Aterra 144, 1960 Grand Avenue, WDM, LLC v. David B. Anders

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 22, 2023
Docket22-0774
StatusPublished

This text of Aterra 144, 1960 Grand Avenue, WDM, LLC v. David B. Anders (Aterra 144, 1960 Grand Avenue, WDM, LLC v. David B. Anders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aterra 144, 1960 Grand Avenue, WDM, LLC v. David B. Anders, (iowactapp 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0774 Filed February 22, 2023

ATERRA 144, 1960 GRAND AVENUE, WDM, LLC, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DAVID B. ANDERS, Defendant-Appellant, ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Michael D. Huppert,

Judge.

Following a bench trial, the defendant challenges the district court’s ruling

that his 2005 guaranty is enforceable by successor landlords and the award of

attorney fees. AFFIRMED.

Brett T. Osborn and Emily X. Douglas of Abbott Osborn Jacobs PLC, West

Des Moines, for appellant.

Matthew A. McGuire, Mitchell R. Kunert, and Kevin B. Patrick (until

withdrawal) of Nyemaster Goode, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee.

Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Greer and Chicchelly, JJ. 2

GREER, Judge.

Following a bench trial, David Anders appeals the district court ruling that

his 2005 personal guaranty of a lease was enforceable by successor landlord

Aterra 144, 1960 Grand Avenue, WDM, LLC (Aterra) and the judgment entered

against him. Anders raises a number of alternative theories why the district court

erred in its ruling: (1) Aterra’s predecessor in interest abandoned his guaranty, (2)

his guaranty was discharged through accord and satisfaction, and (3) Aterra

waived his guaranty by failing to rely on it when it purchased the leased premises

in 2019. Anders also challenges the district court’s award of attorney fees to Aterra

as excessive.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

In April 2005, Crazy Chicken, LLC—a Nebraska limited liability company—

sought to enter a lease agreement with the then-owners of a shopping center in

West Des Moines. The property was managed by John Mandelbaum,1 and he

negotiated the lease. Anders, as one of the members of the Crazy Chicken, signed

the lease on behalf of the LLC. The lease agreement was for a term of five years

and six months (until January 30, 2011) and gave Crazy Chicken the option to

renew for up to two additional five-year periods so long as Crazy Chicken notified

the landlord no later than six months prior to the expiration of the then-current lease

term, was not in default, and had not been late on rent more than three times.

Anders was the only member of Crazy Chicken asked to give a personal guaranty,

and he did. He guarantied “the timely payment of rent and all other charges to be

1 Technically Mandelbaum Commercial Real Estate Services, L.L.C. was the property manager, of which John Mandelbaum was the owner. 3

paid by [Crazy Chicken] under the Lease” and also agreed the guaranty would

“remain in full force and effect as to any renewal or extension of the Lease

regardless of any modification or amendment of the Lease.”

Sometime in 2007 or 2009,2 Anders transferred his ownership interest in

Crazy Chicken to other members. This left Dawnielle Beister, Kenneth Beister,

Collin Nabity,3 and Chicken Coop of Kearney, Inc. as the owners of Crazy Chicken.

In June 2010, Kenneth and Dawnielle4 notified Mandelbaum that Crazy

Chicken wanted to renew the lease. A few months later, in October, Crazy Chicken

and Mandelbaum executed the “first addendum to the lease.” In it, Crazy Chicken

and Mandelbaum agreed “the Lease is continued and has not lapsed.” It also

included the following:

5. Landlord acknowledges that the Ownership interests of Crazy Chicken, LLC have changed and that Dawnielle Beister now owns a 25% interest, Kenneth Beister now owns a 25% interest. [Collin] Nabity now owns a 35% interest and Chicken Coop of Kearney, Inc. now owns a 15% interest. David Anders has sold his entire ownership position and is no longer an owner of Crazy Chicken, LLC; and 6. Dawnielle Beister, Kenneth Beister and [Collin] Nabity have each agreed to personally guarantee the Lease, as amended, and have executed and had notarized the attached personal guarantees; and 7. All the other terms and conditions of the initial Lease shall remain the same and are hereby ratified and confirmed by the parties.

2 There is contradicting evidence about the date in the record. Multiple witnesses testified Anders sold his interest in Crazy Chicken in 2007, but a letter from an attorney written in March 2010, which Anders introduced into evidence at trial, states that Anders transferred his member interests on January 1, 2009. 3 Nabity’s first name is spelled as both “Colin” and “Collin” in the record. For

consistency, we will use “Collin.” 4 We refer to Kenneth and Dawnielle Beister by their first names to avoid confusion. 4

Kenneth, Dawnielle, and Nabity each signed the first addendum on behalf of Crazy

Chicken.

Crazy Chicken and Mandelbaum executed a second addendum to the lease

in 2015 and then a third addendum in 2016.

In 2019, the owners of the shopping center sold the property to Aterra. As

part of the purchase agreement, Aterra purchased the “space leases,” which the

contract defined as “all tenant space lease(s), license(s), concessions or other

occupancy or use agreements, including all modifications, addenda and

supplements thereto and guarantees thereof, applicable to any part of the Real

Estate.” The purchase agreement specifically included “any guarantees or

warranties relating to the Real Estate or Personal Property.” The previous owners

and Aterra also executed an assignment and assumption of leases, which included

Crazy Chicken’s lease.

In July 2020, Crazy Chicken and a manager for Aterra executed the fourth

addendum to the lease agreement.5

Then in August, Aterra advised Crazy Chicken that it was in default of the

lease agreement “for failure to pay rent and other charges required under the terms

of the” lease and “for vacating and abandoning the premises” in violation of the

agreement. Aterra initiated this lawsuit a few months later. It brought suit against

Crazy Chicken, Anders, Nabity, Dawnielle, and Kenneth, alleging Crazy Chicken

5 This addendum provided a period of rent abatement due to the COVID-19 pandemic and added four months to the term of the lease. Otherwise, “[e]xcept as modified by the terms of [the] Amendment, the Lease and all terms and conditions contained therein . . . remain[ed] in full force and effect.” 5

breached the lease agreement and Anders, Nabity, Dawnielle, and Kenneth each

breached their personal guaranties of the lease.

Anders moved for summary judgment, arguing his 2005 guaranty of the

lease agreement was not enforceable because (1) the previous owners of the

shopping plaza—Aterra’s predecessor in interest—abandoned his guaranty and

accepted others in its place and (2) Aterra was barred from recovery under the

doctrine of accord and satisfaction. Anders acknowledged he did not have a formal

written release but asserted that the first addendum to the lease established that

Mandelbaum accepted the new guaranties from Crazy Chicken’s remaining

members in place of Anders’s personal guaranty.

Aterra resisted. It highlighted the language from Anders’s personal

guaranty stating that it “shall remain in full force and effect as to any renewal or

extension of the Lease and regardless of any modification or amendment of the

Lease.” Additionally, Aterra attacked the evidence Anders offered to support his

motion for summary judgment, arguing that his “sole support for each one of his

arguments is inadmissible hearsay. Anders submits a self-serving affidavit signed

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