground Lease. CVS Caremark Corp. is the ultimate successor to Thrifty as the tenant under the Building Lease.

8 Cable Park Ex. 17. 9 Cable Park Ex. 18, “Building Lease.” 10 PW Real Estate Investments is herein referred to as the “Lender.” 11 Cable Park Ex. 19. The case before the California court arises out of a disagreement between the parties as to when Thrifty assigned its interest in the Ground Lease to RA3 — which turns on when the assumption and assignment agreement became effective. The two

candidates are December 7, 1998 and December 11, 1998. The resolution of this issue appears to be outcome determinative of the question whether the Ground Lease remains in place today. The reason those four days are so critical is that it appears that on December 10, 1998, a representative from Thrifty sent a letter to Cable Park’s predecessor-in-interest purporting to exercise all eight options under the Ground Lease and thus extend the lease through 2052.12 If Thrifty was still the tenant under the Ground Lease on that date (as the debtor contends), the Ground Lease remains

in place.

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