Green Leaves Restaurant, Inc. v. 617 H Street Associates

974 A.2d 222, 2009 D.C. App. LEXIS 239, 2009 WL 1789109
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 25, 2009
Docket04-CV-1359, 06-CV-1179, 06-CV-1193
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 974 A.2d 222 (Green Leaves Restaurant, Inc. v. 617 H Street Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green Leaves Restaurant, Inc. v. 617 H Street Associates, 974 A.2d 222, 2009 D.C. App. LEXIS 239, 2009 WL 1789109 (D.C. 2009).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

These consolidated appeals pit guarantors of a commercial lease against the landlord and each other. In the proceedings below, the landlord entered into a settlement agreement with the tenant, a corporation wholly owned by the guarantors, to recover possession of the’leased premises after the tenant defaulted on its obligations in the wake of a disastrous fire. *226 The landlord thereafter secured a judgment against each of the guai'antors for unpaid rent and other damages, including attorney’s fees. In the same action, the guarantors were adjudged liable to each other for contribution but not full indemnification. The appeals raise four main issues: (1) whether one of the guarantors had the authority he claimed to have to enter into the settlement agreement with the landlord on the tenant’s behalf; (2) whether the settlement operated to release another guarantor from his obligations to the landlord; (3) whether the guarantors are jointly liable to the landlord for the attorney’s fees it incurred to enforce their guarantees; and (4) whether the guarantors must contribute equally to pay their common debt (as the trial court ruled) or in proportion to their ownership interests in the principal obligor.

For the most part, we affirm the judgments on appeal. We uphold the validity of the settlement pursuant to which the landlord regained possession from the tenant and conclude that it did not operate to discharge the objecting guarantor. We also hold that the guarantors are liable for the landlord’s attorney’s fees. However, while we affirm the trial court’s rejection of the guarantors’ cross-claims for full indemnification, we remand for further consideration of the proper measure of their contributive shares.

I. Factual Background 1

On May 29, 2001, Green Leaves Restaurant, Inc. (“Green Leaves”), a newly created District of Columbia business corporation, signed a five-year lease with 617 H Street Associates for a building in the Washington, D.C., neighborhood commonly known as Chinatown. Green Leaves’s three shareholders — Michael Cheah, Kevin Yu, and Wan Kam Lee — signed the lease as guarantors, “individually and severally warranting]” that all of the tenant’s obligations would be “the personal responsibility and liability of each and all of’ them as well. In addition to paying rent and local business taxes, Green Leaves’s obligations under the lease included securing adequate fire insurance coverage and maintaining the condition of the premises.

The three owners of Green Leaves also served as its officers and directors. Michael Cheah, who was a 50% shareholder, was Green Leaves’s president. Kevin Yu, a 25% shareholder, was corporate secretary. Wan Kam Lee, also a 25% shareholder, was vice-president. Of the three investors, only Cheah had experience as a restaurateur. Cheah already owned several other restaurants, and during the summer and fall of 2001 he was constructing a new Malaysian restaurant in Bethesda, Maryland. In contest, Yu and Lee had little relevant business experience. Yu was only twenty-years-old; his father, Kam Yu, bankrolled his investment in Green Leaves so that he could learn the restaurant business from Cheah. (Kam Yu had a restaurant of his own in Chinatown, in which his son had worked as a waiter and deliveryman.) Lee was a housewife; her husband owned the Kwong Wong Construction Company, which Cheah had hired as the contractor for his restaurant in Bethesda. Cheah originally expected Yu’s father and Lee’s husband to be his partners in Green Leaves, but with his consent they substituted Kevin Yu and Wan Kam Lee at the last minute. Perhaps for that reason, Cheah, Yu and Lee failed to discuss or clarify their individual roles and responsibilities in the new enterprise.

*227 The building leased by Green Leaves housed a Chinese restaurant, which Green Leaves purchased for $60,000. Cheah, Yu and Lee contributed the funds for that acquisition in proportion to their shareholdings. Their plan was to convert the property to a Malaysian restaurant after Cheah completed his pending project in Bethesda and could turn his attention to the Chinatown venture. In the meantime, Green Leaves retained the incumbent manager to continue running the Chinese restaurant. Cheah, Yu and Lee did not involve themselves in the restaurant’s operation.

Green Leaves’s plans for 617 H Street were never realized. Only four months after the lease was signed, a fire gutted the restaurant. In the aftermath of this calamity, it was discovered that Green Leaves had neglected to obtain fire insurance coverage in an amount equal to the full replacement value of the premises, as the lease required. Cheah, Yu and Lee had never discussed who would be responsible for attending to this obligation. (Cheah subsequently claimed that Yu’s father had promised him he would take care of it for them.) The only applicable insurance was a pre-existing $75,000 policy (with a $1,000 deductible) that covered damage to the restaurant kitchen. With property damage ranging from $120,000 (Cheah’s initial rough estimate) to $400,000 (the insurance adjustor’s estimate), the kitchen policy was plainly inadequate to fund the necessary repairs. The restaurant ceased operations. Green Leaves stopped paying rent, which began to accrue at the rate of $10,000 a month and increased to $11,000 a month in the second year of the lease. At some point following the fire, Cheah and his fellow shareholders ceased communicating with each other.

There was a lengthy delay in obtaining the proceeds of the $75,000 insurance policy, apparently because Cheah insisted that the carrier cover the entire loss without regard to the coverage limits. Ultimately, in September 2002, after Cheah effectively bowed out, Yu dealt with the insurance company and agreed on Green Leaves’s behalf to accept the policy limit. Yu deposited the insurance proceeds (which, net of the deductible, amounted to $74,000) in Green Leaves’s corporate bank account and disbursed $20,000 to 617 H Street Associates in partial payment of the rent arrearage.

Without Cheah’s participation, Yu also obtained bids to repair the fire-damaged building from Kwong Wong Construction (the company owned by Lee’s husband) and a second contractor. Yu hired Kwong Wong to repair the fire-damaged building for $212,000, which was the lower of the two bids he had received. Yu used the remaining $54,000 in insurance proceeds to pay Kwong Wong, and he and Lee together paid the balance due of $158,000 in equal shares with financial help from Yu’s father. 2 Cheah, who had not been consulted, did not contribute to the cost of the premises restoration.

II. The Litigation

By the end of 2002, Green Leaves was in arrears for more than a year’s worth of *228 back rent, and the fire damage was still unrepaired. The landlord then brought two actions in Superior Court. First, on December 16, 2002, 617 H Street Associates sued Green Leaves and its shareholders, the latter in their capacity as guarantors. The complaint sought monetary damages for unpaid rent, estimated repair costs, and anticipatory breach of the lease. Green Leaves never answered the complaint. The guarantors answered and cross-claimed against each other for indemnification or contribution.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilfred Welsh v. McNeil & Elliott
162 A.3d 135 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2017)
Armenian Assembly of America v. Gerard Cafesjian
758 F.3d 265 (D.C. Circuit, 2014)
A-J Marine, Inc. v. Corfu Contractors, Inc.
810 F. Supp. 2d 168 (District of Columbia, 2011)
Terracino v. Gordon and Hiller
1 A.3d 97 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
974 A.2d 222, 2009 D.C. App. LEXIS 239, 2009 WL 1789109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-leaves-restaurant-inc-v-617-h-street-associates-dc-2009.