In Re Cafe partners/washington 1983

81 B.R. 175, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 31, 17 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 320, 1988 WL 1908
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJanuary 14, 1988
DocketBankruptcy 87-00939
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 81 B.R. 175 (In Re Cafe partners/washington 1983) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Cafe partners/washington 1983, 81 B.R. 175, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 31, 17 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 320, 1988 WL 1908 (D.D.C. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

GEORGE F. BASON, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is a motion by the Debtor’s Landlord 1 for relief from the automatic stay imposed by 11 U.S.C. Section 362(a), so that the Landlord may institute proceedings to collect claimed rental accruals and arrears and to evict the Debtor from its premises, and so that the Landlord may repossess personal property consisting of restaurant equipment that was located on the premises and on which the Landlord claims a security interest. 2 The premises are the Potomac Restaurant site at 3000 K St., N.W., Washington, D.C. The Potomac was a “spectacle” or “showplace” restaurant located on the Georgetown bank of the Potomac River. The restaurant premises and the equipment constitute virtually the sole assets of the Debtor partnership. The Washington Harbour real estate development project constitutes essentially the sole asset of the Landlord, and the Potomac Restaurant was the development’s “anchor” tenant.

A hearing began on November 24, 1987 and continued on December 2, 1987 concerning the Landlord’s lift-stay motion. The evidence received at that hearing and the entire record of this case reveal the following:

In September 1983 the Landlord and the Debtor’s predecessor entered into a 40-year lease for the premises with renewal options totaling 25 years. Both the Landlord and the Debtor have experienced serious financial difficulties, and they have been embroiled in controversy between themselves for a considerable time. In order to resolve various disputes, the lease was amended and modified three times — in February and August 1986 and in February 1987. In addition to the rent stipulated in the lease, as amended, the Debtor is obligated to the Landlord on a $1 million, 40-year loan and on a $648,000, five-year loan. The Landlord contends that the monthly amounts payable on these two obligations constitute “additional rent,” and the Debtor disputes this characterization. It is not necessary for this Court to resolve this dispute at this time.

Up through August 1987 the Debtor was fully current in payment of all amounts billed by the Landlord for rent under the lease as amended in February 1987 and fully current on all amounts then due on *177 the $1 million and the $648,000 loans. In September 1987 the Landlord retroactively recalculated the common area maintenance and real estate tax charges payable by the Debtor for a portion of 1986 and for all of 1987 up to the date of billing; the Landlord then sent the Debtor a demand letter for payment of these recalculated charges and other items. The Debtor’s October 13, 1987 letter questioning these charges, went essentially unanswered. On October 22, 1987 the Landlord sent the Debtor a five-day notice of default and lease termination, on account of the Debtor’s failure to pay this newly-billed amount. 3 Four days later, on October 26, 1987, the Debtor ceased restaurant operations.

The fifth day, October 27,1987, was a busy day. On the morning of that day (according to the testimony of Alan Gar-mise, the vice president of the Debtor’s general partner), the Debtor, in order to prevent pilferage by former employees and other souvenir hunters, began to remove from the restaurant premises a number of small items; these items were taken to and are stored for safekeeping at the general partner’s warehouse in New York, and an inventory of them has been taken. This Court, having observed Mr. Garmise, finds him to be a highly credible witness; the Court believes his testimony concerning the reason for removal of certain items; and the Court finds and concludes that the Debtor, faced with an emergency situation, was justified in taking the prudent and necessary steps that it did take in order to preserve those assets for the benefit of the estate and all its creditors, including the Landlord. These steps cannot in fairness or good conscience be characterized as constituting a default under the clause of the security agreement that prohibits removal of collateral from the premises such as to justify any adverse consequences to the Debtor; they do not fall within the intent or spirit of that clause. If the Tenant had removed the equipment solely in order to save it from imminent destruction by a fire on the premises, surely no court would allow the Landlord to declare a default. The same result follows here. There being no other basis on which the Landlord claims any default as to the equipment, the lift-stay motion must be denied insofar as it seeks leave to repossess the equipment; if there is no default, there is no right to repossess.

Also on October 27, 1987 the Debtor and its general partner filed a lawsuit against the Landlord in D.C. Superior Court (C.A. No. 9179-87) alleging various causes of action based on the lease, including challenges to the increased rental demand made in September 1987.

Finally, in the afternoon of that same day two other legal proceedings of major significance were commenced. First, at 3:07 p.m. the Debtor filed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in this Court. Then, at 4:46 p.m. the Landlord sought and obtained a temporary restraining order from the D.C. Superior Court (C.A. No. 9194-87) prohibiting the Debtor, the Debtor’s general partner, and Mr. Leroy from further removing from the premises any items in which the Landlord holds a security interest. This temporary restraining order was sought and obtained notwithstanding notification by the Debtor’s counsel that the bankruptcy petition had already been filed earlier that day and that hence the automatic stay imposed by 11 U.S.C. Section 362(a) was then in effect. Without violating the automatic stay the Landlord could have but did not seek the same relief in this Court as it sought and obtained in D.C. Superior Court in knowing violation of the automatic stay.

According to Mr. Garmise’s unchallenged testimony, which this Court believes: Pursuant to and immediately after issuance of the temporary restraining order, the Landlord changed the locks on the restaurant premises and posted security guards at the premises. Ever since then, in order to gain access to the premises for the purpose of *178 showing the premises to prospective purchasers of the restaurant business or for any other purpose, the Debtor must first make a request through the Debtor’s counsel to the Landlord’s counsel, naming all those persons that the Debtor desires to have access; when those persons arrive at the premises, they must be accompanied by the security guards.

The Landlord adduced considerable testimony and other evidence at the hearing concerning the financial harm that has flowed and will flow to it and to its other tenants as a result of the Debtor’s ceasing operations on October 26, 1987. However, it is indisputable that the Landlord itself sought to terminate the Debtor’s lease as of just one day later, on October 27, 1987. Had the Debtor heeded to the Landlord’s demand, the Debtor’s operations would have ceased on October 27, 1987. The one-day difference between what the Debtor in fact did and what the Landlord demanded that the Debtor do is de minimis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 B.R. 175, 1988 Bankr. LEXIS 31, 17 Bankr. Ct. Dec. (CRR) 320, 1988 WL 1908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cafe-partnerswashington-1983-dcd-1988.