JPMCC 2006-LDP7 Miami Beach Lodging, LLC v. Sagamore Partners, Ltd.

620 F. App'x 864, 542 B.R. 864
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 2015
Docket14-11106
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 620 F. App'x 864 (JPMCC 2006-LDP7 Miami Beach Lodging, LLC v. Sagamore Partners, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JPMCC 2006-LDP7 Miami Beach Lodging, LLC v. Sagamore Partners, Ltd., 620 F. App'x 864, 542 B.R. 864 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

LINN, Circuit Judge:

JPMCC 2006-LDP7 Miami Beach Lodging, LLC (“JPMCC”), Berkadia Commercial Mortgage, LLC (“Berkadia”), LNR Partners, LLC (“LNR”), Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., and U.S. National Bank Association (collectively “appellants”) appeal the district court’s judgment affirming the bankruptcy court’s Order Confirming the Amended Plan of Reorganization of Saga-more Partners, Ltd. (“Sagamore”) but vacating and remanding > the bankruptcy court’s denial of attorney’s fees and costs. See In re Sagamore Partners, Ltd., Bankruptcy Appeals, 512 B.R. 296 (S.D.Fla. 2014) (“Op.”); In re Sagamore Partners, Ltd., No. 11-37867-AJC (Bankr.S.D.Fla. Jan. 10, 2013); In re Sagamore Partners, Ltd., No. 11-37867-AJC (Bankr.S.D.Fla. Dec. 26, 2012) (“Bankruptcy Op.”). Appellants claim that the district court erred in affirming the bankruptcy court’s finding that they are not entitled to default-rate interest; in affirming the bankruptcy court’s finding that Sagamore’s reorganization plan is feasible; and in failing to address their rights to fees and costs incurred in connection with Sagamore’s bankruptcy. Appellants request that, should this Court find that they are entitled to default-rate interest, it further declare that the interest is due immediately. Sagamore cross-appeals the district court’s conclusion that the Bankruptcy Code could ever require a debtor to pay default-rate interest to reinstate the original terms of a loan and the district court’s reversal of the bankruptcy court’s holding that JPMCC’s faulty notice precludes appellants from receiving default-rate interest. Finally, Sa-gamore argues that equitable mootness precludes appellate review.

Because the district court correctly ruled that a debtor may be required to pay default-rate interest to reinstate the original terms of a loan but erred in concluding that appellants waived their rights to default-rate interest, because the district court was correct that JPMCC’s notice of default did not preclude default-rate interest, and because this appeal is not equitably moot, we reverse the district court’s determination that appellants are not entitled to default-rate interest. Because the bankruptcy court did not err in concluding that Sagamore’s plan was feasible, we affirm the district court’s approval of Saga-more’s plan. Because the courts below have not yet addressed the question of whether appellants are entitled to the fees and costs incurred in connection with Sa-gamore’s bankruptcy and have not yet addressed the question of when Sagamore is required to pay default-rate interest, we remand these questions to the district court to address in the first instance.

BACKGROUND

Sagamore owns the eponymous hotel. Martin Taplin (“Taplin”) indirectly owns or controls a 100% interest in the Sagamore Hotel. In 2006, Arbor Commercial Mortgage, LLC (“Arbor”) loaned Sagamore $31.5 million to refinance the hotel. The details of the loan are set out in a promissory note (the “Note”) and in a related loan agreement (the “Agreement”). Arbor assigned the Note and Agreement to JPMCC.

*867 As relevant here, the Agreement required Sagamore to make interest-only payments of 6.54% per year until 2016, when all outstanding amounts would come due. However, in the “Event of Default,” Sagamore would be required to pay a default-rate interest of 11.54%. An “Event of Default” would occur if Sagamore missed “any regularly scheduled payment with respect to any portion of the Debt when due.” The Agreement states that any “required or permitted” notice to Sagamore must be addressed to Sagamore’s Florida address with a copy sent to Sagamore’s New York counsel. The agreement also recites that Sagamore “expressly waives, and shall not be entitled to any notices of any nature whatsoever from Lender” except for those notices that the Agreement or applicable law expressly require. The parties agree that the Agreement does not require JPMCC to provide a notice of default. The Note provides that if there is an Event of Default, “regardless of whether or not there has been an acceleration of the indebtedness[, default-rate] interest shall accrue.”

Beginning in August of 2009, Sagamore stopped making its payments. On September 28, 2009, JPMCC sent a letter to Saga-more, but not to its New York counsel, declaring that Sagamore was in default. On November 19, 2009, JPMCC sent a letter to Sagamore and its New York counsel accelerating the obligation to repay the loan. Upon Sagamore’s failure to cure the default, JPMCC commenced a foreclosure action in state court in December of 2009. Sagamore filed for bankruptcy on October 6, 2011.

In February of 2012, JPMCC filed a Proof of Claim demanding “$81,500,000.00, interest from July 11, 2009, default interest, late charges, costs, attorneys’ fees, expenses, and all other charges and amounts accruing and imposed pursuant to the Loan Documents.” In response, Saga-more filed a Plan of Reorganization in which it sought to cure and “nullify! ] all consequences of any alleged default” by paying the accrued pre-default-rate interest. JPMCC objected that the plan did not allow for default-rate interest. The Bankruptcy Court rejected the plan because it did not allow for default-rate interest, but noted that no default-rate interest would be due if Sagamore could show that its “default [should] be excused, or that default is not otherwise due in accordance with the underlying agreement and/or applicable non-bankruptcy law.” In re Sagamore Partners, Ltd., No. 11-37867-BKC-AJC at 10, 2012 WL 2856104 (July 10, 2012), ECF No. 213.

Sagamore then filed an amended plan, which proposed a fund that would “have all of the funds required to reinstate the indebtedness, whatever that amount is, as determined by the Court, and on the terms and conditions imposed by the Court.” In connection with the amended plan, Saga-more also filed an objection to JPMCC’s •Proof of Claim in which it argued that it did not owe default-rate interest, because JPMCC demanded late fees and a creditor is not entitled to both default-rate interest and late fees. JPMCC responded by waiving late fees “for any time period for which the Court allows default rate interest.” JPMCC Response to Objection to Claim at 3, Sagamore, No. 11-37867-AJC (Bankr. S.D. Fla. Jan. 10, 2013), ECF No. 400; accord id. at 5 n.4, 20.

The difference between late fees and default-rate interest in this case is substantial. The late fees total less than a quarter of a million dollars while the default-rate interest is almost five and a half million dollars. The bankruptcy court ruled in favor of Sagamore. It found that JPMCC’s. notice of default was defective, and that “all that flowed from the defective *868 Default Notice is improper,” including JPMCC’s acceleration letter, Sagamore’s subsequent foreclosure and appellants’ efforts to charge default-rate interest, attorneys’ fees and other costs. Bankruptcy Op. at 8-9. In the alternative, the bankruptcy court found that JPMCC failed to demand default-rate interest, id. at 11-15, and, moreover, “having asserted its entitlement to late fees, is precluded from also recovering default interest,” id. at 15. Finally, the bankruptcy court rejected appellants’ claim that the plan of reorganization was not feasible. Id. at 23.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
620 F. App'x 864, 542 B.R. 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jpmcc-2006-ldp7-miami-beach-lodging-llc-v-sagamore-partners-ltd-ca11-2015.