East Penn Children's Learning Academy, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 3, 2021
Docket20-14646
StatusUnknown

This text of East Penn Children's Learning Academy, LLC (East Penn Children's Learning Academy, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East Penn Children's Learning Academy, LLC, (Pa. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

In re: : Chapter 11 : East Penn Children’s Learning Academy, LLC, : Case No. 20-14646 (PMM) : Debtor. : _________________________________________________ O P I N I O N I. INTRODUCTION East Penn Children’s Learning Academy, LLC (“EPCLA” or the “Debtor”), a day care business which seeks to reorganize under chapter 11, subchapter v, owes its landlord, Robshe Enterprises, LLC (“Robshe”) both pre and post-petition unpaid rent. The Debtor surrendered the property it leased from Robshe and moved to a different location in June 2021, about six (6) months after the bankruptcy filing. The Debtor’s Objection to Robshe’s Proof of Claim Number 3 (the “Proof of Claim”), one of three (3) proofs of claim filed by the landlord, presents the question of whether 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(6) (commonly, and here, referred to as the “Rent Cap”) succeeds either in altering or dictating the amount of damages to which Robshe is entitled. The Debtor argues that the Rent Cap does not change the allowed amount because the damages due under the lease agreement and applicable state court law are lower than the amount that would be provided (or limited) by the Rent Cap. Robshe, to the contrary, asserts that application of the Rent Cap dictates a higher amount of damages. I agree with the Debtor. The Rent Cap does not affect the amount of damages here because the lease between the parties lacks an acceleration clause and the underlying state court damages owed pursuant to the lease are lower than the Rent Cap calculation. Consequently, the Debtor’s Claim Objection will be sustained and, as detailed below, the Proof of Claim will be reduced and allowed as an unsecured claim. II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND EPCLA is a day care center and limited liability company owned by Kristen Funk (“Ms.

Funk”), who purchased the Debtor in 2017. That same year, on August 28, 2017, Ms. Funk entered into a lease agreement (the “Lease”) with Robshe to rent space located at 49 W. Penn Avenue in Alburtis, PA (the “Property”). The Lease commenced on September 1, 2017 and was to terminate on August 31, 2022. The Lease provides for a tiered payment structure, according to which the rent would rise $100.00 the first of September every year (beginning at $2,600.00 per month and rising to $2,900.00 per month as of September 1, 2021). Lease, doc. # 49 at Ex. 1 at Section Three. The rent is subject to a 10% late charge if not paid by the 5th of the month. In addition, rent that was not paid after thirty (30) days would be assessed an additional penalty of 5% per month. Section twelve (12) of the Lease provides that, upon default of the tenant, the landlord may “bring suit

for . . . rent due [and] declare the rights of the [tenant] under the lease terminated, and . . . recover possession of [the] premises through legal process.” Lease at 2, §12. III. PROCEDURAL HISTORY The Debtor filed for chapter 11, subchapter v, bankruptcy protection on December 4, 2020. The Debtor has no secured creditors; Robshe is its main (unsecured) creditor. Just prior to the bankruptcy filing, on November 6, 2020, Robshe obtained a judgment (the “Judgment”) in the amount of $40,100.00 plus 6% interest against the Debtor in state court in Lehigh County.1 See Statement of Financial Affairs. The Judgment included unpaid rent through March, 2020. On March 10, 2021, Robshe filed a Motion to Compel Assumption or Rejection of Unexpired Lease and for Post-Petition Lease Payments, seeking to force the Debtor to accept or

reject the Lease and to compel the Debtor to pay post-petition rent in the amount of $12,040.00. (doc. #49, the “Motion to Compel”). On April 27, 2021, the Motion to Compel was granted, allowing an administrative claim for postpetition rent from January 2021 through April 2021 in the amount of $12,320.00 (including interest, as prescribed by the Lease) (doc. #69, the “Administrative Claim Order”). The Administrative Claim Order further provided that the Debtor must vacate the Property by the end of May, 2021. Doc. #69 at 1. This departure deadline was later extended to June 30, 2021. Doc. # 90. The Debtor did leave the premises by this date. The Debtor, in turn, filed a Motion to Approve a New Lease (with Russell Afflerbach) and to Reject the Lease with Robshe. (doc. # 53, the “Motion to Approve”). The Debtor

considered the Motion to Approve to be a rejection of the Lease. See doc. # 61. The Order granting the Motion to Approve, also entered on April 27, 2021, approved the rejection of the Lease by the Debtor. Doc. # 68. On May 25, 2021, Robshe was granted a separate administrative expense for “stub rent” in the amount of $2,438.71 for the prorated, post-petition rent due from December 4, 2020 to December 31, 2020. Doc. # 89 (the “Stub Rent Order”). Robshe, seeking to make itself whole, filed three (3) of the four (4) proofs of claim in this bankruptcy:

1 Apparently, prior to Robshe’s lawsuit, the Debtor sued Robshe in state court. See doc. # 53 at 1 (details of the Debtor’s suit not provided). • Claim No. 2 in the amount of $12,320.00, which is a priority administrative claim for rent due from January 2021 through April 2021, see footnote 10, supra; • Claim No.3 (the Proof of Claim at issue), which was filed on May 7, 2021 and amended twice (on May 26, 2021 and on July 19, 2021). The second amended claim seeks a

priority claim in the amount $77,725.86 for damages due to the prepetition unpaid rent and rejection of Lease, broken down as follows:  $43,725.86 for unpaid prepetition rent;2 and  $34,000.00 for the rejection of the Lease pursuant to §502(b)(6) (the Rent Cap).

• Claim No. 4, an unsecured priority claim in the amount of $2,438.71 for December 2020 for “stub rent.” This amount was allowed by the Stub Rent Order. The Debtor only objects to Claim Number 3, contesting the following charges:3 • $2,970.00 for August 2020 rent and late fee. Because the revised Proof of Claim removed this charge, this amount is no longer at issue; • Rent charged for September and October 2020. However, the amended Claim revises these dates to reflect the dates of September -December, 2021. See Claim 3-3, Part 2; and

2 This figure represents the amount of the Judgment plus the rent for November 2020 and the portion of the December 2020 rent that is not included in the Stub Rent Order.

The fact that pre-petition rent from April 2020 through October 2020 is not sought by Robshe indicates that the Debtor has satisfied its rent obligation for this time period (though the papers do not make this clear). Therefore, I will not consider any rent owed for this period.

3 The Debtor’s Objection was filed after the first amendment to Claim No. 3 but before the second amendment to the Claim. • Rent charged after June 2021. The Debtor asserts that it paid rent for May and June, 2021 and vacated the Property in June 2021, thus eliminating any further obligation to pay rent. Due to the revision of the Proof of Claim, only the final point remains at issue. See

Debtor’s Br. at 7 (conceding both that the amount owed for prepetition rent as stated in the Proof of Claim is accurate and that the Debtor is liable for rent from January to April 2021). The dispute thus boils down to whether Robshe is entitled to rent owed from May through December 2021. The parties are fighting over a sum of about $23,000.00. Following denial of its chapter 11 Plan, doc. # 97, the Debtor filed the Objection, to which Robshe responded, doc. # 103. After a hearing on the Objection, held and concluded on August 10, 2021, the parties each filed a Memorandum. See doc. #’s 111 and 116. The matter is now ripe for adjudication. IV. THE PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS

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East Penn Children's Learning Academy, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-penn-childrens-learning-academy-llc-paeb-2021.