Indianapolis Life Insurance Company v. Lucky Stores, Inc. And Dominick's Finer Foods

35 F.3d 568, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 32623, 1994 WL 481225
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 1994
Docket93-3073
StatusUnpublished

This text of 35 F.3d 568 (Indianapolis Life Insurance Company v. Lucky Stores, Inc. And Dominick's Finer Foods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indianapolis Life Insurance Company v. Lucky Stores, Inc. And Dominick's Finer Foods, 35 F.3d 568, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 32623, 1994 WL 481225 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

35 F.3d 568

NOTICE: Seventh Circuit Rule 53(b)(2) states unpublished orders shall not be cited or used as precedent except to support a claim of res judicata, collateral estoppel or law of the case in any federal court within the circuit.
INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
LUCKY STORES, INC. and Dominick's Finer Foods, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 93-3073.

United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.

Argued June 7, 1994.
Decided Sept. 6, 1994.

Before CUMMINGS, ALARCON* and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges.

ORDER

This action was brought by plaintiff Indianapolis Life Insurance Company ("Indianapolis Life"), an Indiana corporation, alleging that the defendants, Lucky Stores, Inc. ("Lucky") and Dominick's Finer Foods ("Dominick's"), both of Delaware, had breached their lease agreement with the plaintiff. Indianapolis Life sought damages and a declaratory judgment. With the amount in controversy exceeding $50,000, the diversity of the parties' citizenship gave the district court jurisdiction over this dispute. 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1332.

Many of the facts in this case are stipulated. The district court heard evidence as to disputed facts in September 1992 and issued its Memorandum Opinion and Order on July 29, 1993, after the parties had completed post-trial submissions. Judgment was entered in favor of both defendants as to all of Indianapolis Life's claims on August 2, 1993. This appeal followed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291.

On appeal, plaintiff explicitly declines to challenge the district court's findings of fact. Pl.Br. at 12. We review the court's legal analysis de novo. Walton v. Jennings Community Hospital, Inc., 999 F.2d 277, 282 (7th Cir.1993). Because the facts as found by the district court dispose of plaintiff's claims, we affirm.

Background

In September 1976 Lucky Stores entered into a 25-year lease, the term of which began in November 1977, with American National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago as trustee (the "Trustee") of Trust No. 39266 (the "Land Trust"). The lease obligated the tenant to pay, among other things, an annual fixed minimum rent of $118,381. Lucky operated an Eagle Food Stores on the property at 375 N. Halsted Street, Chicago Heights, Cook County, Illinois, from November 1977 until July 1985, when it assigned the lease, as part of a package of lease assignments and sales, to Dominick's Finer Foods. Dominick's decided not to open a store on the property because the facility was too small and because the area was already adequately served by its other stores. The property therefore stood vacant, although Dominick's continued to pay rent on it until at least May 10, 1989, when Dominick's and the Trustee entered into an agreement that purported to terminate the lease between the parties. In exchange for the May 10, 1989, termination of its lease, Dominick's paid one year's rent and taxes.

Indianapolis Life is concerned with this transaction because it was a secured creditor of the Land Trust. In October 1977 Indianapolis Life loaned one million dollars to the Land Trust and obtained a mortgage on the property.1 As additional security for the loan, the Land Trust assigned Lucky's lease to Indianapolis Life. The parties agree that all interests in the property and assignments of the lease were duly recorded.

After Dominick's determined that it would not utilize the Land Trust property for a store, it made extensive efforts to find a subtenant for the property. In late 1988, the real estate broker hired by Dominick's located the United States Postal Service as a potential tenant. Negotiations revealed that a sublease was not practicable; therefore Dominick's, the beneficiaries of the Land Trust, and the Postal Service began to negotiate the termination of Dominick's lease so that a new lease could be entered between the Land Trust and the Postal Service. The district court explicitly found that Indianapolis Life was aware of these negotiations and that it knew that the deal involved termination of Dominick's lease rather than a sublease to the Post Office. It found that Indianapolis Life wanted to have the Postal Service as a tenant on the property and considered this a better option than having the property continue to stand vacant with Dominick's as the tenant. The district court meticulously outlined a course of conduct by Indianapolis Life from which it inferred that Indianapolis Life had consented to the termination of Dominick's lease.

The Land Trust was late in paying its June 1989 mortgage payment to Indianapolis Life; it never made another payment. From this time until some time in September the Land Trust successfully persuaded Indianapolis Life that the Post Office was on the verge of beginning to pay rent on the property. The district court found as a fact that Indianapolis Life took no immediate action when the mortgage payments became past due "because it knew there was an ongoing transaction regarding the property. The Post Office was entering a lease to become the tenant on the property...." Pl.Short App. at 14. "From this time through January 1990, neither Indianapolis Life nor the beneficiaries of the Land Trust suggested that Dominick's or Lucky represented a potential source of payments." Id.

In September 1989 Indianapolis Life learned that the Land Trust had deceived it regarding any lease with the Post Office. Nonetheless, it continued to pursue both the Land Trust and the Post Office in an attempt to collect its past due mortgage payments. In late 1989 the Postal Service broke off negotiations with the Land Trust, having determined that the property did not meet its requirements. Not until January 1990, after it had already initiated foreclosure proceedings,2 did Indianapolis Life attempt to recover rent payments on the lease from either Lucky Stores or Dominick's. When they resisted making rent payments on the ground that their leases with the Land Trust had been terminated, Indianapolis Life responded that the documents between the parties required its prior written consent to any lease termination, and that absent such a writing the purported lease termination agreement was invalid.

The district court rejected such a contention. Its crucial finding of fact was that Indianapolis Life clearly consented to the lease termination, as evidenced by its behavior both prior and subsequent to the execution of the lease termination agreement. We agree with the district court that this fact is fatal to Indianapolis Life's present attempt to hold Dominick's and Lucky to the lease.

Pertinent Documents

The documents upon which Indianapolis Life relies in challenging the validity of the lease termination are the so-called Assignment of Lease by Lessor, executed by the Land Trust when it assigned Lucky's lease to Indianapolis Life in 1977, and the Lessee's Estoppel Certificate, executed by Lucky as part of the same transaction.

When the Land Trust assigned Lucky's lease to Indianapolis Life as additional security for the one million dollar loan, the "Assignment of Lease by Lessor" provided that "The Lessors ...

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35 F.3d 568, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 32623, 1994 WL 481225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indianapolis-life-insurance-company-v-lucky-stores-inc-and-dominicks-ca7-1994.