Capital Commercial Properties, Inc. v. Ames Realty II, Inc. (In Re Ames Department Stores, Inc.)

288 B.R. 339, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 75, 2003 WL 259017
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 5, 2003
Docket18-13842
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 288 B.R. 339 (Capital Commercial Properties, Inc. v. Ames Realty II, Inc. (In Re Ames Department Stores, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Commercial Properties, Inc. v. Ames Realty II, Inc. (In Re Ames Department Stores, Inc.), 288 B.R. 339, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 75, 2003 WL 259017 (N.Y. 2003).

Opinion

ROBERT E. GERBER, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this adversary proceeding under the umbrella of the jointly administered chapter 11 cases of debtors Ames Department Stores, Inc. (“Ames Department Stores”), and Ames Realty II, Inc. (“Ames Realty II,” and together with Ames Department Stores, the “Ames Defendants”), brought by landlord-plaintiffs Capital Commercial Properties, Inc. (“Capital Commercial Properties”) and Eden Center, Inc. (“Eden Center,” and together with Capital Commercial Properties, “Landlord”) 1 against tenant-defendant Ames Realty II and its parent Ames Department Stores, the Ames Defendants move for summary judgment in their favor. Summary judgment in the Ames Defendants’ favor is granted, for the reasons set forth below. 2

The Landlord seeks a declaration that its tenant, Ames Realty II, did not validly exercise contract options (or at least the most recent of them) to extend the term of the lease relating to Ames Store # 2571, in Falls Church, Virginia (the “Falls Church Store”). While it is undisputed that the Landlord received written, timely, notices for exercise of the renewal options, the Landlord contends that (while they were written by an officer who was an officer of both Ames Department Stores and Ames Realty II) the notices of option exercise were defective because they were written on the letterhead of Ames Realty II’s parent Ames Department Stores, and failed expressly to say that it was Ames Realty II that was exercising the option.

The Landlord contends that as a consequence of this defect or alleged defect (which followed the exercise of the renewal option in a like manner, five years earlier, which was never objected to, and after which the validity of the earlier lease extension was jointly acknowledged), the exercise of the option was a nullity, and Ames Realty II forfeited its rights to continued occupancy of the Falls Church Store. The Ames Defendants dispute this *342 assertion, and contend that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law, based on traditional contract principles of offer- and-acceptance; facts relating to the parties dealings which are said to establish estoppel, waiver or ratification as matter of law; and principles of law disfavoring the forfeiture of leases.

Because the Court determines that the relevant contractual issues are governed by the objective meaning of the words used by the parties and the undisputed facts with respect to their conduct, the Court concludes that the Ames Defendants have met the high burden for showing that they are entitled to judgment in their favor as a matter of law, and summary judgment in their favor must be granted.

Facts

After the parties’ exchange of their respective submissions with respect to material facts said not to be in dispute and opposition thereto, 3 and review of the relevant documents, the Court believes that the following facts are not in dispute.

Back in 1963, predecessors to Landlord and Ames Realty II — Capital Properties, Inc. (“Capital Properties”), and Zayre of Virginia, Inc. (“Zayre-Virginia”), respectively-entered into a lease (the “Lease”) with respect to the Falls Church Store. 4 The Lease as then drafted would terminate on July 31, 1986, 5 but provided for two options on the part of the tenant to extend it. 6 With respect to the tenant’s right to extend, the Lease provided, in its Section 4(B), in relevant part:

Tenant shall have the right, at its election, to extend the original term of this lease for an additional period of ten (10) years commencing upon the expiration of the original term, provided that Tenant shall give Landlord notice of the exercise of its election at least six (6) months prior to the expiration of the original term. Tenant shall have the right, at its election, to extend the original term as previously extended for one (1) additional period of ten (10) years commencing upon the expiration of the original term as previously extended provided that Tenant shall give Landlord notice of the exercise of its election at least six (6) months prior to the expiration of the original term as previously extended.... It is expressly understood that the provisions of this Section (B) do not permit Tenant to extend the term of this lease beyond July 31, 2006.

(Lease § 4(B)).

The Lease set forth requirements for the exercise of the options. Its Section 4(B) required notice of the exercise at least six months prior to the expiration of the Lease’s term. Additionally, Section 25 of the lease set forth requirements for notice under the Lease; it provided that notice “shall be in writing and shall be given by mailing the same by certified mail or registered mail, return receipt requested, postage prepaid, and except as may otherwise be provided in this lease, any such notice or other communication shall be deemed given when mailed as in this article provided.” 7

*343 In 1969, Zayre-Virginia assigned its interest as tenant under the lease to Zayre Leasing Corp. (“Zayre Leasing”), and in 1970, Zayre Leasing and Capital Properties executed an amendment to the Lease (the “1970 Amendment”). 8 Under the 1970 Amendment, Zayre Leasing (there referred to as “Leasing”) exercised the option to renew that had been provided in the Lease’s Section 4(B) as originally drafted, thereby extending the lease term for the additional 10-year period from 1986 to 1996. Zayre Leasing and Capital Properties further agreed to add, after the original Section 4(B)’s second sentence:

Tenant shall have the right, at its election, to extend the original term as previously extended pursuant to the provisions of the second sentence of this Section (B) for four (4) additional periods of five (5) years each, each commencing upon the expiration of the original term as previously extended; provided that Tenant shall give Landlord notice of the exercise of its election at least six (6) months prior to the expiration of the original term as previously extended.

(1970 Amendment § 3(a)).

The 1970 Amendment also deleted the last line of Section 4(B) of the Lease as originally drafted in 1963, which had previously provided: “It is expressly understood that the provisions of this Section (B) do not permit Tenant to extend the term of this lease beyond July 31, 2006.” 9

Though the record does not reveal exactly when or how it happened, it is apparently undisputed that sometime before 1992, Zayre Leasing became a subsidiary or affiliate of Ames Department Stores, which operated its store #2571 at the location of the Falls Church Store. Likewise, though the record is unclear as to when or how it happened, it appears that at some point in time before 1992, Capital Properties became Capital Commercial Properties. 10

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Bluebook (online)
288 B.R. 339, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 75, 2003 WL 259017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-commercial-properties-inc-v-ames-realty-ii-inc-in-re-ames-nysb-2003.