In Re C & C Tv & Appliance, Inc.

97 B.R. 782, 1989 WL 23134
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 27, 1989
Docket19-11036
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 97 B.R. 782 (In Re C & C Tv & Appliance, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re C & C Tv & Appliance, Inc., 97 B.R. 782, 1989 WL 23134 (Pa. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

The instant dispute between the Debtor and its landlord pursuant to a lease containing a purchase option, tests the power of the landlord to unilaterally terminate the parties’ contract on the basis of a forfeiture clause. Since we believe that such a clause must be construed narrowly, we hold that, in several respects, the landlord has failed to establish that it met the prerequisites for termination of the lease under its own terms. We also hold that the landlord’s attempt to utilize extrajudicial means to terminate the lease would not be permissible in any event.

The Debtor, a retailer of household appliances, filed this Chapter 11 case on December 22, 1988. A motion to utilize cash which was collateral for debts owed to the floor planners or financiers of the Debtor’s merchandise was bitterly fought from the outset, because the financiers were painfully aware that the Debtor had sold approximately $1.5 million of merchandise “out of trust,” i.e., it had made retail sales without remitting the wholesale purchase prices to the financiers pursuant to the terms of their security agreements. The largest of the financiers, Transameriea Commercial Finance Corporation (hereinafter referred to as “Transameriea”), whose sales “out of trust” exceeded $1 million, nevertheless agreed to enter into an agreement to continue financing the Debtor, as long as certain payments and assurances were made to it. One of the most important of these assurances was that it would receive a priority in the proceeds which the Debtor hoped to realize from a sale and leaseback of a portion of its valuable, but oversized business headquarters, of which it retained possession under a lease with an option to purchase. The other, under-secured financiers objected to certain aspects of the agreement between the Debtor and Trans-america, as unfairly preferential to the latter.

On January 3, 1989, we conducted a lengthy hearing on the issues of whether the Debtor’s agreement with Transameriea should be approved and whether the Debt- or could use the cash collateral of Trans-america and/or the other financiers on any basis if approval of the agreement with Transameriea were disapproved. At its close, we allowed the Debtor to proceed under the terms of the proposed agreement until January 17, 1989, when a hearing on whether to continue our approval of the agreement through its projected date of termination, March 29, 1989, would be conducted.

The owner of the real estate housing the Debtor’s headquarters at 191 South Gulph Road, King of Prussia, Pennsylvania (here *784 inafter “the Premises”), Emory Hill McConnell & Associates (hereinafter “the Landlord”), was present at the January 3, 1989, hearing. In the course of this hearing, it became apparent that the most substantial asset of the Debtor was an option to purchase the Premises for between $2.34 and $2.43 million, depending on the date of exercise of an option to purchase, that was contained in a Lease Agreement of November 14, 1986. The Debtor was compelled to utilize this asset as a bargaining chip in which it would provide the creditors an interest as security in its efforts to convince them that it could adequately protect their rights in its future operations. The Landlord’s counsel, who was present, advised all of the parties present that it believed that it had terminated the Debtor’s interest in the lease and option prior to the bankruptcy filing. However, upon ascertaining that the Landlord’s contention was based merely upon dispatch of a pre-petition termination notice, as opposed to a duly-executed pre-petition writ of possession for the Premises, we expressly stated that we doubted that the Landlord’s position had merit. Transamerica and the other financiers, as will be noted, obviously agreed with and relied upon this assessment of the Landlord’s rights.

On January 17, 1989, we sustained the financiers’ Objections to the Debtor’s agreement with Transamerica and scheduled a hearing on the Debtor’s motion to use cash collateral on January 19, 1989. At the outset of the hearing on January 19, 1989, we were advised that the Debtor, Transamerica, and the other financiers were close to a settlement, which was in fact effected by a Stipulation presented to us on January 20, 1989. The Stipulation included sharing by the other financiers in the priority in the proceeds of the Debtor’s proposed sale of its interest in the Premises. The Landlord objected to this Stipulation on the ground that the Debtor no longer had an interest in the Premises to sell, but we approved the Stipulation in an Order of January 23, 1989. No appeal from this Order was filed.

In the meantime, on January 11, 1989, the Landlord filed one of the matters presently before us, a Motion to obtain a declaration from this court that it had effectively terminated the Debtor’s lease pre-petition and/or to obtain relief from the automatic stay to evict the Debtor from the Premises. The Debtor, Transamerica, and the Creditors’ Committee appointed in the Debtor’s case all answered and opposed the Landlord’s motion. The Debtor included, as an alternative defense in its answer, a “counter-motion” to avoid any termination of the lease by the Landlord under 11 U.S. C. § 548(a)(2). Prior to the hearing on the Landlord’s motion, continued by agreement until February 14, 1989, the Debtor filed the second of the matters presently before us, a motion to assume the executory Lease Agreement concerning the Premises and a lease at its other business location in East Lansdowne, Pennsylvania.

On February 14, 1989, the parties agreed to submit the Landlord’s motion on a Stipulation of Facts, believed to be forthcoming on February 17, 1989. When no final Stipulation could be effected, the parties agreed to continue the hearing to the date of the scheduled hearing on the Debtor’s motion, March 8, 1989. We directed the parties to file any Briefs supplemental to those already filed with the motions and answers and to prepare a Stipulation of ■Facts to the extent that they could prior to that hearing.

A rather comprehensive Stipulation of Facts was presented at the hearing on March 8, 1989. The only additional testimony of any substance was presented by David J. Ross of Ross Investment Group, who stated that he and the Debtor had executed a “letter of intent” by which he would purchase the Debtor’s interest in the Premises for $2.69 million. This agreement was said to result in a $350,000.00 gross profit to the Debtor, and to include the desideratum of a leaseback of a portion of the Premises to the Debtor.

We believe that the entire controversy manifests a problem of ascertaining the legal effect of certain paragraphs of the Lease Agreement in light of the course of conduct of the parties. Most significant is the following portion of paragraph 19 of *785 the Lease Agreement, which the parties stipulate was the subject of negotiation and draftsmanship by counsel representing both parties:

19. DEFAULT PROVISIONS:

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Bluebook (online)
97 B.R. 782, 1989 WL 23134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-c-c-tv-appliance-inc-paeb-1989.