C.W. 100 Louis Henna, Ltd. v. El Chico Restaurants of Texas, L.P.

295 S.W.3d 748, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 7178, 2009 WL 2902735
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 27, 2009
Docket03-08-00555-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 295 S.W.3d 748 (C.W. 100 Louis Henna, Ltd. v. El Chico Restaurants of Texas, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.W. 100 Louis Henna, Ltd. v. El Chico Restaurants of Texas, L.P., 295 S.W.3d 748, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 7178, 2009 WL 2902735 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

BOB PEMBERTON, Justice.

This is an appeal from a final summary judgment, on cross-motions, in a dispute between a landlord, appellant C.W. 100 Louis Henna, Ltd. (Henna), a tenant, ap-pellee El Chico Restaurants of Texas, L.P. (El Chico), and the tenant’s guarantor, El Chico Restaurants, Inc., over the proper construction of their commercial ground lease. The principal issue concerns whether air-conditioning units that El Chico installed on a building that the lease required it to construct are “improvements” that the lease obligated El Chico to maintain and deliver to Henna in good condition upon the lease’s expiration, as Henna contends, or are trade fixtures that are excluded from the lease’s definition of “improvements,” as appellees argue. We agree with appellees that the air-conditioning units are trade fixtures and not “improvements” as a matter of law. Because this is one of the grounds on which the district court could have relied in granting summary judgment for appellees, we will affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

The material underlying facts are undisputed. On September 24, 1996, El Chico and Henna’s predecessor, Boardwalk Center, Ltd., entered into a ground lease of a parcel of land located in Round Rock that Boardwalk owned and was developing as part of a new retail shopping center. On the same day, El Chico Restaurants, Inc. signed an agreement to guarantee El Chi-co’s obligations under the ground lease.

Among its other obligations under the ground lease, El Chico was required to construct a building on the parcel it was leasing (defined as the “Land”) within the permissible building area reflected in the project’s site plan and “pursuant to plans and specifications approved in writing by Landlord [Boardwalk].” The lease defined this “building and other improvements and appurtenances that may hereafter be erected” on the Land as the “Improvements” and defined the Land and Improvements collectively as the “Premises.” The referenced “plans and specifications” included or depicted two 12.5-ton 1 air conditioning units and two 10-ton units (the “HVAC units”), which were to be installed on top of the building.

The lease authorized El Chico to use the Premises to operate a “restaurant, a related cocktail lounge, such other uses as are incidental to the operation thereof and for any other lawful purpose,” subject to its complying with “all applicable governmental and regulatory requirements and regulations.” The lease was to run for an initial term expiring on the tenth anniversary of the “Rent Commencement Date”— a date tied to when El Chico opened for business on the Premises — subject to El *751 Chico’s right to renew the lease for np to four additional terms of five years each. “While the lease was in effect, El Chico would own the Improvements “hereafter constructed or placed on the Land during the Term,” but El Chico had “no right to demolish, remove or alter the Improvements without Landlord’s prior written consent.” El Chico was further required to carry specified insurance on the Premises and “take good care of the Improvements during the Term, including repairs to the interior, exterior and structure, it being understood that Landlord shall not be required to maintain the Premises or make any repairs to the Improvements during the Term.” At the end of the lease, El Chico was required to “deliver up the Land with the Improvements then situated thereon in good repair and condition, loss by fire or other casualty, condemnation, act of God, ordinary wear and tear, decay, depreciation and obsolescence being excepted,” whereupon the Improvements were to “be and become the property of Landlord ... without compensation therefor.” However, paragraph 12 of the lease provided that “trade and business fixtures ... shall not be deemed to be part of the Premises but shall remain the property of Tenant.”

The “Rent Commencement Date” was in April 1997, which meant that the ten-year initial lease term ran until April 2007. The record reflects that, in April 2006, Boardwalk conveyed its interest in the Premises and the ground lease to Henna Blvd., L.L.C., which then assigned these interests to Henna. Around the same time, El.Chico gave written notice to Henna Blvd., L.L.C. that El Chico had ceased doing business in the Premises and that it would permit the lease to expire at the end of the initial term without renewing it. In this document, El Chico also waived any rights it possessed under the lease that would have prevented Henna Blvd., L.L.C. (or Henna, its successor) from marketing and selling or leasing the Premises, and El Chico agreed to execute a document terminating the lease upon the landlord’s request if the landlord succeeded in selling or leasing the Premises.

In June 2006, El Chico sold Henna “all furniture, fixtures and equipment (collectively, the ‘Assets’) located, as of this date, in the El Chico® restaurant at 100 Louis Henna Boulevard, Round Rock.” Henna acknowledged and agreed that it “ha[d] inspected the Assets at the Premises and [was] acquiring the Assets in their ‘AS IS’ condition.” Around the same time, El Chi-co and Henna amended the ground lease to provide that effective June 23, 2006, Henna would assume responsibility for paying all charges for utility services at the Premises, including the security alarm system, and for maintaining the grounds around the Improvements. However, El Chico continued to make monthly rental payments through the end of the initial lease term in April 2007.

In January 2007, a few months before the lease’s April expiration, Henna learned that the HVAC units on top of the restaurant building had been vandalized by copper thieves and damaged by hail. Henna obtained an estimate of $38,496 to repair the damage. A series of communications ensued between the parties or their agents in which it was disputed whether Henna or El Chico was responsible for repairing and/or insuring against the damage to the HVAC units. Eventually, in August and September of that year, counsel for Henna sent letters to both El Chico and, as guarantor, El Chico Restaurants, Inc., demanding payment of the $38,496 estimated repair amount. In October, Henna sued these entities.

Henna alleged that appellees were obligated under the ground lease to insure or *752 repair the HVAC units and had failed to perform. It asserted a cause of action for breach of contract and sought damages and attorney’s fees. Henna filed a “traditional” motion for partial summary judgment as to appellees’ liability for breaching the lease. It attempted to conclusively establish each of the elements of its breach-of-contract cause of action; namely, that: (1) a valid contract existed between the parties; (2) Henna had performed or tendered performance; (3) appellees had breached the contract; and (4) Henna was damaged as a result of the breach. See New York Life Ins. Co. v. Miller, 114 S.W.3d 114, 121 (Tex.App.-Austin 2003, no pet.). Appellees filed a response and a “traditional” cross-motion in which they attempted to conclusively negate each of these elements, as well as Henna’s entitlement to attorney’s fees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 S.W.3d 748, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 7178, 2009 WL 2902735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cw-100-louis-henna-ltd-v-el-chico-restaurants-of-texas-lp-texapp-2009.