Applied Biosystems v. 384 Foster City Blvd. Partners

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 19, 2014
DocketA135226
StatusUnpublished

This text of Applied Biosystems v. 384 Foster City Blvd. Partners (Applied Biosystems v. 384 Foster City Blvd. Partners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Applied Biosystems v. 384 Foster City Blvd. Partners, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 8/19/14 Applied Biosystems v. 384 Foster City Blvd. Partners NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

APPLIED BIOSYSTEMS, LLC, Cross-complainant and Appellant, A135226 v. 384 FOSTER CITY BOULEVARD (San Mateo County PARTNERS, Super. Ct. No. CIV 496994) Cross-defendant and Respondent.

A landlord, 384 Foster City Boulevard Partners (FCB Partners), sued its former tenant, Applied Biosystems, LLC (Applied Biosystems), for lost rent damages it incurred due to the inability to lease the premises after Applied Biosystems failed to repair and restore the leased premises at the conclusion of the lease. In a cross-complaint, Applied Biosystems sought to rescind an agreement in which FCB Partners gave Applied Biosystems a limited release in exchange for receiving $345,000 to repair and restore the premises. Applied Biosystems claimed FCB Partners breached the limited release by filing its lawsuit. The trial court granted FCB Partners’ motion to strike the cross- complaint as a strategic lawsuit against public participation (SLAPP) pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section section 425.16—commonly referred to as the anti-SLAPP statute.1 On appeal, Applied Biosystems challenges the order granting the anti-SLAPP motion, arguing that it established a probability of prevailing on its cross-complaint. 1 All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise specified.

1 Applied Biosystems claims it is entitled to rescission of its agreement with FCB Partners because the core allegations of the complaint filed by FCB Partners are false and in breach of the limited release. For its part, FCB Partners argues that the limited release covered only the costs of restoring the premises but did not extend to lost rent damages. Because we agree with FCB Partners that the filing of its lawsuit for lost rent damages does not entitle Applied Biosystems to rescind the agreement, we shall affirm the trial court’s order. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND FCB Partners is a general partnership that owns a commercial office building and parking lot located at 384 Foster City Boulevard in Foster City (the premises). FCB Partners leased the premises to Applied Biosystems beginning in 1997.2 Three years into the lease, Applied Biosystems expanded the parking lot from the premises onto an adjacent property. As part of the project to expand the parking lot, the water and electrical services at the premises were connected to the neighboring property. Applied Biosystems and its subtenant vacated the premises by February 8, 2008, which was the date the lease expired. When Applied Biosystems moved out it had not restored the premises to its former condition as required by the lease. Four months after moving out, Applied Biosystems still had not completed the restoration. Instead of doing so, it proposed to simply pay FCB Partners to have the restoration work done. In a draft agreement proposed by Applied Biosystems, it offered to pay FCB Partners $310,000 in exchange for a complete release of “any and all commitments, obligations, liabilities, losses, damages, rents, causes of action, costs, and expenses” under the lease. (Italics added.) The attorney for FCB Partners rejected the draft agreement, describing it in an e- mail to Applied Biosystems as a “complete release” that was never contemplated by the parties. The attorney for FCB Partners explained in the e-mail that the parties 2 Applied Biosystems is actually the successor in interest to the entity that originally leased the premises from FCB Partners. For the sake of consistency and simplicity, when referring to the parties to the lease we use the names of the parties to this action instead of any predecessor or successor entities.

2 contemplated a release limited to the obligation to return the premises to the condition required by the lease. Nearly a year after the lease ended, Applied Biosystems and FCB Partners reached an agreement in January 2009 settling the restoration costs issue (the 2009 limited release). The terms of the 2009 limited release provided that Applied Biosystems would pay $345,000 to FCB Partners and that “[t]his payment releases Applied Biosystems, Inc. (PE Corporation, The Perkin-Elmer Corporation, and Applera Corporation, previous names of Applied Biosystems, Inc., the ‘Lessee’), its successors, assigns, affiliates, subsidiaries, employees, officers, directors, agents, and representatives, from any and all interior repairs and exterior landscape and parking lot work necessary to restore the Premises to the condition required pursuant to the Lease.”3 FCB Partners filed suit against Applied Biosystems in July 2010.4 The original complaint contained causes of action for breach of contract and conversion. FCB Partners alleged that Applied Biosystems failed to restore the premises in accordance with the lease terms at the conclusion of the tenancy in February 2008 despite repeated demands from FCB Partners to repair and restore the premises. FCB Partners acknowledged receiving $345,000 from Applied Biosystems in January 2009 as a payment in lieu of the obligation to restore the interior, parking lot, and landscaping. According to the complaint, at some point after receiving the $345,000 payment from Applied Biosystems, FCB Partners discovered that Applied Biosystems “without notice or permission” had connected the water supply from the premises to the neighboring property in order to provide water to the adjacent parking lot controlled by Applied Biosystems. FCB Partners alleged that as a result of the failure to restore the premises, Applied Biosystems had been a holdover tenant since February 2008 and owed

3 The party to this appeal—Applied Biosystems, LLC—is the successor in interest to Applied Biosystems, Inc. 4 The named plaintiff in the original complaint was a successor in interest to FCB Partners, and the named defendant was Applied Biosystems’ predecessor in interest. The parties later stipulated that the proper parties were FCB Partners as plaintiff and Applied Biosystems as defendant.

3 FCB Partners rent at the fair market value for the use of the premises. FCB Partners sought lost rent damages exceeding $1.9 million as well as $10,000 for the water allegedly used without permission to irrigate the neighboring property. In a first amended complaint, FCB Partners clarified that Applied Biosystems was a tenant at sufferance for the period from February 2008 until at least January 2009. The first amended complaint referenced the partial release in exchange for the payment of $345,000 but alleged that the 2009 limited release “did not release any claims of rent during the tenancy by sufferance . . . .” The first amended complaint also added an allegation that Applied Biosystems “without notice or permission” connected into the premises’ electrical service in order to provide electricity to the neighboring property controlled by Applied Biosystems. Applied Biosystems alleged that the cost to remediate and repair the water and electrical system was no less than $10,000. The first amended complaint added causes of action for trespass, quantum meruit, and waste. FCB Partners sought damages totaling $980,000 as the reasonable value of the lost rent and the water and electricity supplied to the neighboring property. The estimated value of the water and electricity supplied to the neighboring property was $10,000. Consequently, almost all of the damages sought were for lost rent.

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Bluebook (online)
Applied Biosystems v. 384 Foster City Blvd. Partners, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/applied-biosystems-v-384-foster-city-blvd-partners-calctapp-2014.