Capital One, N.A. v. City of Alexandria

439 B.R. 379, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 116498, 2010 WL 4386820
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedOctober 27, 2010
DocketCivil Action 10-0665
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 439 B.R. 379 (Capital One, N.A. v. City of Alexandria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital One, N.A. v. City of Alexandria, 439 B.R. 379, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 116498, 2010 WL 4386820 (W.D. La. 2010).

Opinion

RULING

DEE D. DRELL, District Judge.

Before the Court is the appeal of Capital One Bank (“Capital One”), from the Bankruptcy Court’s April 1, 2010 grant of partial summary judgment in favor of the City of Alexandria (“the City”), recognizing the City’s unencumbered ownership of certain immovable property in Alexandria and rejecting and terminating Capital One’s claim to an interest in the property. Doc. 1-3.

For the reasons set forth, we affirm the Bankruptcy Court’s ruling (i) that the City is the fee owner of the land and its improvements and (ii) its reinstatement of its own order deeming the lease rejected. However, we vacate the Bankruptcy Court order terminating the lease as an automatic result of its rejection. We are compelled to remand the case for further development of the record on that issue.

BACKGROUND

I. History of the lease and origins of the improvements

The property affected is described in detail in Exhibit “A” of the Bankruptcy *382 Court order. Doe. 1-3, pp. 5-9. It consists mainly of (i) a certain tract of land in Alexandria surrounded roughly by Fourth Street, Jackson Street, Main Street, and Elliott Street, and (ii) various immovable improvements located there, particularly a disputed hotel tower and parking lot, formerly the Downtown Holiday Inn and today the Alexander Fulton Hotel. The property also contains various movables, the parties’ interest in which is not at issue.

The City is the fee owner of the land. It had a long-term lease, originally dating from 1983, under which various lessees rented the property to operate a “full service hotel facility.” Doc. 13-9. The hotel tower and parking lot were constructed by the original lessee, Alexandria Convention Centre, Ltd., pursuant to the 1983 lease, under which the parties agreed to construct a “landlord’s project” and a “tenant’s project” on the property, the latter consisting, in part, of the hotel tower and parking lot. Doc. 13-5, pp. 6-7. Alexandria Convention Center’s interest in the property was transferred multiple times until the bankruptcy debtor here, NR Group, LLC (sometimes “NR” or “Debt- or”) acquired it and began operating the hotel in 2003. 1 In the interim, the original 1983 lease was amended numerous times, most notably in 1991, 2 1996, and then in December 2003 when NR was assigned its interest and the City and NR entered into an Estoppel Agreement. 3 Docs. 13-5 to 13-10.

At the same time NR assumed the lease, it granted a mortgage to Capital One in its interest in the property. Doc. 3-35. That it mortgaged its entire interest in the property is undisputed. Rather, at issue is, first, what that interest encompassed— whether the Debtor owned and mortgaged an interest only in the leasehold, or in an interest that would survive the end of the lease- — and second, whether the lease and/or any of that mortgage survive the Bankruptcy Court’s deemed rejection of the lease.

*383 II. The Bankruptcy, including the order deeming the lease rejected (though not terminated)

In 2008 NR encountered financial difficulties. It sought bankruptcy protection in November of that year. Doc. 13-1.

Thereafter, through multiple joint and consensual filings before the Bankruptcy Court, the City and Capital One — and sporadically the Debtor — cooperated to allow the hotel to remain open during the bankruptcy process and to try to devise a long-term solution for the property. So, in December 2008, on the City’s motion, the parties agreed to allow a Court appointed Manager to operate the hotel, and, in part at the City’s request, Capital One agreed to provide $300,000 of Debtor In Possession (“DIP”) financing. Kg., Docs. 13-37, 13-48.

One month later, in January 2009, the parties agreed to auction Debtor’s interest in the property in February 2009. Doc. 3-4, p. 1, para. 2. This sale of Debtor’s interest was already a remedy provided in the lease to protect NR’s potential leasehold mortgagee, 4 and it would have allowed a new party to take over the lease subject to Capital One’s mortgage. Kg., doc. 13-6, p. 6. However, again at the City’s request, the parties agreed to postpone the auction until September 2009 so the City could continue to operate the hotel over the summer, when several large conventions would be in town. 5 Docs. 3-7, 3-26, p. 7.

On June 30, 2009, the City moved the Bankruptcy Court to deem the lease rejected by operation of the Bankruptcy Code and to order Debtor to surrender the premises to the City. Doc. 13-52. Capital One initially objected that the City’s motion (and particularly the exact relief it sought with regards to the lease) was “unclear.” Doc. 3-55, p. 1. After a hearing the parties apparently came to an agreement, and two days later, on July 17, 2009, the Bankruptcy Court entered an order deeming the lease rejected, one of the orders at issue here. Doc. 13-60. Crucially, this order did not say the lease was either canceled or terminated. It used neither of those words nor any of their synonyms; the only verb it used with regard to the lease was that it was “rejected.” Id. On this basis, Capital One consented to the order, which was not appealed.

In the interim, on July 14, 2009, Capital One filed its initial proof of Claim against Debtor for more than $3,000,000. It asserted a mortgage in the leasehold and claimed as its security a mortgage in the ownership of the improvements. Doc. 3-12, pp. 1-2.

On September 16, 2009, the City filed an ex parte motion asking the Bankruptcy Court to order the Clerk of Court to cancel the lease in the public property record, “In furtherance of the operation of the Order [deeming the lease rejected] entered July 17, 2009.” Doc. 13-63, p. 3. Service of the motion was mailed the next day, causing Capital One to receive it two days after the motion was filed, on September 18, 2009. This was the same day the Bankruptcy Court granted the motion, before Capital *384 One could oppose it. Docs. 3-9, 3-10, p. 8. However, Capital One quickly filed its objection, moving the next week for the Bankruptcy Court to stay its order and reconsider its decision. Doc. 13-66.

The Bankruptcy Court stayed its order and granted the motion to reconsider, ordering a hearing for October 14, 2009. Doc. 3-11. At the pretrial conference for that hearing the bankruptcy trustee did not appear, and the Bankruptcy Court advised the City to file an adversarial proceeding. Doc. 3-20, p. 7.

The City filed its complaint in the adversarial proceeding on October 29, 2009. Doc. 3-20. On November 10, 2009 the City filed an objection to Capital One’s proof of claim. Docs. 13-70, 13-76. The Bankruptcy Court promptly consolidated the two actions, both of which are thus before us here. Doc. 13-73.

III. The Present Proceeding

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
439 B.R. 379, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 116498, 2010 WL 4386820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-one-na-v-city-of-alexandria-lawd-2010.