Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. v. Forbes/Cohen Florida Properties, L.P.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 6, 2024
Docket9:20-cv-80157
StatusUnknown

This text of Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. v. Forbes/Cohen Florida Properties, L.P. (Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. v. Forbes/Cohen Florida Properties, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. v. Forbes/Cohen Florida Properties, L.P., (S.D. Fla. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA

CASE NO. 20-CV-80157-BER

DICK’S SPORTING GOODS, INC.,

Plaintiff,

v.

FORBES/COHEN FLORIDA PROPERTIES, L.P., and THE GARDENS VENTURE, LLC,

Defendants.

__________________________________________/

SUPPLEMENTAL ORDER REGARDING BANKRUPTCY ISSUE

In my Order on Motions for Summary Judgment, I did not resolve all of the legal issues in this case related to the Sears bankruptcy. ECF No. 289. After further thought, I decided these issues needed to be resolved, pretrial, as issues of law. ECF No. 316 (taking ECF No. 299 under advisement and giving notice under Rule 56(f)). The relevant issues are now fully briefed. ECF Nos. 283, 299, 300, 307, 312, 331, 336. The summary judgment record was also supplemented with bankruptcy-related documents. ECF No. 324. I held oral argument on September 4, 2024. At oral argument, both sides agreed that these issues were properly resolved by the Court as issues of law, not by the jury as issues of fact. I incorporate by reference the Order on Motions for Summary Judgment. The parties dispute three primary issues relating to the Sears bankruptcy. First, whether Transform obtained exterior signage rights that could be sublet to DSG. Second, whether Transform could form a post-bankruptcy contract with DSG.

Third, whether any damages caused by Defendants’ tortious interference ended as a matter of law under the Sears Reorganization Plan in October 2022. DISCUSSION Sears Bankruptcy Sears filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on October 15, 2018. It is undisputed that, at that time, both the Forbes-Sears Sublease and the DSG Sublease were

executory contracts of the debtor. The Bankruptcy Court approved an Asset Purchase Agreement (APA) dated January 17, 2019, that divided the debtor’s assets into two categories — Acquired Assets (§2.1) and Excluded Assets (§2.2). Transform got the “Acquired Assets,” which were defined as “all right, title and interest of the Business [i.e., Sears], in, to, or under all assets, properties and rights Related to the Business other than the Excluded Assets.” APA §2.1, ECF No. 226-6 at 140. It is undisputed that the Forbes-

Sears Sublease was one of the Acquired Assets. Similarly, Sears’ liabilities were divided into Assumed Liabilities (§2.3) and Excluded Liabilities (§2.4). The debtor retained the Excluded Liabilities and the Excluded Assets. As relevant here, the Excluded Liabilities included all liabilities “arising out of the ownership of the Acquired Assets or operation of the Business or the Acquired Assets prior to the Closing Date.” §2.4(a). It also included “all Liabilities 2 relating to the payment or performance of obligations arising solely out of facts or circumstances in existence prior to the [APA] with respect to the Assigned Agreements.” §2.4(b).

The Assumed Liabilities (which were transferred to Transform) included “all liabilities arising after the APA “relating to the payment or performance of obligations with respect to the Assigned Agreements.” §2.3(b). “Assigned Agreements” included Designatable Leases, such as the Forbes-Sears Sublease. ECF No. 226-6 at 110.1 So, any pre-APA liabilities arising from the Forbes-Sears Sublease stayed with

Sears. Any post-APA liabilities arising from that lease went to Transform. As part of the process for approving the APA, Transform filed a Notice of Cure Costs and Potential Assumption and Assignment of Executory Contracts and Unexpired Leases in Connection with Global Sale Transaction. SDNY Bankruptcy Case No. 18-23538, Docket Entry 1731. That document identified the Forbes-Sears Sublease as an unexpired lease that Transform proposed to assume and assign. Id. at 336.

