Jack I. Bender & Sons v. The Tom James Company

37 F.3d 640, 308 U.S. App. D.C. 343, 1994 WL 558375
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 28, 1994
Docket93-7231
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 F.3d 640 (Jack I. Bender & Sons v. The Tom James Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jack I. Bender & Sons v. The Tom James Company, 37 F.3d 640, 308 U.S. App. D.C. 343, 1994 WL 558375 (D.C. Cir. 1994).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.

STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:

Sixteen months after a tenant moved out in breach of its lease, the landlord relet the abandoned premises together with a larger, adjacent space. The landlord sued in district court to recover lost rentals. The court denied recovery on a number of theories. Because the lost rents were fully offset by the revenues under the substitute lease that were reasonably attributable to the tenant’s departure, and because we find that such an offset is allowable under District of Columbia law, we affirm.

Bender & Sons owns an office building at 1120 Connecticut Avenue in the District of Columbia. The building (shown in the accompanying map) contains 19,468 square feet of retail space with direct access to Connecticut Avenue. Roughly 6,400 square feet of this space is at street level, with the remainder below ground level. The building has 67 feet fronting on Connecticut Avenue, of which ten are used for the entrance to the office portion of the budding; the remaining 57 are available for retail street-level display.

Until the premises were renovated in May 1992, the 19,468 square feet had been divided into two separate spaces. About 1,000 square feet were occupied by the Tom James Company under a 10-year lease expiring in July 1996. These premises were all at street level and included 47 of the 57 feet available along Connecticut Avenue. The remaining 18,468 square feet of retail space (with only 10 feet of sidewalk frontage) had originally been leased to Mel Krupin for use as a bar and restaurant; Krupin had vacated the premises in July 1988, however, and Bender was unable to find a replacement tenant until after James’s breach.

In December 1990 James announced its intention to vacate its 1,000 square feet at the end of January. Bender wrote back that it refused to accept the surrender of the premises and that it intended to hold James to the terms of the lease. James abandoned the premises on January 30, 1991 and paid no further rent after that date.

All was not lost for Bender, however. At some point around the time of James’s notice of intention to vacate, the landlord had begun negotiations with The Gap, hoping to secure the national clothing retailer as a tenant for the combined retail space on Connecticut Avenue — that is, for the full 19,468 square feet. The negotiations took a long time but ultimately panned out. In May 1992, pursuant to a letter of intent, Bender demolished the walls separating the James space from the Krupin space and performed other work to ready the combined premises for The Gap. The parties signed a twelve-year lease for *642 the full 19,468 square feet on June 9, 1992, and The Gap’s tenancy began that October.

Bender brought a diversity suit in federal district court against James (a Tennessee corporation), seeking the rent due for the remaining term of the lease, the costs incurred in securing The Gap as replacement tenant, and attorneys’ fees. Bender won summary judgment on the issue of liability: James clearly breached the lease. Nonetheless, the district court denied Bender any recovery. The court held that Bender’s ef-* forts before and after the breach to secure a tenant willing to lease the entire 19,468 square feet proved that the landlord accepted the surrender of the premises immediately upon James’s vacation in January 1991; in the court’s view this acceptance canceled both the tenant’s lease and any liability thereunder. Even if there had been no such acceptance, the court went on, the benefits Bender received as a result of the breach— the roughly $5,200,000 in rent due under the new lease with The Gap until its end in 2004 — so exceeded the breaching tenant’s rent obligation (roughly $900,000 until that lease’s end in 1996) as to erase any injury suffered by the landlord. The court also denied attorneys’ fees.

We affirm the district court’s order entering judgment in favor of James. Although we find no basis for the court’s determination that Bender accepted abandonment immediately upon James’s breach of its lease with Bender, we agree that Bender suffered no net damages. Bender was entitled to rent from the time of James’s breach to the end of that original lease (whether as actual rent or as contract damages), less a set-off for the portion of the value of the substitute lease to The Gap attributable to the inclusion of James’s former premises (adjusted for the properly allocable share of the reasonable expenses incurred in securing The Gap’s tenancy). The district court could find, without clear error, that the amount of that set-off would exceed James’s liability for rent and expenses.

The district court’s finding that Bender accepted James’s abandonment immediately upon its breach in January 1991 is clearly erroneous. Bender’s repeated notices to James of James’s liability for the unpaid rent, and the absence of any conduct inconsistent with an intent to hold James responsible and to relet on its account pursuant to the terms of the lease, dispel any inference of an intent to accept abandonment. See International Comm’n on English in the Liturgy v. Schwartz, 573 A.2d 1303, 1306 (D.C.1990) (no acceptance of abandonment where landlord notifies tenant of intention to hold tenant to terms of lease, even where landlord makes efforts to secure replacement tenant) (citing Baskin v. Thomas, 12 F.2d 845 (D.C.Cir.1926)); see also 2 Richard R. Powell & Patrick J. Rohan, Powell on Real Property § 17.05[1], at 17-77 to -78 (1994).

The parties disagree as to whether Bender’s obtaining The Gap as a substitute tenant in 1992 represented an acceptance of James’s abandonment or a re-entry and re-letting by Bender on the tenant’s account. Cf. Cohen v. Food Town, Inc., 207 A.2d 122, 123 (D.C.1965). But given the lease’s damages provision, which provides that the tenant remains liable for all rent should the tenant breach, Bender’s recovery would be identical under either approach. If Bender’s demolition of the boundary walls of James’s former premises in May 1992 worked an acceptance of the tenant’s surrender by law, cf. International Comm’n, 573 A.2d at 1306 n. 2, Bender would be entitled to the unpaid rent from the January 1991 breach through the May 1992 acceptance of the surrender, plus damages (as provided for in the lease) in an amount equal to the rent for the remaining term of the lease (June 1992 to July 1996), less the portion of the substitute lease rentals attributable to James’s space (with an adjustment for the properly allocable reasonable expenses of bringing in the new tenant). See Ostrow v. Smulkin, 249 A.2d 520, 521 (D.C.1969); Restatement (Second) of Property: Landlord & Tenant, § 12.1 cmts. g, i. (1977). On the other hand, if Bender were simply re-entering the premises and reletting on the former tenant’s account, it would be entitled to the amount owed under the remaining term of the original lease (January 1991 to July 1996) as rent, less

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Bluebook (online)
37 F.3d 640, 308 U.S. App. D.C. 343, 1994 WL 558375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jack-i-bender-sons-v-the-tom-james-company-cadc-1994.