Kopolow v. P.M. Holding Corp. (In re Modern Textile, Inc.)

900 F.2d 1184
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1990
DocketNos. 88-1609, 88-2604
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 900 F.2d 1184 (Kopolow v. P.M. Holding Corp. (In re Modern Textile, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kopolow v. P.M. Holding Corp. (In re Modern Textile, Inc.), 900 F.2d 1184 (8th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

CAMBRIDGE, District Judge.

Defendants P.M. Holding Corporation (P.M. Holding) and Continental Textile Corporation (Continental) appeal the district court’s judgment, enforcing certain guarantees P.M. Holding and Continental had made for the commercial lease obligations of Modern Textile, Inc. Plaintiffs A1 Kopo-low and A1 Kopolow Investments also cross-appeal the district court’s determination on attorneys’ fees and the court’s denial of their Rule 60(a) motion for clarification of judgment. For the reasons stated below, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand the matter for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

In August 1977, Modern Textile, Inc., a Delaware corporation (Buyer), purchased the business and operating assets of Modern Textile Company, a Missouri corporation (Seller). Seller, a manufacturer of children’s clothing, was owned and operated by A1 Kopolow. In connection with that purchase, Buyer executed a 10-year sublease of Seller’s manufacturing facility in Clarksville, Missouri (Clarksville sublease)1 and a 10-year lease of Seller’s manufacturing facility on Fee Fee Road in St. Louis, Missouri (Fee Fee Road lease). In addition to those leases, Buyer’s parent company, defendant P.M. Holding Corp., and Buyer’s sister company, Continental, executed an assurances agreement, whereby both corporations guaranteed Buyer’s obligations [1187]*1187under the leases.2 Seller subsequently changed its name to Al Kopolow Investment Company. See In re Modern Textile, Inc., 739 F.2d 808, 310 (8th Cir.1984).

After two years of operation, Buyer experienced serious business and financial difficulties. In December 1979, Buyer sold its business at the Clarksville facility, and orally subleased that facility to another garment manufacturer. The next month, Buyer and defendants P.M. Holding and Continental, as guarantors, received notice that Seller considered Buyer in default on the Clarksville sublease because Buyer had subleased the facility without authorization. In July 1980, Buyer’s sublessee vacated the premises and Seller reentered the facility.

In January 1980, Buyer also defaulted under the Fee Fee Road lease and vacated that facility. One month prior to such default, Seller had sold the Fee Fee Road facility to a third party, Travelers Insurance Co. (Travelers). In connection with that sale, Seller had assigned the Fee Fee Road lease to Travelers and expressly guaranteed the payment of Buyer’s rent obligations under the lease for a two year period. Seller had not, however, expressly assigned the guaranty of defendants P.M. Holding and Continental to Travelers. After Buyer’s default, Travelers made a demand on Seller for payment of rent and other amounts due under the lease. Pursuant to its own guaranty, Seller paid Travelers the sum of $82,992.47.

A1 Kopolow and Seller filed suit against defendants P.M. Holding and Continental in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Missouri, to enforce defendants’ guaranty of Buyer’s obligations under the lease agreements and personal employment agreement.3 Later, on December 22, 1980, the case was removed to bankruptcy court after A1 Kopolow, Seller, and other creditors forced Buyer into bankruptcy.4 During the course of these bankruptcy proceedings, the Trustee of Buyer’s bankrupt estate rejected the unexpired portions of the Clarksville sublease, as permitted under 11 U.S.C. § 365.

The first of two trials was held in January 1982, before the bankruptcy court. The bankruptcy court’s findings and recommendations were adopted by the district court. Following an appeal to this court, In re Modern Textile, Inc., supra, several issues remained. Trial resumed before the bankruptcy court in April 1985, and the bankruptcy court made recommendations to the district court based on its findings of fact and conclusions of law. On March 15, 1988, the district court adopted the bankruptcy court’s recommendations and entered judgment against Buyer’s Trustee in bankruptcy, P.M. Holding and Continental on all three counts of the complaint.

Subsequently, plaintiffs filed a motion for attorneys’ fees and a motion for relief pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(a), seeking clarification of the judgment entered on March 15, 1988. A few days thereafter, defendants P.M. Holding and Continental also filed notice of appeal.5

On September 22, 1988, the district court held that plaintiffs could recover attorneys’ fees only for that portion of the action in the bankruptcy court which sought to recover the balance due on the leases; the court disallowed recovery of fees for the initial action, the employment contract aspect of the case, and the successive appeals [1188]*1188which had been filed. The district court also denied plaintiffs’ motion for relief under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(a) as moot, in light of the defendants’ appeal to this court. Plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal from the district court’s September 22, 1988 order, and both appeals were consolidated for oral argument.

II. DISCUSSION — DEFENDANTS’ APPEAL

A. The Fee Fee Road Lease

We begin by considering defendants’ argument that the district court’s enforcement of the guaranty, i.e., assurances agreement, with respect to the Fee Fee Road lease was error as a matter of law. The district court, having adopted the bankruptcy court’s findings and conclusions, held that (1) the guaranty was a specific guaranty entered into for the benefit of Seller, (2) Seller was the proper party to enforce the guaranty, and (3) Seller’s assignment of the lease to Travelers did not extinguish Seller’s right to look to the guaranty or the obligations of the guarantors, because the lease specifically contemplated assignment.

Defendants argue that notwithstanding the assignment clause in the lease, Seller’s sale of the Fee Fee Road facility and assignment of the lease operated to extinguish Buyer’s lease obligations to Seller and to discharge their guaranty to Seller as a matter of law. Defendants acknowledge that, after Seller assigned the lease, (1) Buyer’s lease obligations continued in favor of Travelers and (2) Seller made payment to Travelers pursuant to its own guaranty after Buyer’s default. Defendants argue, however, that Seller’s payment to Travelers merely subrogated Seller to whatever rights Travelers would have had against Buyer for default.

We find that the district court’s analysis as to whether the assignment of the lease operated to extinguish Buyer’s lease obligations and to discharge defendants’ guaranty is flawed. The district court failed to recognize that under general principles of contract law a property owner’s sale of property and assignment of an existing lease on that property operates to transfer all of his rights, powers, privileges and immunities with respect to that property to another person. 4 A. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts § 861 (1951). Such transfer extinguishes the grantor’s legal relations to the property and vests them in the grantee. Id. See also Ellison v. Henion, 183 Cal. 171, 190 P.

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900 F.2d 1184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kopolow-v-pm-holding-corp-in-re-modern-textile-inc-ca8-1990.