John Hilsman Investments, LLC v. Quality Properties, LLC

500 B.R. 105, 2013 WL 5132984, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 131073
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedSeptember 13, 2013
DocketNo. 1:11-CV-1417-KOB
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 500 B.R. 105 (John Hilsman Investments, LLC v. Quality Properties, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Hilsman Investments, LLC v. Quality Properties, LLC, 500 B.R. 105, 2013 WL 5132984, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 131073 (N.D. Ala. 2013).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KARON OWEN BOWDRE, District Judge.

This matter comes before the court on appeal from an Order of the Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Alabama, In re Quality Properties, LLC, Case No. 10-42783-JJR-ll.1 The Bankruptcy Court, in an Order entered January 31, 2011, held that Quality’s leasehold interest continued despite its assignor’s rejection of the lease in a prior bankruptcy, and granted Quality’s motion to assume the Lease and Assignment. Id. at Doc. 209. For the reasons stated below, the court finds that the Bankruptcy Court correctly decided the issue and affirms its decision.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

When a district court reviews a decision from a bankruptcy court, the Circuit Court has clearly defined that role: “In reviewing a bankruptcy court judgment as an appellate court, the district court reviews the bankruptcy court’s legal conclusions de novo. The district court must accept the bankruptcy court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous, and give due regard to the bankruptcy court’s opportunity to judge the credibility of the witnesses.” In re Englander, 95 F.3d 1028, 1030 (11th Cir.1996).

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The essential facts affecting this appeal are not disputed by the parties, but involve events from three bankruptcy proceedings. This case concerns a ground lease (“Lease”) originally entered into between Bruno’s, Inc. and the owners of the property (“Landlords”).2 In a prior bankruptcy case, In re PWS Holding Corp., Bruno’s Inc., et al., Case No. 98-00212 (Bankr.D.Del), Bruno’s, Inc. assigned the Lease in 2005 to Bruno’s Supermarkets, Inc. (“Supermarkets”), which immediately assigned the Lease to Quality Properties, LLC (“Quality”), the debtor in the current case.

The Landlords refused to recognize Quality as assignee of the Lease, and litigation ensued in the Circuit Court of Marshall County over numerous issues be[108]*108tween Supermarkets, Landlords, and eventually Quality. In November 2008, the trial court granted summary judgment for Supermarkets, holding that the assignment to Quality (“Assignment”) was valid. The Landlords appealed to the Alabama Supreme Court. While that appeal was pending, Supermarkets subsequently filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy case on February 5, 2009. In re BFR Liquidation, LLC, Case No. 09-00634-BGC-11 (Bankr.N.D.Ala.) (“Supermarkets bankruptcy”).

In that case, as relevant to the issue at hand, Judge Cohen found Supermarkets had a continuing contractual obligation to the Landlords to pay rent under the Lease if Quality failed to do so. He found this obligation made the Lease an executory contract, which had to be administered in the Supermarkets bankruptcy. Cohen Op. at 6 (Supermarkets bankruptcy, doc. 2301). Because Supermarkets had neither accepted nor rejected the lease pursuant to §§ 1123(b)(2) and 365(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, he found Supermarkets rejected the Lease by operation of law. Id. at 6-7. He entered this Order on March 26, 2010.3 Id. at 9. That Order is not before this court for review, nor was it appealed. Judge Cohen specifically refrained from addressing the impact of his Order on the interests of Quality in the Lease under the Assignment. Id.

On October 1, 2010, Quality filed the chapter 11 bankruptcy case from which this appeal arises. Quality filed a motion to assume the Lease and related Assignment to it. The Landlords objected to Quality’s motion. They also filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay to allow Judge Cohen to consider their motion to compel surrender of the property that they had filed in the Supermarkets bankruptcy.

Judge Robinson framed the Landlords’ argument as follows: “The crux of the Landlords’ argument is rejection of the Lease by Supermarkets in the Supermarkets bankruptcy caused Quality to lose the leasehold estate it obtained through the Assignments, thereby leaving Quality with no remaining rights or interest to assume under Code § 365.” Robinson Op. at 7 (doc. 209).

Judge Robinson concluded that after Supermarkets assigned the Lease to Quality, Supermarkets “was no longer the lessee under the Lease, although it remained obligated to the Landlords to back-stop defaults by Quality.” Robinson Op. at 10 n. 19. Judge Robinson’s rationale for finding Supermarkets was no longer the lessee is based upon his analysis of the nature of the leasehold estate created by the Lease and the Assignment. Judge Robinson noted the assignors of the Lease (Bruno’s Inc. and then Supermarkets) “retained no remainder, reversion, contingency or other right whatsoever that could once again vest in them any inkling of the leasehold estate they conveyed under the Assignments.” Robinson Op. at 8. He found the Assignment resulted in the transfer to Quality of the entire leasehold estate. He contrasted such an assignment of the leasehold estate with a sublease: “A sublease creates a new tenancy which relies on the underlying prime lease for its subsistence, while an assignment of a lessee’s interest under a lease transfers the original tenancy without creating a new leasehold estate.” Id. at 8-9.

Although Judge Robinson found Supermarkets was no longer the lessee under [109]*109the Lease, he noted the Assignment to Quality did not relieve Supermarkets of its contingent obligations under the Lease. He concluded it was “these obligations that were rejected by Supermarkets in the Supermarkets bankruptcy.” Id. at 9-10. Therefore, he found Supermarkets had no rights in the leasehold tenancy at the time it was deemed to have rejected the Lease: “Utilizing Code § 365(a), Supermarkets was able to purge itself of the lessee’s liabilities under the Lease, but it no longer had any rights in the leasehold tenancy to reject — those rights were vested in Quality and beyond the reach of Code § 365(a) in the [Supermarkets bankruptcy].” Id. (emphasis added).

In a footnote, Judge Robinson made clear he found the Lease had not been terminated by virtue of its rejection by Supermarkets: “As stated — perhaps ad nauseam — the Lease was not terminated, and it is alive and well with Quality as the lessee and, much to their chagrin, the Landlords as lessor.” Id. at 10 n. 19. Accordingly, Judge Robinson granted Quality’s motion to assume the Lease and Assignment.4 He also denied the Landlords’ motion for relief from the stay.

The Landlords appealed to this court. The court agrees with Judge Robinson’s well-reasoned opinion and, for the reasons stated below, will affirm it.

DISCUSSION

I. § 365(a) or § 365(d)(4)?

The Landlords’ primary argument on appeal is that Supermarkets’ rejection of the Lease in its bankruptcy case terminated the Lease and the Assignment by operation of law, giving Quality no rights to the Lease to be assumed in its bankruptcy. Their argument, however, misconstrues key language of the Bankruptcy Code in the context of assignment of leases and the continuing obligations under an executory contract. Their underlying legal theory suggests that § 365(d) (k) should apply to Quality’s interest in the Lease. The success of their argument hinges on the applicability of § 365(d)(4) to the facts of this case because all of the cases on which they rely applied § 365(d)(4) and not § 365(a) on which Judge Robinson and Judge Cohen relied.

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Bluebook (online)
500 B.R. 105, 2013 WL 5132984, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 131073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-hilsman-investments-llc-v-quality-properties-llc-alnd-2013.