Ashwood Capital, Inc. v. OTG Management, Inc.

99 A.D.3d 1, 948 N.Y.2d 292

This text of 99 A.D.3d 1 (Ashwood Capital, Inc. v. OTG Management, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashwood Capital, Inc. v. OTG Management, Inc., 99 A.D.3d 1, 948 N.Y.2d 292 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Saxe, J.P.

The central issue in this appeal from the dismissal of an action for breach of contract, unjust enrichment and a declaratory judgment is the scope of the parties’ 2003 written agreement regarding the right to operate concessions within the Jet-Blue terminal at John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK). We are asked to determine whether the agreement’s repeated use of the term “Terminal 6” unambiguously limited the scope of the contract exclusively to the operation of concessions at Terminal 6, or whether, as plaintiff contends, the parties intended for their rights and obligations under the agreement to endure after Jet-Blue relocated to another JFK terminal. Because contract terms that are unambiguous must be enforced as written (W.W.W. Assoc. v Giancontieri, 77 NY2d 157, 162 [1990]), and not interpreted in some other way based on one party’s assertion that “when [it] used the words, [it] intended something [other] than the usual meaning” (Hotchkiss v National City Bank of N.Y., 200 F 287, 293 [SD NY 1911]), we affirm the dismissal of the claim for breach of contract.

Plaintiff Ashwood Capital, Inc. is a merchant bank, founded in 1991; Ashwood’s chairman and sole stockholder, Lawrence J. Twill, Sr., is an investment banker and a businessman with more than 40 years of experience. According to Ashwood, from 1998 to 2002, Twill personally worked with nonparty JetBlue Airways Corporation (JetBlue), then a fledgling airline, to help “develop its overall customer experience” and “facilitate Jet-Blue’s entry into JFK in 2000.” In late 2002, JetBlue Chief Executive Officer David Barger approached Twill to seek his assistance with attracting new, higher-quality restaurants and concessionnaires to JetBlue’s facilities at JFK, then located in JFK Terminal 6.

According to the complaint, finding interested concessionaires proved challenging because the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operated JFK, had announced its plans to renovate and reorganize all JFK terminals over the next decade. With JetBlue’s lease for Terminal 6 set to expire in November 2006, and the airlines’ plans to relocate to Terminal 5 shortly thereafter, any newly-created concessions at Terminal 6 would be short-term and therefore were considered unattractive as an investment.

[5]*5Twill ultimately committed his own company, Ashwood, to opening new concessions at Terminal 6. In mid-2003, Ashwood alleges, it entered into a Concessionaire Agreement with Jet-Blue, whereby Ashwood secured the rights to open three restaurants in JetBlue’s Terminal 6 facilities: a Papaya King franchise, a New York-themed sports bar and grill, and a Mexican restaurant. Ashwood, however, had little interest in the day-to-day operations and wished to acquire a business partner to assume these responsibilities. On the recommendation of JetBlue’s vice-president of real estate, Twill contacted defendant Eric Blatstein, then president of defendant OTG Management, Inc. (OTG),

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99 A.D.3d 1, 948 N.Y.2d 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashwood-capital-inc-v-otg-management-inc-nyappdiv-2012.