Buck Consultants, Inc. v. Glenpointe Associates

217 F. App'x 142
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 2007
Docket05-4685
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 217 F. App'x 142 (Buck Consultants, Inc. v. Glenpointe Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buck Consultants, Inc. v. Glenpointe Associates, 217 F. App'x 142 (3d Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

PRATTER, District Judge.

Glenpointe Associates (“Glenpointe”) has appealed the District Court’s summary judgment in favor of Glenpointe’s tenant, Buck Consultants, Inc. (“Buck”), in which the District Court found that Glenpointe unreasonably, and in bad faith, refused Buck’s request that Glenpointe consent to a proposed sublease between Buck and Eisai Corporation of North America (“Eisai”).

For the reasons below, we affirm the finding with respect to unreasonableness and vacate and remand the District Court’s finding that Glenpointe acted in bad faith. We also find that it was error for the District Court to order that the lease in question was terminated in its entirety.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On November 18, 1998, Glenpointe leased 70,000 square feet of office space to' PriceWaterhouse Coopers, LLP (“PWC”) at Glenpointe Centre West (“Glenpointe West”), in Teaneck, New Jersey (the “Lease”). 1 The Lease term extended to February 28, 2009. In January 2002, -with the consent of Glenpointe, PWC assigned the Lease to EBS Acquisition Corporation (“EBS”), a wholly owned subsidiary of Mellon Financial Corporation (“Mellon”). Six months later, EBS assigned the Lease to Buck, another Mellon affiliate.

Under the terms of the Lease, Buck was responsible for annual fixed rent payments in the amount of $1,992,777 for the first five years of the Lease, and $2,272,465 annual fixed rent thereafter. In addition, Buck was responsible for its proportionate share of operating expenses and real estate taxes. Accordingly, Buck made monthly rent payments totaling $173,377.79, including $166,044.75 in fixed rent and $7,313.04 in additional rent obligations.

The Lease contains multiple provisions that, when taken together, govern Buck’s ability to assign or sublease the premises. Paragraph 11 of the Lease states, in pertinent part:

(A) Tenant, for itself ... successors and assigns, expressly covenants that it shall not assign, mortgage or encumber this Lease, nor underlet, or suffer or permit the demised premises of any part thereof to be used by others, without the prior written consent of Landlord in each instance, as hereinafter set forth.

Paragraph 27(J) of the Lease provides the guidelines for Glenpointe’s consent:

*144 (1) (a) Whenever Landlord’s consent or approval is required under the Lease, Landlord agrees that such consent or approval shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed at such times as Tenant is not in default in the performance of any of its obligations under this Lease after notice and the expiration of any applicable cure periods provided herein. This subsection J(l) shall not apply to any provision in this Lease which expressly permits Landlord to arbitrarily withhold its consent or approval.
(2) If in this Lease, it is provided that Landlord’s consent or approval as to any matter will not be unreasonably withheld, and it is established by a court or body having final jurisdiction thereover that Landlord has been unreasonable, the only effect of such finding shall be that Landlord shall be deemed to have given its consent or approval; it being understood and agreed that in no event ... shall Landlord be liable to Tenant in any respect for money damages by reason of withholding its consent, unless such court or body specifically determines that Landlord had acted in bad faith or maliciously ... and in no event shall Landlord be liable for consequential or punitive damages (including, without limitation, lost profits).
(4) Landlord and Tenant each agree to perform all of their respective obligations hereunder in good faith.

Thus, under the bargained-for terms of the Lease, (a) Glenpointe’s consent to a proposed sublease is required, (b) Glenpointe’s consent may not be unreasonably withheld, (c) if Glenpointe withholds consent unreasonably, Buck’s only remedy is that consent would be deemed given, unless (d) Glenpointe acts in “bad faith or maliciously,” in which case Glenpointe is subject to monetary damages for withholding consent.

In December 1996, Eisai entered into a lease with Glenpointe for approximately 50,000 square feet in Glenpointe West with a February 28, 2007 expiration date (the “Eisai Lease”). Eisai obtained additional space in Glenpointe West through a series of sublets from other Glenpointe West tenants, each time with the consent of Glenpointe, and each time extending the subleases beyond the lease termination dates of the sublandlord to be coterminous with the expiration of the Eisai Lease. By 2002, Eisai approximately doubled its occupancy in Glenpointe West, and continued to seek further expansion.

On May 30, 2002, Eisai approached Glenpointe with a request for a proposal to lease approximately 160,000 square feet in a different building owned by Glenpointe, not far from Glenpointe West. 2 However, Glenpointe responded to the request with terms that Eisai found unacceptable, and after rejecting the proposal, Eisai began negotiations with Buck to sublease approximately 50,000 square feet of Buck’s space (the “subject space”).

Having learned of the negotiations between Buck and Eisai, 3 Glenpointe was not to be defeated; it continued its attempts to solicit a direct lease with Eisai. Citing concerns about what had become Eisai’s patchwork quilt of short term leases, all of which were to expire in February 2007, on September 25, 2002, Glenpointe made a second proposal to Eisai. Glenpointe based the terms of this proposal on those *145 Eisai had included in its initial request to Glenpointe for a proposal, offering Eisai a total of approximately 150,000 square feet of new space. Glenpointe would directly lease 99,000 square feet of this space to Eisai, and would preapprove Eisai’s sublease with Buck. The proposal would extend the Eisai Lease for a term 15 years beyond the current expiration date. Glenpointe also warned Eisai that in the absence of a “long term ‘game plan’ ” of expansion, Glenpointe was unwilling to consent to a situation where nearly half of the building would vacate “in one fell swoop” in the near term.

Despite the new offer, on October 16, 2002, Buck and Eisai agreed on the terms of the sublease. Buck was to sublease 51,922 square feet of space to Eisai, for a term to commence December 1, 2002 and terminate on February 28, 2007, the same date of the expiration of the Eisai Lease and of all of Eisai’s subleases in Glenpointe West. On November 11, 2002, Buck gave Glenpointe Notice of the Intention of Buck and Eisai to enter into the sublease, requesting Glenpointe’s consent to the transaction. 4 In response to the Notice, on December 10, 2002, Glenpointe sent Eisai another revised proposal with a reduced term extension to six years beyond the expiration of the Eisai Lease, yet Eisai remained uninterested.

On December 30, 2002, Glenpointe provided Buck written notice of its refusal to consent to the Buck/Eisai sublease.

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217 F. App'x 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buck-consultants-inc-v-glenpointe-associates-ca3-2007.