Bill Signs Trucking, LLC v. Signs Family Limited Partnership

69 Cal. Rptr. 3d 589, 157 Cal. App. 4th 1515, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 2047
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 2007
DocketD047861
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 69 Cal. Rptr. 3d 589 (Bill Signs Trucking, LLC v. Signs Family Limited Partnership) 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
Bill Signs Trucking, LLC v. Signs Family Limited Partnership, 69 Cal. Rptr. 3d 589, 157 Cal. App. 4th 1515, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 2047 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*1518 Opinion

McCONNELL, P. J.

We hold in this case that a tenant’s preemptive purchase rights under a commercial lease are not triggered by the conveyance of an interest in the property between copartners in a family limited partnership that owns the property and is the landlord. We affirm the judgment for defendants.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

William Signs, Jr., owned Bill Signs Trucking, Inc., later called Bill Signs Trucking, LLC (BST). Robert Neal began managing the business in 1985, with the understanding he would eventually obtain an ownership interest in it. Signs and Neal became close friends. Signs married Lori Signs in 1994. 1 His only child, Tammy Duncan, is from a former marriage. Lori was not on friendly grounds with Duncan or Neal.

In 1988 Signs purchased several parcels of land totaling approximately 45 acres on Channel Road in Lakeside, California. Signs and Neal began developing the parcels and BST moved its operation to approximately six acres of the property. Other portions of the property were used for other purposes.

In December 1992 Signs created the Signs Family Limited Partnership (SFLP) and transferred ownership of the Channel Road property to it, along with other real and personal property. Signs was the sole general partner in SFLP and he was originally the sole limited partner. His general interest was valued at 4 percent of the total value of the partnership and his limited interest was valued at 96 percent.

Also in December 1992 Signs created the William B. Signs, Jr. Children’s Trust (Children’s Trust) to benefit Duncan and her children. Signs conveyed 62 percent of his limited interest in SFLP to Duncan as trustee of the Children’s Trust.

Shortly before their April 1994 marriage, Signs and Lori entered into a prenuptial agreement. It provided that on Signs’s death, Lori was to receive 20 percent of his limited interest in SFLP and other assets.

In September 1994 Signs executed the William Boyd Signs, Jr. Trust (Signs Revocable Trust) and transferred his assets to it. Duncan and her children were beneficiaries on his death, and Lori was eligible to become a *1519 beneficiary under the prenuptial agreement. Further, Signs’s 4 percent general interest in SFLP and 51 percent of his interest in BST were to be distributed to Neal, and Neal was named first successor trustee.

In February 1999 Signs gave Neal a 20 percent interest in BST and they entered into an operating agreement for the business. Additionally, Signs and Lori amended their prenuptial agreement to give her 100 percent of his limited interest in SFLP on his death. Further, the agreement required Lori to cooperate to enable Neal to purchase the remainder of BST on Signs’s death.

On April 26, 1999, SFLP and BST entered into a lease agreement (Lease) of the portion of the Channel Road property on which the business operates. The Lease contains preemptive purchase rights that are the subject of this appeal.

Section 1.03(a) of the Lease provides: “Landlord [SFLP] . . . agrees that it will not sell the Premises to any person until Landlord has given to Tenant [BST] notice in writing of its intent to sell, specifying the price and terms of the contemplated sale.” Under section 1.03(a), BST had an option to purchase the property at the same price and on the same terms and conditions set forth in the notice of intent to sell.

Section 1.03(b) of the Lease provides: “If at any time during the term of this Lease Landlord receives from any third party a bona fide offer to purchase the Premises at a price and on terms acceptable to Landlord, Landlord shall give written notice of the offer to Tenant. Within thirty . . . days after Landlord gives Tenant written notice of the third-party offer, Tenant shall have the right to purchase the Premises at the same price and on the same terms and conditions set forth in the third-party offer.”

Also on April 26, Signs amended the Signs Revocable Trust to remove Neal as first successor trustee and to designate Lori and Duncan as cotrustees, and to delete the bequests to Neal. Duncan was upset about sharing trustee duties with Lori, but Signs explained he wanted them to learn to get along, and “it would all work out” and “flow smoothly.”

In November 1999 Signs amended SFLP in recognition of Neal’s efforts to develop approximately 19.5 acres of additional land Signs purchased for a sand mining venture. This land is referred to separately as the East Willow property, but it is also included within the definition of the Channel Road property. The amendment stated SFLP “agrees to specially allocate and distribute 20% of net profits from such property [East Willow property] to .. . Neal. Net profits shall be defined as gross income from rents, royalties, licenses, environmental land bank credits[,] sale or other income producing uses of the property, net of expenses incurred in generating the gross income.”

*1520 Signs died in January 2001, at which time he held general and limited interests in SFLP of 4 percent and 34 percent, respectively. Neal exercised an option to purchase Signs’s interest in BST.

Lori and Duncan became embroiled in disputes and litigation regarding the management of SFLP and Duncan wanted out of the partnership.

Among the disagreements was the division of Signs’s 4 percent general interest in SFLP. In October 2003, after mediation, Lori and Duncan approved the Signs Family Limited Partnership Distribution Agreement (SFLP Distribution Agreement), under which partnership assets are to be divided and it is to be dissolved. Duncan, for herself and the Children’s Trust, is to receive 2 2/3 percent of the general interest (increasing her total interest to 64 2/3 percent), and Lori is to receive 1 1/3 percent of it (increasing her total interest to 35 1/3 percent). Additionally, Lori is to buy out Duncan’s interest in the Channel Road property for $5 million.

SFLP sent Neal a letter notifying him of the SFLP Distribution Agreement and stating it believed the agreement did not trigger BST’s preemptive purchase rights as to the portion of the property on which BST conducts business. Neal disagreed and he and BST sued SFLP, Lori, Duncan and the Children’s Trust for specific performance and related counts. 2 Pending resolution of this litigation, the SFLP Distribution Agreement has not gone into effect.

The parties agreed to a bifurcated procedure, in which the trial court would first determine whether the proposed transfer triggered BST’s preemptive purchase rights in the Lease and the special profit-sharing amendment to SFLP. The court found the Lease ambiguous and allowed parol evidence on Signs’s intent. The court determined Signs did not intend that a transfer between family members would trigger Neal’s preemptive purchase rights, and the proposed transaction was not a bona fide sale to a third party. The court denied Neal’s claim for specific performance of the Lease, and also found the special profit-sharing amendment to SFLP was not triggered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 Cal. Rptr. 3d 589, 157 Cal. App. 4th 1515, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 2047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bill-signs-trucking-llc-v-signs-family-limited-partnership-calctapp-2007.