Condado Plaza Acquisition LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 5, 2020
Docket20-12094
StatusUnknown

This text of Condado Plaza Acquisition LLC (Condado Plaza Acquisition LLC) 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
Condado Plaza Acquisition LLC, (N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANRUPTCY COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK -----------------------------------------------------------------x In re: : Chapter 11 : CONDADO PLAZA ACQUISITION LLC, et al., : Case No. 20-12094 (MEW) : Debtors. : Jointly Administered -----------------------------------------------------------------x

DECISION HOLDING THAT PURCHASE AND SALE AGREEMENT TERMINATED PRIOR TO THE PETITION DATE

A P P E A R A N C E S: TARTER KRINSKY & DROGIN Proposed Attorneys for Debtors By: Scott S. Markowitz Anthony Dougherty Jonathan E. Temchin

KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP KIRKLAND & ELLIS INTERNATIONAL LLP Attorneys for Posadas de Puerto Rico Associates, L.L.C. By: Aaron Marks, P.C. Joseph M. Sanderson Kimberly Pageau Jace A. Cearley Chad J. Husnick, P.C. Richard U.S. Howell, P.C.

HONORABLE MICHAEL E. WILES UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE

The Debtors in these cases are Condado Plaza Acquisition LLC (“Condado”), Condado Plaza Acquisition Lagoon LLC, and Condado Plaza Acquisition Ocean LLC. They are special purpose entities that are affiliated with Platinum Capital Partners and that were formed for the purpose of buying the Condado Plaza Hilton Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The current owner of the hotel is Posadas de Puerto Rico Associates, L.L.C. (“Posadas”). The parties entered into a Purchase and Sale Agreement dated November 20, 2019 (the “PSA”). The PSA calls for a purchase at a price of $31 million and Condado paid an initial deposit of $3.1 million into escrow. The closing was to occur by December 31, 2019 but the agreement gave the parties with the right to extend the Closing Date to February 28, 2020 under certain circumstances. Otherwise, the contract stated that “time is of the essence.” PSA §§ 2.3(a), 14.21. The parties later agreed to several extensions of the Closing Date, and in connection with those extensions the deposits were increased to $5.1 million.

Posadas notified Condado by letter dated May 4, 2020 that the transaction was ready to close and that under the parties’ prior agreements the Closing Date would be May 11, 2020. However, the closing did not occur. Posadas then issued a notice dated May 11, 2020, stating that Condado’s failure to close was a default and that the PSA therefore was being terminated. The Debtors sent a letter disputing the purported termination and contending that the contract was still in force. The gist of the parties’ dispute relates to the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on the operations of the hotel. The Debtors argue that they had agreed to buy a viable and operational hotel with employees and with substantial goodwill, and that Posadas was not ready to deliver that

consideration in May 2020, as the hotel had been closed and layoffs had occurred due to the pandemic. At a hearing before this Court on September 22, 2020, Condado’s counsel argued that Condado agreed to purchase property with a positive “goodwill” and that there was no positive “goodwill” to be transferred at the proposed closing in May. Posadas contends that Condado had agreed to buy the hotel “as is” and with no covenants as to its operating condition, that time was of the essence, that Condado had waived any closing conditions in a contract amendment executed in March 2020, and that Condado had no excuse for refusing to close. The parties’ disputes led to two separate litigations. On May 8, 2020, Condado filed suit in Puerto Rico and asked the court to modify the Closing Date requirements of the PSA. See Declaration of Aaron Marks [ECF No. 12] (the “Marks Decl.”), Ex. 38, at 5-7. Condado argued that it was legally impossible for Posadas to deliver an operational hotel in light of Covid-19 quarantine rules and that the closing date should be postponed until Posadas could do so. Id. Condado also obtained, on an ex parte basis, a lis pendens order that was conditioned on the filing of a $5 million bond and that, upon the filing of such a bond, would put a cloud on any sale of the

property to another buyer. However, the Puerto Rico court declined to enter an injunction against a sale of the property. On May 18, 2020, Posadas filed an action in the Supreme Court for the State of New York in Monroe County, which is located in western New York. Posadas asked the state court to enjoin Condado from continuing its Puerto Rico action on the ground that doing so was in violation of forum selection clauses in the PSA. The New York state court issued the anti-suit injunction in an order that was dated July 16, 2020 and entered on July 17, 2020. The New York court also denied a request by Condado for a stay pending appeal. The court in Puerto Rico also separately considered, and approved, a motion to enforce the

forum selection clause, and dismissed the action that had been filed in Puerto Rico after finding the forum selection clause was enforceable. Condado filed an appeal in Puerto Rico without first getting relief from the injunction that the New York state court had entered. The New York state court issued an Order on August 28, 2020 that directed Condado to show cause as to why it should not be held in contempt for violation of the anti-suit injunction. See Marks Decl., Ex. 43. Meanwhile, Condado asked the New York state court for a temporary restraining order against a sale of the hotel, contending that Condado wished to obtain specific performance of the contract of sale. The state court issued an Order to Show Cause with a temporary restraining order on August 14, 2020. Id., Ex. 16. On August 28, 2020 the state court directed Condado to show cause as to why the restraining order should not be vacated and required Condado to file an undertaking in the amount of $9,200,590 in support of the restraining order that was then in effect. Id., Ex. 42. Condado informed the state court on September 2, 2020 that it was having trouble making arrangements for an undertaking but that it was working on getting a bond. On September 8, 2020, after no bond had been filed, the state court advised the parties that an amendment to the

temporary restraining order would be filed on September 10, 2020 if a bond were not posted by then. Id., Ex. 47. Debtors filed their chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions on September 9, 2020, one day before the deadline for the filing of an undertaking in the state court. The Debtors stated that they intended to remove the Monroe County state court case to this Court and they have since filed a notice of removal, which I will discuss after I address other issues. The Debtors also stated their intent to use section 108(b) of the Bankruptcy Code to extend the deadline for closing on a purchase of the hotel, assuming the seller could deliver the hotel in the condition that the Debtors contended was required by the PSA.

Posadas promptly filed a motion to dismiss the bankruptcy petitions or, alternatively, for relief from the automatic stay. Posadas claims it is incurring expenses of $1,314,370 per month as a result of delays in the sale, which are made up of operating losses of $401,000 per month and financing costs of $913,370 per month. I agreed to shorten notice for consideration of the motion to dismiss and scheduled it for a hearing on September 16, 2020. At the September 16 hearing I noted that section 108(b) of the Bankruptcy Code would only apply if the PSA had not already terminated prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petitions. Similarly, sections 362 and 365 of the Bankruptcy Code would not be relevant to the hotel if the PSA (and the Debtors’ rights thereunder) had already terminated. Posadas claimed that the contract terminated as a matter of law, and I suggested that the Court make a prompt determination as to whether the issue could be resolved as a matter of law. The parties agreed, and I directed that they make further submissions.

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