First Flight Limited Partnership v. Alliance Technology Group, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 9, 2023
Docket8:18-cv-00720
StatusUnknown

This text of First Flight Limited Partnership v. Alliance Technology Group, LLC (First Flight Limited Partnership v. Alliance Technology Group, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Flight Limited Partnership v. Alliance Technology Group, LLC, (D. Md. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

FIRST FLIGHT LIMITED PARTNERSHIP,

Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant, -

1M Civil Action No. TDC-18-0720 ALLIANCE TECHNOLOGY GROUP, LLC, Defendant/Counterclaim Plaintiff.

MEMORANDUM OPINION □ Plaintiff First Flight Limited Partnership (“First Flight”) filed this civil action against □ Defendant Alliance Technology Group, LLC (“Alliance”) for breach of contract arising out of a lease agreement for commercial space in Hagerstown, Maryland. In. turn, Alliance filed counterclaims for indemnification, recoupment, set-off, detrimental reliance, and unjust enrichment. Pending before the Court is Defendant’s Motioa for Partial Summary Judgment in

| which it seeks summary judgment on First Flight’s claim and three of Alliance’s counterclaims. Having reviewed the submitted materials, the Court finds that no hearing is necessary. See D. Md. Local R. 105.6, For the reasons set forth below, Alliance’s Motion will be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. BACKGROUND First Flight, a Virginia limited partnership with its principal place of business in Chantilly, Virginia, is under the control of Barrie Peterson, who owns 98 percent of the company. In 2012, First Flight owned a large warehouse space, formerly used for manufacturing aircraft, within the _| Topflight Air Park in Hagerstown, Maryland (“the Hagerstown Property”).

Peterson also controlled, and was the president of, another entity known as Marble Mountain OC, LLC (““MMOC”). Peterson created MMOC as part of an effort beginning in 2012 to secure a government contract with the Defense Information Systems Agency (“DISA”), a component of the United States Department of Defense, to store electronic data, including □

classified information, at the Hagerstown Property. These efforts included a teaming agreement with Alliance under which Alliance would lease the Hagerstown Property to use for data storage to meet the requirements of a DISA contract. In that time frame, First Flight was seeking to refinance a loan on the Hagerstown Property. During discussions with M&T Bank, Peterson stated that Alliance would be leasing the Property. At that.time, M&T deemed Alliance to be a more creditworthy lessee for the Hagerstown Property than MMOC, and it expressed its desire for First | Flight to enter into a lease with Alliance. OL The Lease _ □□ On or about October 3, 2013, First Flight and Alliance entered into a lease agreement under which Alliance would lease the Hagerstown Property (“the Lease”). The Lease was for a term of

. three years, from October 15, 2013 to October 15, 2016, at a monthly rent of $100,000. The Lease provided that “[alny monthly installment of Basic Rent not paid within ten (10) days of the due □ date shall be subject to a late charge of five percent[.]” Lease {[2.1(c), Mot. Summ. 1 Ex. 8, ECF No. 174-13. The Lease also stated that Alliance would not sublet the Hagerstown Property or transfer, assign, mortgage, or encumber the Lease without the prior written consent of First Flight. id. 3.8(a). The Lease included a provision entitled “Entire Agreement” stating that “this Lease . | contains all the agreements and conditions made between the parties hereto and may not be modified orally or in any other manner than by agreement in writing, signed by all parties hereto,

to

or their respective successors and interests. Any intention to create a joint venture or partnership relation between the parties hereto is expressly disclaimed.” fd 9 9.13. In submitting the Lease as an exhibit to its memorandum in opposition to the‘Motion, First Flight appended a “Tenant’s Agreement,” signed by Alliance only and dated with an unspecified . date in September 2013, which stated that it was “for the benefit of M&T Bank,” and that it was entered into to satisfy M&T Bank’s requirement “as a condition of its loan” to First Flight that Alliance subordinate its rights in the Hagerstown Property under the Lease to M&T Bank’s rights. Tenant’s Agreement at 1, Opp’n Mot. Summ. J. Ex. 4, ECF No. 177-4. In the Tenant's Agreement, Alliance stated in part that there had “been no modifications of the Lease,” that Fitst Flight was “not in default” under the Lease, and that Alliance had “no defense, set-off or counterclaim against ‘[First Flight] under the lease or otherwise.” Id 2. tos I. The Business Agreement . the months preceding the execution of the Lease, First Flight, MMOC, and Alliance were also negotiating a separate letter agreement relating to the efforts to secure a sontract from DISA for data storage at the Hagerstown Property (“the DISA contract”), including a possible sublease of the Hagerstown Property by MMOC (“the Business Agreement”). On October 3, 2013, the same date that the Lease was signed, these parties executed the Business Agreement. The terms of the Business Agreement included that (1) Alliance agreed to execute a Lease for the Hagerstown Property: (2) Alliance agreed to pay First F light $100,000 per month pursuant to the Lease; (3) MMOC, in exchange for its participation in the DISA contract opportunity, agreed to pay Alliance $100,000 per month within five days of Alliance’s payment of the: amount it □□□□ under the Lease; (4) upon award of the DISA contract, MMOC agreed to sublease the Hagerstown Property in order to provide the space to fulfill the DISA contract and would then stop making □□□

3 □

$100,000 payments; and (5) upon award of the DISA contract, Alliance: would pay MMOC $120,000 per month until the storage capacity at the Hagerstown Property reached a certain level. The Business Agreement also provided, however, that if Alliance did not receive the DISA contract within three months of the date of the Business Agreement and the Lease, it would. continue to make the $100,000 lease payments and MMOC would continue to make the. corresponding $100,000. payments, while First Flight would seek to find subtenants for some or all of the Hagerstown Property. Notably, the Business Agreement included a provision stating that “TFirst Flight] agrees to indemnify Alliance for the total amount of unpaid Lease payments due in the event that Alliance is in breach of the Lease due to nonpayment of-rents” (“the Indemnification Clause”). Business Agreement at 2, Mot. Summ. J. Ex. 9, ECF No. 174-14. The Business Agreement also stated that “the terms and conditions of this letter shall remain in effect throughout the life of the lease or until such time as the parties determine to alter or terminate the terms of this letter as evidenced by an agreement reduced to writing and executed by both parties.” Jd. at 1.

According to Hugh V. Hayes, an Executive Vice President of Alliance, Alliance entered into the Lease to allow First Flight to show that it was receiving rental income on the Hagerstown Property in order to secure the refinancing from M&T Bank, but that pursuant to the Indemnification Clause, Alliance was not actually responsible for the lease payments. Hayes asserts that the Indemnification Clause was important to Alliance because there was no certainty . that Alliance would receive the DISA contract, so it needed First Flight and MMOC to bear some of that risk by agreeing that it would not be responsible for the rent unless or until a government contract was secured. In February 2014, Alliance secured the DISA contract. However, the revenue from the contract proved to be substantially less than expected. In March 2015, MMOC terminated its

subcontract with Alliance, and First Flight demanded that Alliance remove its equipment from the Hagerstown Property. According to Peterson, Alliance owes First Flight for unpaid rent from April 2015 forward.

_ | OL Procedural History . : On January 2, 2018, First Flight filed its Complaint against Alliance.

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First Flight Limited Partnership v. Alliance Technology Group, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-flight-limited-partnership-v-alliance-technology-group-llc-mdd-2023.