Lagoon Partners, LLC, a Minnesota limited liability company v. Silver Cinemas Acquisition Co., a Delaware ...

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 11, 2023
Docketa230194
StatusPublished

This text of Lagoon Partners, LLC, a Minnesota limited liability company v. Silver Cinemas Acquisition Co., a Delaware ... (Lagoon Partners, LLC, a Minnesota limited liability company v. Silver Cinemas Acquisition Co., a Delaware ...) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Opinion

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A23-0194

Lagoon Partners, LLC, a Minnesota limited liability company, Respondent,

vs.

Silver Cinemas Acquisition Co., a Delaware corporation, d/b/a Landmark Theatres, Appellant.

Filed December 11, 2023 Reversed and remanded Johnson, Judge

Hennepin County District Court File No. 27-CV-21-11262

Blake R. Nelson, Brian N. Niemczyk, Ryan M. Theis, J. Robert Keena, Hellmuth & Johnson, Edina, Minnesota (for respondent)

Erik F. Hansen, Elizabeth M. Cadem, Kirk A. Tisher, Burns & Hansen, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota (for appellant)

Considered and decided by Cochran, Presiding Judge; Johnson, Judge; and

Klaphake, Judge. ∗

SYLLABUS

The liquidated-damages clause in the parties’ lease agreement is unenforceable

because actual damages caused by the tenant’s breach are capable of accurate estimation

and because the amount of liquidated damages, which does not account for the landlord’s

duty to mitigate damages, is not a reasonable forecast of actual damages.

∗ Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10. OPINION

JOHNSON, Judge

This appeal presents a question as to whether a liquidated-damages clause in a

commercial lease agreement is enforceable. We conclude that the liquidated-damages

clause in the parties’ lease agreement is unenforceable because actual damages caused by

the tenant’s breach are capable of accurate estimation and because the amount of liquidated

damages, which does not account for the landlord’s duty to mitigate damages, is not a

reasonable forecast of actual damages. Therefore, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

The Uptown Theater is located in south Minneapolis at the intersection of Hennepin

Avenue South and Lagoon Avenue. It was the site of single-screen cinema from the early

20th Century to the early 21st Century, and it has become an icon of its namesake

neighborhood.

Lease Agreement

In 2011, the property was owned by Lagoon Partners LLC, which is owned and

managed by Ned Abdul. Silver Cinemas Acquisition Co. (d.b.a. Landmark Theatres) was

leasing the property and was showing specialty and independent films, as it had done since

1978.

In October 2011, after several months of negotiations, Lagoon and Landmark

entered into a new 15-year lease. According to Landmark’s vice president of real estate,

Abdul stated during the 2011 negotiations that he wanted to convert the property into a

2 performance venue but did not believe that the city would allow that type of use because

of the historic nature of the property.

The new lease term began a year later, in September 2012, and was to end in

September 2027. The lease provides that the base monthly rent is $16,667 during the first

five years of the lease term; $18,333 during the second five-year period; and $20,417

during the last five-year period, with additional amounts due each year for common-area

maintenance and real-property taxes.

The lease also provides certain remedies for Lagoon in the event of a default by

Landmark. The lease allows Lagoon to re-enter the property, and, in addition, to either

suspend Landmark’s right of possession and relet the property or to terminate the lease and

recover the rent then due and unpaid. The lease provides that, if Lagoon elects to terminate

the lease, Landmark’s obligations would be accelerated so that it would be required to pay

Lagoon the sum of the rent then due and unpaid and the present value of all rent payments

remaining for the duration of the lease term:

Upon such termination . . . , Tenant shall pay Landlord upon demand, in addition to [the rent due at the time of Landlord’s re-entry], the following: (i) Net Rent, and additional rent for the period between such reentry and such termination, and (ii) as damages for loss of the bargain and not as a penalty, an aggregate sum which at the time of such termination of this Lease represents an amount equal to the present value (discounted at the rate of seven percent per annum) of the Net Rent and additional rent payable for the unexpired balance of the initial term or any renewal term (“Remaining Rent”), as the case may be, of the Lease.

3 Furthermore, the lease provides that Lagoon is entitled to liquidated damages in an

amount equal to the sum of the rent then due and unpaid and the present value of the

accelerated future rent payments:

If any statute or rule of law governing the proceedings in which such damages are to be proved shall limit the amount of such claim, Landlord shall be entitled to prove, as and for liquidated damages, by reason of such breach and termination of this Lease, the maximum amount which may be allowed by or under such statute or rule of law. Nothing herein shall limit or prejudice Landlord’s right to prove and obtain as liquidated damages arising out of such breach or termination the maximum amount allowed by any such statute or rule of law which may govern the proceedings in which such damages are to be proved whether or not such amount be greater, equal to, or less than the amount of the excess of the then present worth of the Rent and all other charges reserved herein over the then present worth of the fair market rents and all other charges referred to above.

Default

On March 13, 2020, the governor issued an emergency executive order declaring a

peacetime emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Emerg. Exec. Order No. 20-01,

Declaring a Peacetime Emergency and Coordinating Minnesota’s Strategy to Protect

Minnesotans from COVID-19, at 2-3 (Mar. 13, 2020). On March 16, 2020, the governor

issued another emergency executive order that required the immediate closure to the public

of certain places of public accommodation, including “[t]heaters and cinemas.” Emerg.

Exec. Order No. 20-04, Providing for Temporary Closure of Bars, Restaurants, and Other

Places of Public Accommodation, at 2 (Mar. 16, 2020). Landmark complied with that

emergency executive order by temporarily closing the Uptown Theater. In early May 2020,

Landmark’s president wrote a letter to Abdul proposing a lease modification that, among

4 other things, would have reduced the amount of the monthly rent after the theater reopened

to the public. The parties exchanged e-mail messages but did not agree on a modification.

On June 5, 2020, the governor issued an emergency executive order that allowed

theaters and cinemas to reopen, subject to certain restrictions. Emerg. Exec. Order No. 20-

74, Continuing to Safely Reopen Minnesota’s Economy and Ensure Safe Non-Work

Activities During the COVID-19 Peacetime Emergency, at 8 (June 5, 2020). Landmark

had intended to reopen the theater when allowed to do so. But Landmark refrained from

doing so, initially because of civil unrest in the Uptown neighborhood following the highly

publicized death of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, 1 and later because of an increased

level of crime and violence nearby, which Landmark believed would discourage

moviegoers from visiting the Uptown neighborhood. Landmark’s plans to reopen were

adversely affected by another emergency executive order in November 2020, which again

temporarily closed theaters and cinemas to members of the public until December 18, 2020.

Emerg. Exec. Order No. 20-99, Implementing a Four Week Dial Back on Certain Activities

to Slow the Spread of COVID-19, at 4, 12 (Nov. 18, 2020).

In May 2021, Lagoon sought to recover possession of the property by commencing

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