Big Buck Brewery & Steakhouse, Inc. v. Eyde (In Re Big Buck Brewery & Steakhouse)

399 B.R. 820, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1172, 2009 WL 56044
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 8, 2009
DocketBkrptcy No. 07-04213-SWR. No. 08-CV-12471
StatusPublished

This text of 399 B.R. 820 (Big Buck Brewery & Steakhouse, Inc. v. Eyde (In Re Big Buck Brewery & Steakhouse)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Big Buck Brewery & Steakhouse, Inc. v. Eyde (In Re Big Buck Brewery & Steakhouse), 399 B.R. 820, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1172, 2009 WL 56044 (E.D. Mich. 2009).

Opinion

*822 OPINION AND ORDER AFFIRMING MAY SO, 2008 DECISION AND JUDGMENT

GEORGE CARAM STEEH, District Judge.

Appellants Michael Eyde, Eyde Brothers Development Co., L.L.C., and Land One L.L.C., appeal from a May 30, 2008 adversary proceeding judgment entered by Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes against Big Buck Brewery & Steakhouse, Inc. in the amount of $13,640.00 for damages resulting from Big Buck’s removal of fixtures and other personal property from Eyde’s building. A hearing was held on December 16, 2008. Eyde’s Counsel appeared by teleconference and was granted leave to file a written response to the arguments advanced by Big Buck at the hearing. Eyde filed a “Rebuttal to Oral Argument” on December 30, 2008. For the reasons set forth below, the May 30, 2008 decision and judgment will be AFFIRMED.

I.

Former debtor-in-possession Big Buck operated an Auburn Hills, Michigan restaurant, filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on June 10, 2004. Following this court’s May 25, 2005 affirmance of the Bankruptcy Court’s determination that a 1997 sale and ground-leaseback transaction between Big Buck and Eyde was not a bona fide lease, 11 U.S.C. § 365(d), the parties executed a February 14, 2006 “Settlement Agreement,” and a December 7, 2006 “Stipulation Granting Debtor Limited License for Use of Real Property.” The Settlement Agreement and Stipulation granted Big Buck the right to retain possession of the restaurant premises until January 15, 2007. Paragraph 6 of the Settlement Agreement provides:

6. The Debtor [Big Buck] shall have the right to remove its personal property, including furniture, trade fixtures and equipment (not including the Brewery Equipment, which shall be governed by the Personal Property Option) from the Premises within 30 days *823 after receipt of Eyde’s written notice that he is not exercising the Personal Property Option. In removing any of the Debtor’s personal property, including furniture, trade fixtures and equipment including the Brewery Equipment if applicable (i) the Debtor shall use its best efforts to minimize damage to the Premises, and (ii) the Debtor shall repair to as least as good condition any damage caused by such removal, such as, but not limited to, damage to plate glass windows and removal of walls and doors. Debtor shall not be obligated to replace floor or wall coverings or paint exposed as a result of removal of fixtures, or to remove electrical, mechanical or physical connection points for fixtures including but not limited to wiring drops, footings, brackets and exhaust vents. That debtor shall ensure that any openings to the exterior of the building created due to the removal of any equipment are closed or otherwise sealed to weather. The Debtor shall leave the Premises in a safe condition. The Debtor shall notify Mr. Eyde of the dates and times of the removal of the personal property as provided elsewhere in this Agreement, or if not otherwise provided, at least forty-eight (48) hours prior to such actions, and Mr. Eyde shall be entitled to have a representative present to supervise the removal.

(emphasis added).

Big Buck removed walk-in coolers from the south wall of the building on January 14, 2007, and vacated the premises on January 16, 2007. Eyde representatives inspected the building on January 23, 2007. The record indicates an attorney for Eyde left a roof door open following the inspection. In a February 12, 2007 letter from Eyde representative Don Cuthbert to Big Buck Chief Executive Officer Joel Flowers, Eyde demanded $60,400.00 to repair and restore the building, asserting that “the crew that handled the removal of the equipment and the restoration of the facility did a less than professional job.” Among other complaints, Cuthbert wrote:

Several areas were covered with mold. The wall covering and insulation would need to be removed and disposed of. The areas would need to be sanitized and the insulation and wall covering replaced.

Cuthbert and Flowers inspected the premises on February 17, 2007, and discovered that a 11/2 inch diameter pipe behind a northeast wall had frozen and burst, causing water to flow into the walls and carpeting. Cuthbert repaired the pipe approximately a week later, but did not extract the water from the walls or carpet.

On March 9, 2007, Big Buck filed a complaint in Bankruptcy Court seeking declaratory relief that it was in full compliance with the terms of the Settlement Agreement. Eyde filed a Counter-Complaint alleging breach of the Settlement Agreement, breach of implied contract, and waste. Following a six-day adversary proceeding, Bankruptcy Judge Rhodes determined that Big Buck was liable under Eyde’s breach of contract counter-claim for $13,640.00. Judge Rhodes also found that Big Buck was not liable for remediation of the mold found within the building. Specifically, Judge Rhodes held that Big Buck had not breached its contractual duty arising under Paragraph 6 of the Settlement Agreement — “Debtor shall leave the Premises in a safe condition.” — interpreting this sentence of Paragraph 6 as applicable only in the context of Big Buck’s removal of fixtures and personal property from the building as opposed to a general undertaking. May 30, 2008 Tr., at 60. Judge Rhodes held that Big Buck “was obligated to remedy any unsafe condition *824 only to the extent that such unsafe conditions resulted from the removal of its personal property.” Id. at 62. As the fact-finder, Judge Rhodes determined that Eyde failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Big Buck’s removal of its personal property and fixtures created or exasperated any unsafe condition with respect to the mold on the premises. Id. at 63.

.... [I]t is significant to the Court, although no means controlling, that in the interim five or six months between the time that Big Buck vacated the premises and the Eyde Entities experts began their investigations, there was significant water intrusion into the building from the burst pipe which allowed water to flow freely into the building for several days. In these circumstances, the Court must conclude that the evidence simply does not allow a finding, and it’s certainly none in the Eyde’s favor, the issue of the extent to which the mold on the premises was a result of that water intrusion or conditions that existed before Big Buck vacated the premises.
Now, it is certainly true that the removal of the cooler walls exposed the mold that was pre-existing along the south wall. Nevertheless, it does not logically follow in the Court’s view that the removal of the cooler walls is what caused the south wall to be left in an unsafe condition. The removal of the cooler walls did not cause the mold. Rather, the evidence establishes that the mold was caused by a water leak from a defective roof or a defective scoffer [sic] system.
In the end the Court must find that the Eyde Entities have not carried their burden of proof that the mold condition, and the mold contamination on the premises was caused by or measurably worsened by the manner in which Big Buck removed its personal property.

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Bluebook (online)
399 B.R. 820, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1172, 2009 WL 56044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/big-buck-brewery-steakhouse-inc-v-eyde-in-re-big-buck-brewery-mied-2009.