Howard Avenue Station, LLC v. Kane

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedDecember 1, 2021
Docket8:19-cv-02491
StatusUnknown

This text of Howard Avenue Station, LLC v. Kane (Howard Avenue Station, LLC v. Kane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard Avenue Station, LLC v. Kane, (M.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

HOWARD AVENUE STATION, LLC; THOMAS ORTIZ,

Appellants,

v. Case Nos: 8:19-cv-2491-WFJ1 8:12-bk-8821-CPM

FRANK KANE,

Appellee. __________________________________/ ORDER

This appeal arises from a bankruptcy case, In re: Howard Avenue Station, LLC, Case No. 8:12-bk-8821-CPM. Appellants Howard Avenue Station, LLC and Thomas Ortiz appeal two bankruptcy court orders: (1) an “Order Granting Emergency Motion to Abate the Payment of Adequate Protection to Frank R. Kane” entered on July 12, 2019; and (2) an “Order Denying Thomas Ortiz’s Motion for Rehearing or Modification of Order Granting Emergency Motion to Abate Adequate Protection Payments to Frank R. Kane” entered on August 28, 2019 (“the Orders”). The Orders are attached here in the Appendix. After oral

1 Consolidated with Case No. 8:19-cv-2490-WFJ and Case No. 8:19-cv-2492-WFJ. arguments and careful review of the record, the Court grants Appellants relief by sustaining the Orders in part but “blue penciling” them as set forth below.

BACKGROUND This is a complex bankruptcy, so the Court has simplified these facts for present purposes.2 Appellants are lessors of a building primarily used as a restaurant on Howard Avenue in Tampa, Florida. Dkt. 21 at 1. The parties entered

the commercial lease in 2009. Id. Appellant Thomas Ortiz signed the lease and is an interested party. Id. Appellant Howard Avenue Station, LLC is the Chapter 11 debtor. Id. Appellee Frank Kane is the landlord of the building. Id. Pertinent to this

triple net lease is the clear duty of the landlord to ensure a watertight roof on the premises.3 Appellant-Debtor Howard Avenue Station filed the Chapter 11 petition in 2012. Id. at 2. Landlord Kane filed a motion for adequate protection soon after,

seeking, inter alia, rent payments as landlord during the bankruptcy. Id. The Bankruptcy court granted this motion, with monthly rent due in accordance with the lease: $21,400 monthly. Dkt. 21-9.

2 The designated record is at Case No. 8:19-cv-2490-WFJ. All docket citations in this opinion are to Case No. 8:19-cv-2490-WFJ unless otherwise noted. 3 The lease may be found in the record at Dkt. 21-34 at 6. Paragraph 9 of the lease requires the landlord to “maintain the existing exterior walls and roof system.” Paragraph 19 entitles lessees to “quiet enjoyment” of the premises. Paragraph 3 states the rent shall be paid monthly “without deduction or offset.” No lease provision exists for a landlord’s failure to provide a habitable leasehold or quiet enjoyment during the lease term. Appellant-Debtor Howard Avenue Station then sought to assume the lease under the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §365(a). Dkt. 41-237. Landlord Kane

objected, and the issue has remained pending. The parties have been litigating in state court and bankruptcy court ever since, with several lawsuits and adversary proceedings.

Among the various proceedings, the parties attended a bankruptcy hearing in April 2018 concerning Landlord Kane’s Motion for Relief from Stay. Dkt. 21-30. At that hearing, Appellant Ortiz stated to the Bankruptcy Judge that Landlord Kane breached his obligation to maintain a sound roof. Id. at 21–23. Counsel for

Landlord Kane stated in response: “It sounds like somebody should send me a letter about it.” Id. at 23. The Bankruptcy Judge responded: “You don’t need a letter. Now we’re telling you. You’re on notice. Please tell Mr. Kane.” Id. There

were a series of additional hearings stretching into 2020 at which the failing roof was discussed. Dkts. 21-31; 21-32; 21-33; 21-35 (declaration of Ortiz); 42-337. During a hearing on January 4, 2019, the Bankruptcy Judge at first directed counsel to inform the health department about the faulty roof, but then stated that

Landlord Kane should be given a chance to fix the roof without involvement from the authorities. Dkt. 21-31 at 30, 38. The Court stressed: “The roof needs to be fixed.” Id. at 31. The Court likened Landlord Kane to Nero fiddling while Rome

burned. Id. at 37. At another hearing in January 2019, Landlord Kane’s lawyer stated that Kane expects to have the entire roof replaced “within 45-ish days.” Dkt. 21-32 at 6.

The Court noted the roof repair “was of dire concern to me [in April 2018] . . . It has to go fast.” Id. At a hearing on February 13, 2019, Landlord Kane’s counsel stated: “We

expect construction to start within the next two weeks.” Dkt. 42-337 at 34. The Court expressed concern about black mold in the building. Id. at 34. At a hearing later that day, the Court inquired about roof repair. Dkt. 21-33. Ortiz stated no one had shown up to address the roof and someone had partly fallen through it. Id. at

26. The Court stated, “I don’t want the danger of anybody in that building—I mean I don’t want anyone to be in danger . . . Is there adequate insurance in case someone, you know, falls through and dies?” Id. at 27. The Court implored

Landlord’s counsel to attend to the roof matter. Id. Counsel stated, “I’ll follow up on it today.” Id. On May 7, 2019, code inspectors from the City of Tampa shut down the second floor of the building as unsafe. Dkt. 21-34 at 2. The inspectors “red-tagged”

the entire building, closing it as unsafe until structural repairs were made. Id. at 2– 3. The City issued notices of violations and orders to vacate. Id. At that point, occupancy of the leasehold was illegal and barred for life safety reasons. The

property has not been habitable since May 2019, although the Landlord told this Court at a recent hearing that for a short time frame in 2020 the property might have been habitable.4 The property has not been fit for occupation by the Debtor

restaurant since it was “red-tagged” in May 2019, and counsel for Landlord Kane conceded at the recent hearing that “[t]here was no benefit to the debtor’s estate during the time the property was closed.”5

The Appellant-Tenants were ousted on May 7, 2019, by the City’s condemnation. They then took two steps on May 10, 2019. First, they served upon the Landlord notice under Fla. Stat. § 83.201, stating their intention to withhold rent under that statute until the tenancy was rendered habitable. Dkt. 21-34. That

provision, which the Court hereafter refers to as “the Florida statute,” states: Notice to landlord of failure to maintain or repair, rendering premises wholly untenable; right to withhold rent. When the lease is silent on the procedure to be followed to effect repair or maintenance and the payment of rent relating thereto, yet affirmatively and expressly places the obligation for same upon the landlord, and the landlord has failed or refused to do so, rendering the leased premises wholly untenantable, the tenant may withhold rent after notice to the landlord. The tenant shall serve the landlord, in the manner prescribed by § 83.20(3), with a written notice declaring the premises to be wholly untenantable, giving the landlord at least 20 days to make the specifically described repair or maintenance, and stating that the tenant will withhold the rent for the next rental period and thereafter until the repair or maintenance has been performed. The lease may provide for a longer period of time for repair or maintenance. Once the landlord has completed the repair or maintenance, the tenant shall pay

4 See Case No. 8:19-cv-2491-WFJ, Transcript from Hearing on November 18, 2021, p. 4. 5 See Case No. 8:19-cv-2491-WFJ, Transcript from Hearing on November 18, 2021, p. 5. the landlord the amounts of rent withheld.

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