1 Under the APA, “Designatable Lease” included the “Operating Leases.” ECF No. 226-6 at 116. “Operating Leases” meant “those leases or lease agreements (including ground leases) related to real properties identified in in Schedule 1.1(o) (together with all amendments, modifications, supplements, and renewals thereof).” Id. at 128–29. the Gardens Mall property (Sears store 1765) was listed in Schedule 1.1(o). Id. at 421.

3 Forbes objected to the Forbes-Sears lease being assumed and assigned. SDNY Bankruptcy Case No. 18-23538, Docket Entry 1932. Forbes argued (1) the lease had expired prior to the bankruptcy and was now, at best, a month-to-month lease, (2)

Forbes retained a right of first refusal that preempted the proposed assignment, (3) regardless, the bankruptcy court should make clear that “nothing contained in any order approving the Global Sale Transaction or the assumption and assignment of the Sears Lease shall be deemed to, in any way, impact Forbes rights to continue to dispute and contest the propriety of the Dick’s Sublease under the Governing Documents or otherwise and nothing in any such orders shall be deemed to, in any

way, approve or determine any of the respective rights between the parties with regard to the Dick’s Sublease.” Id. ¶¶ 28–30. While the objection was pending, on February 8, 2019, the bankruptcy court approved the sale of Sears’ assets to Transform. SDNY Bankruptcy Case No. 18- 23538, Docket Entry 2507. The bankruptcy court preserved Forbes’ objection to the assumption and assignment of the Forbes-Sears Sublease for later resolution. Id. at 25 ¶3.

On April 19, 2019, Transform filed a Notice of Assumption and Assignment of Additional Designatable Leases that included the Forbes-Sears Sublease. SDNY Bankruptcy Case No. 18-23538, Docket Entry 3298. Forbes again objected. SDNY Bankruptcy Case No. 18-23538, Docket Entry 3484. Forbes argued any assumption must include the Governing Documents and any covenants running with the land

4 (including the REA). Forbes also argued that Transform must assume all of Sears’ obligations under the Forbes-Sears Sublease.

Settlement Agreement Forbes’ objection was resolved through a Confidential Settlement Agreement (“Settlement Agreement”) with an effective date of May 7, 2019. ECF No. 215-34. The parties to the Settlement Agreement were Forbes as “Landlord” and Transform Midco LLC, Transform Propco LLC, and Transform Operating Stores, LLC collectively as “Buyer” or “Transform.” The parties agreed that, upon approval by the bankruptcy court, the Forbes-Sears Sublease “shall transfer to and be assumed by the applicable

Buyer entity set forth in the Designation Notice (as applicable, “Tenant”).” ECF No. 215-34 ¶1(a).2 The Settlement Agreement further said the Tenant would assume the lease subject to the existing covenants, including the REA: Tenant agrees to take the Designated Lease subject to, and to assume, abide by, and honor (i) all monetary obligations (including without limitation, the payment of all rent, maintenance charges and any and all other charges and assessments) payable by Tenant under the Designated Lease; (ii) all the terms, conditions, covenants and obligations to be performed by, and governing the rights of, tenant under the Designated Lease; and (iii) the terms, conditions, and restrictions set forth in any easements, reciprocal easement agreements, covenants, licenses, permits, municipal resolutions, ordinances, PUD, laws, or other similar encumbrances and restrictions applicable to the Tenant Leased Premises.”

2 No Designation Notice is in the record, but the lease ultimately was assigned to Transform Operating Stores LLC, so the circumstantial evidence suggests that Transform Operating Stores LLC was the designated “Buyer entity.” 5 Id.¶1(b). Forbes agreed not to exercise its right of first refusal under the lease provided that Transform continue to operate the Sears store: “Tenant [must] continue [] to

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Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. v. Forbes/Cohen Florida Properties, L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dicks-sporting-goods-inc-v-forbescohen-florida-properties-lp-flsd-2024.