Brink's Incorporated v. Kingsbridge Holdings LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 18, 2025
Docket1:23-cv-16727
StatusUnknown

This text of Brink's Incorporated v. Kingsbridge Holdings LLC (Brink's Incorporated v. Kingsbridge Holdings LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brink's Incorporated v. Kingsbridge Holdings LLC, (N.D. Ill. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

BRINK'S INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 23 C 16727 ) KINGSBRIDGE HOLDINGS, LLC, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge:

In July 2015, plaintiff Brink's, Inc. entered into a "master lease agreement" with AAM Capital, Inc., the predecessor of defendant Kingsbridge Holdings, LLC (KBH), under which KBH agreed to lease safes to Brink's. The agreement provided that KBH would enter into one or more "lease schedules" with Brink's, i.e., lists of equipment that would be covered by the master lease, and that Brink's would pay KBH rent. Countercl., Ex. A ¶¶ 1-2. Under the master lease agreement, each lease schedule was "noncancelable by lessee for its entire lease term," and Brink's had an unconditional obligation to pay rent on time for the full lease term (as defined in the particular schedule). The master lease agreement also included a provision entitled "Redelivery." Id. ¶ 11. It stated that not less than 30 days and not more than 270 days before the expiration of the lease term, Brink's was to provide written notice of its intent to return the equipment upon expiration of the lease term. If Brink's failed to do this, then under the agreement the lease term would be deemed automatically extended for a period lasting until 30 days after Brink's provided the required notice. During this extended period, Brink's would be obligated to pay KBH "per diem rent at the last prevailing basic or renewal rent" under the applicable lease schedule. In this situation, the "stipulated loss value" of the equipment covered by the lease schedule "shall be deemed to be

equal to the Stipulated Loss Value of the Equipment determined as of the last Payment Date during the applicable Lease Term (not taking into consideration the extension described in this Section), and the applicable percentage factor shall be the last percentage factor set forth in the Lease Schedule covering such Equipment." "Stipulated Loss Value" was a reference to the master lease's requirement for Brink's to maintain first-party insurance covering the safes for loss of damage, in an amount not greater than the full replacement cost of the safes, or their "stipulated loss value." Id. ¶ 9. A list of definitions attached to the master lease agreement defined "stipulated loss value" as the equipment's acquisition cost, adjusted in a manner provided in the definition.

The master lease agreement does not appear to contain any term that permitted Brink's to return safes before the end of the original term of a particular lease schedule and get off the hook for paying rent on all the safes for the lease schedule's full term. In or about 2017, Brink's and KBH entered into a supplement to the master lease agreement entitled "cash handling equipment – renewal terms protocol." Countercl., Ex. B. This included a provision called the "renewal protocol," which "defines the terms that [KBH] and [Brink's] have agreed shall apply to any Renewal Agreement," a term defined to mean "a Lease Agreement entered into by [Brink's] at the end of the Base Term to retain Equipment"—i.e., at the end of a particular lease schedule. The renewal protocol, a key provision at issue on the present motion, reads as follows: At the end of a Base Term, [Brink's] has the right, but not the obligation, to exercise the following but only if [Brink's] gives irrevocable notice to [KBH] unequivocally electing this option ('Exercise Notice') and the Exercise Notice is received by [KBH] at least 30 days but no more than 270 days before the end of the Term.

If no Event of Default is continuing at the time [KBH] receives the Exercise Notice or at the end of the Term and [KBH] determines that no material adverse change in [Brink's] business or financial condition has occurred since the Acceptance, [Brink's] may renew the Base Term for a Renewal Term specified in the Exercise Notice.

In relation to any such Renewal Agreement, the Renewal Rent to be paid by [Brink's] will be negotiated between [KBH] and [Brink's] based upon the following factors: the Residual Value of the Equipment; the Applicable Rate; the Retained Equipment Percentage; and the length of the renewal term selected by [Brink's]. The same methodology and assumptions originally used by [KBH] will be applied.

. . .

If the foregoing Renewal option or the Redelivery Option in Section 11 of the Master Lease is not exercised, the Base Term will automatically extend for successive 3-month Renewal Terms in which case [Brink's] will continue to pay [KBH] rent at the rate of the total periodic Rental Payment previously in effect for all items of Equipment and Soft Cost Items and all other provisions of the Master Lease will continue to apply. If the Renewal option is not exercised but [Brink's] returns a portion of the Equipment to [KBH] pursuant to the Redelivery Option, the Base Term will automatically extend for successive 3-month Renewal Terms in which case [Brink's] will continue to pay [KBH] rent at the rate of the total periodic Rental Payment previously in effect proportionately reduced in accordance with the Retained Equipment Percentage.

Id. at 1-2. Each of the capitalized terms had a definition in either the renewal protocol or the master lease agreement. In particular, the term "Retained Equipment Percentage" was defined as "the Original Cost of Retained Equipment from a particular Lease Schedule expressed as a percentage of the Original Cost of all Equipment in the same Lease Schedule." Id. at 1. In this lawsuit, Brink's asserts that it has the right to make partial returns of equipment and need not return all items of equipment listed on a lease schedule. Brink's seeks a declaratory judgment that KBH breached the master lease by refusing to

except partial returns, causing Brink's losses in excess of $475,000 to store and inspect equipment it wanted to return. In its counterclaim against Brink's, KBH alleges that after entering into the master lease agreement, Brink's defaulted by failing to pay the full rent owed at various times. KBH further alleges that Brink's also defaulted by "return[ing] certain items of equipment to [KBH] during the initial term of the Lease Schedules or prior to expiration of the initial term. Then, after returning the equipment, Brink's unilaterally reduced its rent payments to [KBH]." Countercl. ¶ 2. KBH alleges that despite being notified of these and other defaults, Brink's attempted to invoke a provision of the Renewal Terms Protocol that allowed for partial returns at or after the expiration of a Lease Schedule's initial term.

KBH alleges that this "provision could only be invoked if Brink's was not in default under the Lease Agreement, which Brink's, at all relevant times, was." Id. ¶ 4. Brink's has moved to dismiss the counterclaim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. It says that the counterclaim is based on a misreading of the master lease agreement and the renewal terms protocol. Brink's also challenges the enforceability of a liquidated damages term contained in the mater lease agreement. Brink's argues that "the unambiguous contractual language permits partial safe returns." Pl.'s Mot. to Dismiss at 3. Specifically, Brink's contends that it "exercise[ed] the Redelivery Option" under the last quoted sentence of the renewal terms protocol.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Brink's Incorporated v. Kingsbridge Holdings LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinks-incorporated-v-kingsbridge-holdings-llc-ilnd-2025.