Fuji Food Products, / Cross - App. v. Occidental, Llc, / Cross - Res.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 3, 2018
Docket76152-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fuji Food Products, / Cross - App. v. Occidental, Llc, / Cross - Res. (Fuji Food Products, / Cross - App. v. Occidental, Llc, / Cross - Res.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuji Food Products, / Cross - App. v. Occidental, Llc, / Cross - Res., (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTOie "-nc; V? no) t -j Ga ..._ FUJI FOOD PRODUCTS, INC., a ) No. 76152-8-1 California corporation, ) ) DIVISION ONE Respondent, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION v. ) ) OCCIDENTAL, LLC, a Washington limited ) liability company, ) ) Appellant. ) ) FILED: December 3, 2018

ANDRUS, J. — Occidental LLC, a commercial landlord to Fuji Food Products

Inc., appeals from an adverse jury verdict for conversion and an attorney fee award

in Fuji's favor. Fuji cross appeals an adverse jury verdict on its claim for the return

of a security deposit. We affirm the jury verdicts but reverse the award of attorney

fees to Fuji and remand for rehearing on the attorney fee award under Marassi v.

Lau, 71 Wn. App. 912, 859 P.2d 605,606-07 (1993).

FACTS

Fuji, a producer of prepackaged sushi, edamame, and salads, entered into

a commercial lease with Occidental for 20,000 square feet of warehouse space in

Seattle's SODO neighborhood (the Premises). The original lease ran for five No. 76152-8-1/2

years, from December 1, 2008, to November 30, 2013. Fuji paid Occidental a

security deposit of $42,000 when it took occupancy of the Premises.

Paragraph 56 of the lease specified that upon vacating the Premises, Fuji

"shall remove all cooler rooms and HVAC systems on the roof." Fuji understood

this provision to require the removal of three modular cooler rooms—one referred

to as "the cooler," designed to keep food at 36 to 38 degrees, one identified as a

"blast cooler," which had high velocity fans designed to quickly reduce temperature

to meet FDA regulations, and one used as a freezer (collectively, "the cooler

rooms"). Fuji purchased the cooler rooms, among other miscellaneous items,from

the previous tenant, Monterey Gourmet Foods (Monterey), for $135,000. The

leased space also included a temperature-controlled production area, but Fuji did

not consider this space or any other areas of the Premises to fall within the

definition of "cooler rooms." The modular cooler rooms were physically located in

the southern portion of the Premises.

In early September 2013, Fuji asked Occidental's representative,

Dr. Hokwai Woo, if Occidental would be interested in extending the lease on a

month-to-month basis. Dr. Woo indicated that the lease permitted Fuji to remain

as a month-to-month tenant but Fuji, as a holdover tenant, would have to pay rent

of 175 percent of the base monthly rent. Dr. Woo also stated if Fuji chose to leave,

it must "remove all equipment such as cooler, refrigerator, cooling system on the

roof, heating system on the east loading dock, the Y-loading dock on the east, and

plug all floor drains." On October 10, 2013, Fuji notified Occidental it would vacate

the Premises by November 30 to avoid any holdover rent.

2 No. 76152-8-1/3

Throughout October 2013, Fuji and Occidental discussed the scope of Fuji's

contractual obligations to remove cooler rooms from the facility. Fuji agreed it was

contractually obligated to remove the three modular cooler rooms located in the

southern portion of the Premises. Occidental contended Fuji had to remove

structures in the middle and north end of the warehouse, actions Fuji did not

believe it was required to undertake.

Before the parties resolved this issue, Occidental learned that another

tenant, Vinum Wine Importing & Distribution was interested in taking over a portion

of Fuji's space with the cooler rooms left in place. At Occidental's request, the

parties extended the lease to December 13, 2013, while Occidental negotiated

with Vinum. Fuji was willing to leave the cooler rooms in place for Vinum's use if

Occidental would agree to release it from any responsibility for removing them from

the Premises.

Occidental and Fuji signed an extension agreement on November 8, 2013,

relieving Fuji of the obligation to pay any rent between November 30, 2013, the

original lease expiration date, and December 13, 2013, the new lease expiration

date, as long as Fuji vacated the premises by the latter date. The extension

agreement provided that Fuji would refrain from removing the cooler rooms

until November 21, 2013. It also directed Fuji to "begin removing the Cooler

Rooms...from the Premises on the Removal Extension Date unless prior to that

date Landlord expressly releases Fuji from its obligations to remove them and any

other improvements."

3 No. 76152-8-1/4

Fuji, Occidental, and Vinum spoke by conference call on November 21,

2013. Fuji understood from this call that Occidental agreed to release it from the

obligation to remove the cooler rooms. On December 6, 2013, Joseph Marchica,

Fuji's Chief Executive Officer (CEO), sent Dr. Woo a draft release agreement to

sign. Dr. Woo disputed the accuracy of the draft on December 9, 2013, sending a

revised version of the release to Marchica on December 10, 2013. The following

morning, Marchica made what he thought were minor changes to Dr. Woo's draft

and asked to finalize the document that day. No release was ever executed.

Occidental and Vinum were unable to reach agreement on lease terms, and

on the afternoon of December 11, 2013, Occidental notified Fuji that it had to

remove the cooler rooms by December 13. On December 12, Fuji informed

Occidental it was not possible to remove the cooler rooms on such short notice,

and it would not pay holdover rent. It informed Dr. Woo that it would surrender the

Premises on December 13, 2013, with the understanding that Occidental would

provide Fuji with access to the building to remove the cooler rooms at a later date.

Fuji returned the keys to Dr. Woo on December 13, 2013. On December

17, 2013, Occidental sent Fuji a letter notifying it that it was in default of the lease

because it had left the Premises without removing the cooler rooms, removing

doors, and closing certain openings in partition walls. The letter provided "[t]his is

your written notice to cure this default," referring to Section 16 of the lease.1

1 Under Paragraph 16.1(c) of the lease, Occidental was required to give Fuji 30 days' notice of any default to allow Fuji time to cure the default. Fuji argued at trial that Occidental did not give Fuji 30 days to cure the alleged default. -4- No. 76152-8-1/5

Although Occidental's December 17, 2013, letter did not mention Vinum,

the evidence at trial established that Occidental and Vinum had agreed on lease

terms for Fuji's space with the modular cooler rooms in place the very same day.

Dr. Woo sent a draft lease addendum to Vinum on December 17, but asked it to

hold off on executing the lease until January 3, 2014.

Fuji replied on December 23, 2013, stating it had no obligation to remove

the cooler rooms based on Occidental's representation that it had an agreement

with Vinum to lease the Premises with the cooler rooms in place. Fuji also stated

that if Occidental and Vinum did not have an agreement, it would remove the cooler

rooms but needed Occidental to provide it access to do so. Fuji demanded the

return of its security deposit. Occidental refused.

Fuji commenced this action in April 2014. It alleged five claims against

Occidental: (1) breach of contract, (2) unjust enrichment, (3) conversion, (4)

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