Hasson Investment v. Sunset Blvd. Properties CA2/7

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 23, 2025
DocketB330413
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hasson Investment v. Sunset Blvd. Properties CA2/7 (Hasson Investment v. Sunset Blvd. Properties CA2/7) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hasson Investment v. Sunset Blvd. Properties CA2/7, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/23/25 Hasson Investment v. Sunset Blvd. Properties CA2/7 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

HASSON INVESTMENT, LLC, B330413

Plaintiff, Cross-defendant, and (Los Angeles County Super. Appellant, Ct. No. 21STCV43251)

v.

SUNSET BLVD. PROPERTIES, L.P. et al.,

Defendants, Cross- complainants, and Respondents. ________________________________

HASSON INVESTMENT, LLC, B331301

Plaintiff, Cross-defendant, and Respondent,

SUNSET BLVD. PROPERTIES, L.P. et al., Defendants, Cross- complainants, and Appellants.

APPEALS from a judgment and a postjudgment order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Richard L. Fruin, Jr., Judge. Judgment is reversed with directions; appeal from postjudgment order is dismissed as moot. Law Office of Kenneth R. Morris and Kenneth R. Morris for Plaintiff, Cross-defendant, Appellant, and Respondent. Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton and Emil W. Herich for Defendants, Cross-complainants, Respondents, and Appellants. ______________________

This case concerns a dispute over a failed restaurant lease. Hasson Investment, LLC leased the property from Sunset Blvd. Properties, L.P., the owner, and Paramount Contractors & Developers Inc., its agent (collectively, the landlord). After the lease terminated, Hasson refused to return the liquor license for the premises unless the landlord paid it $100,000. In response, the landlord withheld $62,000 in deposits Hasson had paid. Both sides sued. Following a bench trial, the trial court concluded the landlord did not breach the lease by failing to return Hasson’s deposits, but the landlord owed Hasson $42,000 under unjust enrichment principles. The court found Hasson breached the lease by failing to return the liquor license, causing the landlord to suffer $25,000 in damages—the landlord’s cost to obtain a replacement license. The result was a net recovery of $17,000 to Hasson.

2 Hasson argues the court erred by reducing its unjust enrichment award based on the landlord’s $25,000 cost to obtain a new liquor license because the landlord would have had to pay Hasson more than $25,000 for the transfer of the license, had Hasson performed its obligation to return the license. We agree. We further agree the court erred in concluding the landlord did not breach the lease by failing to return some of Hasson’s deposits. We reverse and remand for the court to award Hasson $42,000 on its cause of action for unjust enrichment, to determine Hasson’s costs, and to consider any request for attorney fees. The landlord filed a cross-appeal challenging the denial of its motion for attorney fees under Code of Civil Procedure section 998 because it offered to settle for a sum larger than Hasson’s ultimate $17,000 recovery.1 Because we conclude Hasson was entitled to a larger unjust enrichment award as to which the settlement offer was not greater, the cross-appeal is moot. We therefore dismiss the landlord’s cross-appeal.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. The Lease, Its Termination, and the Parties’ Dispute The parties do not challenge the following factual findings and legal conclusions made by the trial court: “Heloise Hasson is the owner and sole member of plaintiff Hasson Investment, LLC.[2] [Heloise] is a French citizen; during

1 References to code provisions are to the Code of Civil Procedure, unless otherwise stated. 2 We refer to the LLC as Hasson and to Heloise Hasson by her first name for clarity.

3 the relevant period she was applying to obtain a V-2 (investment) visa for U.S. residency. “[Hasson] and Paramount entered into [a] lease under which [Hasson] would open a restaurant in [the] ground floor space of a commercial building [on Sunset Boulevard] . . . owned by defendant Sunset Blvd. Properties, LLC. Defendant Paramount Contractors & Developers, Inc. acted as the agent of Sunset in the lease negotiations. Paramount and Sunset have common ownership. . . . “The parties signed a lease and the original addendum on March 3, 2021. [Hasson] took possession and began to prepare the premises for restaurant operations. The restaurant never opened. A lease provision provided that the lease terminated on August 31, 2021, unless [Heloise] had by that time acquired a V-2 visa. The visa process required, as its final step, that [Heloise] be interviewed at the U.S. Embassy in Paris. However, due to delays and restrictions caused by the pandemic, the Embassy cancelled successive interviews it had scheduled with [Heloise]. [Hasson’s] lawyers notified Paramount . . . that [Hasson] terminated the lease, relying on the provision that the lease had terminated on August 31 because [Heloise] had not secured a V-2 visa. Other reasons may have contributed to [Hasson’s] decision—delays and disputes about the remodeling, for instance—but such considerations are not relevant to the parties’ contractual rights upon the lease termination. “[Hasson’s] termination of the lease did not breach the lease. [Hasson’s] conduct afterwards did breach the lease agreement. [Hasson] under the lease had made three pre- payments to the landlord: $30,000 as a security deposit; $12,000 as pre-paid rent; and $20,000 as a liquor license deposit (later

4 described as key money). Under the lease agreements (four addenda were signed) the landlord was required to provide a liquor license so that the restaurant could sell alcoholic beverages. The landlord in 2016 had procured a Type 47 liquor license[3] limited to sales at the . . . Sunset [Boulevard] location, and the landlord transferred that license to [Hasson]. [Hasson], however, under the lease was required to pay $60,000 in three installments once the restaurant opened to pay the landlord for the use of the liquor license and to transfer it back to the landlord when the lease terminated. The $20,000 deposit was an initial payment by [Hasson] for use of the liquor license until the license was returned to the landlord.[4] Under the limitations imposed by a Type 47 liquor license[, the license] had to be used for alcoholic beverage sales [on the Sunset Boulevard premises] for five years, and two years were remaining on that requirement when the landlord transferred the license to [Hasson], but once the five year limitation was satisfied the license could be sold to any qualified user and used at any qualifying location in Los Angeles County. The liquor license, therefore, could increase in market value after the five-year location restriction was satisfied.

3 According to the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC), a Type 47 license “[a]uthorizes the sale of beer, wine and distilled spirits for consumption on the licensed premises.” (See California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, License Types [as of July 15, 2025].) 4 Hasson also paid the landlord an additional $6,000 for the license—the maximum that the landlord could charge under an ABC restriction that prohibited resale of the license for more than $6,000 until the license matured in September 2023.

5 “After terminating the lease, [Hasson] demanded the landlord pay [it] $100,000 for return of the liquor license. This was a breach of the lease terms that required [Hasson] to transfer the license to the landlord when the lease was terminated (for which the landlord was to reimburse to [Hasson] a $6,000 ABC fee and another [approximately] $5,000 administrative fee). A different . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Hasson Investment v. Sunset Blvd. Properties CA2/7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasson-investment-v-sunset-blvd-properties-ca27-calctapp-2025.