Gamesa Energy USA, Aplt. v. Ten Penn Center

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 26, 2019
Docket28 EAP 2018
StatusPublished

This text of Gamesa Energy USA, Aplt. v. Ten Penn Center (Gamesa Energy USA, Aplt. v. Ten Penn Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gamesa Energy USA, Aplt. v. Ten Penn Center, (Pa. 2019).

Opinion

[J-5-2019] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

GAMESA ENERGY USA, LLC AND : No. 28 EAP 2018 GAMESA TECHNOLOGY : CORPORATION INC., : Appeal from the Judgment of Superior : Court entered on March 19, 2018 at Appellants : No. 1635 EDA 2016 affirming in part : and reversing in part the Order : entered on May 20, 2016 in the Court v. : of Common Pleas, Philadelphia : County, Civil Division at No. 03768 : March Term, 2013. TEN PENN CENTER ASSOCIATES, L.P. : AND SAP V TEN PENN CENTER NF G.P. : ARGUED: March 5, 2019 L.L.C., : : Appellees :

OPINION

JUSTICE DOUGHERTY DECIDED: September 26, 2019

We granted discretionary review of this commercial landlord and tenant dispute to

determine whether the Superior Court erred in holding the tenant was limited to damages

for breach of contract and could not also recover the rent it paid following the landlord’s

breach, despite prevailing on its claims for both remedies at trial. After careful review, for

the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. Background

In 2008, Appellants, Gamesa Energy USA, LLC and Gamesa Technology

Corporation, Inc. (Gamesa), entered into a commercial lease agreement (the Lease) to

rent 35,000 square feet of office space in Philadelphia (the Premises) from Appellees, Ten Penn Center Associates, L.P. and SAP V Ten Penn Center NF G.P. L.L.C.

(collectively Ten Penn Center). The base terms of the Lease provided for a ten-year term

ending September 2018, with annual rent escalating from $1,113,805 in year one to

$1,144,470 in year ten, and a “tenant improvement allowance,” or per-square-foot credit,

for Gamesa to build out the office space to its specifications.1

Additional relevant provisions of the Lease are its terms setting forth criteria for

subleasing and default. The Lease permitted Gamesa to sublease the premises, as long

as Ten Penn Center approved of the arrangement. Specifically, the Lease provided, in

pertinent part:

Tenant shall not . . . sublet all or any part of the Premises or permit the same to be occupied or used by anyone other than Tenant or its employees without Landlord’s prior written approval, which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed. . . . Lease, Art. 20.1 (emphasis added). The Lease required Gamesa to submit its sublease

requests to Ten Penn Center in writing, including the following components: the proposed

sub-lessee’s name and address, a description of its business, its “most recent financial

statement and other evidence of its financial responsibility,” its intended use of the

premises, and the terms and conditions of the proposed sublease. Id. at Art. 20.2. Upon

receipt of such a request, the Lease required Ten Penn Center to grant or refuse its

consent to the proposed sublease within thirty days. Id. With regard to default, the Lease

provided, in relevant part, “[i]t shall be an ‘Event of Default’ under this Lease if . . . Tenant

1 The Lease initially provided an annual rent schedule of $1,113,805 in year one, then $1,011,589 in year two, escalating to $1,232,235 in year ten, and a tenant improvement allowance crediting Gamesa with $58.76 per square foot to improve the leased office space. See Lease, dated January 23, 2008, at 2-4. In 2009, the parties made minor amendments to the Lease, which incorporated the Lease, gave full effect to a majority of the Lease terms, and included a reduction of the annual minimum rent schedule to $939,332 in year two escalating to $1,144,470 in year ten, and the credit to $45 per square foot. See First Amended Lease, dated January 1, 2009, at 2.

[J-5-2019] - 2 vacates the Premises or attempts to remove or manifests an intention to remove any or

all of Tenant’s property from the Premises otherwise than in the ordinary and usual course

of business . . . .” Id. at Art. 22 (emphasis in original). In the event of a default by Gamesa,

the Lease entitled Ten Penn Center to terminate the lease, repossess the premises,

accelerate the amount of rent owed for the remainder of the ten-year lease term, charge

interest on overdue rent, and recover related attorney’s fees. Id. at Art. 23.

In May 2011, following Gamesa’s submission of the information required under

Article 20.2 of the Lease, Ten Penn Center approved a request to sublease approximately

15,000 square feet, or forty percent of the Premises, to Viridity Energy, Inc. (Viridity)

through August of 2018. N.T. 10/14/15, at 66-69. Ten Penn Center allowed Gamesa to

use a portion of its improvement allowance to outfit the space for Viridity, after which point

Gamesa’s remaining credit balance was approximately $391,000. Id. at 73.

In April 2012, Gamesa informed Ten Penn Center it would be moving out of the

Premises as part of a corporate consolidation, and would continue to pay its monthly rent

and attempt to find a sub-lessee for the open space. Id. at 92-93. Gamesa vacated the

Premises on May 18, 2012. Id. at 94-95. Viridity remained in the Premises under the

terms of its sublease with Gamesa. Though Gamesa submitted its June 2012 rent

payment eighteen days late, and its July rent two days late, the parties agree Gamesa

continued to make all of its rent payments on time thereafter. Id. at 118, 139.

On June 12, 2012, Gamesa submitted a request to Ten Penn Center for consent

to sublease 5,200 square feet of the Premises to Business Services International, LLC

(BSI), a business entity comprised of two foreign corporations formed for the particular

purpose of subleasing office space through Gamesa. Id. at 89-90; Trial Court Findings

of Fact and Conclusions of Law, dated February 23, 2016, at 4 ¶13. The proposed BSI

sublease anticipated rental payments totaling $265,460 over a three-year term. N.T.

[J-5-2019] - 3 10/15/15, at 17-18. Ten Penn Center responded on June 26th, informing Gamesa it was

in default of the Lease for vacating the Premises and, as a result, Ten Penn Center had

no obligation to entertain the request to sublease. N.T. 10/14/15, at 102-104; Letter dated

June 26, 2012, Trial Court Exhibit P-9. Ten Penn Center also noted Gamesa’s late rent

payment for June. Id. Nevertheless, Ten Penn Center provided comments and questions

about the proposed BSI sublease, and requested BSI’s financials, which had not been

included with the initial request. Id; see Email and Attachments dated June 12, 2012,

Trial Court Exhibit P-7. Via letter dated July 5th, Gamesa objected to the assertion a

default had occurred, but provided Ten Penn Center with the requested information.

Email dated July 5, 2012, Trial Court Exhibit P-13. On July 13th, Ten Penn Center

reiterated its position asserting Gamesa was in default for vacating the Premises;

however, Ten Penn Center proposed it would grant consent to the BSI sublease if

Gamesa forfeited its remaining tenant improvement allowance. N.T. 10/14/15, at 124-25,

140-41. Thereafter, negotiations between the parties stalled, and the proposed sublease

with BSI never materialized.

On March 23, 2013, Gamesa filed a complaint against Ten Penn Center, asserting

claims of breach of contract, tortious interference in business relationships, and unjust

enrichment. Complaint at 9-14. Gamesa alleged Ten Penn Center materially breached

the Lease by declaring Gamesa in default without basis; failing to accept or reject the

sublease proposal within thirty days as required by the Lease; and unreasonably

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