Nextel Retail Stores Inc. v. LTCW Trust

124 F. App'x 724
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 15, 2005
DocketNo. 04-1616
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 124 F. App'x 724 (Nextel Retail Stores Inc. v. LTCW Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nextel Retail Stores Inc. v. LTCW Trust, 124 F. App'x 724 (3d Cir. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

RENDELL, Circuit Judge.

Appellant LTCW Trust (“Trust”), successor to the Debtors in the underlying bankruptcy proceeding, appeals the District Court’s reversal of the Bankruptcy Court’s grant of summary judgment to the Trust. The Trust’s principal argument is that the District Court erred in ruling that the Bankruptcy Court could use its equitable power to avoid a contractual deadline on Appellee Nextel’s right to exclude certain short-term leases from a sale of substantially all the Debtors’ assets and demand the release of escrow funds where Nextel was late in providing notice of which leases it wanted to exclude from the sale and in making the demand on the escrow agent. The Trust characterizes the disputed contract provision as an “option” that must be strictly enforced, whereas Nextel characterizes enforcement of the provision as effecting an inequitable “forfeiture.”

The District Court had jurisdiction to hear an appeal from the Bankruptcy Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a). We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d). Because we conclude on the facts in this case that the Bankruptcy Court cannot use its equitable power to avoid a clearly enforceable contractual term, we will vacate the District Court’s order and remand to the Bankruptcy Court for further proceedings.

I.

As we write solely for the parties, and the facts are known to them, we will discuss only those facts pertinent to this appeal. This matter arises from the sale by the Debtors of substantially all of their assets to Nextel. To transact the sale, the parties executed an Asset Purchase Agreement, an Escrow Agreement, a Letter [726]*726Agreement (dated February 1, 2001), and an Amendment to the Letter Agreement (dated April 27, 2001). Under the terms of the Asset Purchase Agreement and the Escrow Agreement, $3.2 million (10%) of the $32 million purchase price for the Debtors’ assets was to be retained in escrow with the Bank of New York (“escrow agent”) after closing to secure the Debtors’ post-closing obligations. Under the terms of the Escrow Agreement, Nextel was required to give written notice to the escrow agent “not later than ninety (90) days” from the closing date if it sought disbursement from the retained funds.

The retained escrow funds were intended to secure the Debtors’ obligation under the Letter Agreement to assign certain short-term leases to Nextel with extensions or renewals of at least one year. The Letter Agreement, as modified by the April 27, 2001 Amendment, provided:

1. If Seller is unable to assign a Shorts Term Lease to Purchaser on or before the date which is 90 days after the Closing Date together with an extension or renewal of the lease term of at least one year (but no more than three years) from the expiration date set forth in such Short-Term Lease with an Acceptable Modification, as defined in paragraph 3 below, then Purchaser may elect in writing (the “Notice”) within ten ninety days from the Closing Date to treat such Shorb-Term Lease as an Excluded Asset under the Agreement (an “Excluded Lease”) and to recover from the Indemnity Escrow Funds an amount equal to $125,000 for such Excluded Lease (the “Lease Agreement”), in accordance with the terms of Article VIII of the Agreement and the Escrow Agreement.
2. If Purchaser elects to treat a Short-Term Lease as an Excluded Lease and receive a Lease Adjustment, Purchaser covenants and agrees that, for a period of one year from the Closing Date, Purchaser and its Affiliates shall not own, lease, or operate (directly or indirectly) any retail or commercial facility at or within the shopping center or mall in which such Excluded Lease is located

(Letter Agreement, app. at 117a; Amendment to Letter Agreement, app. at 122a (strike-through indicates omission, double-underline indicates addition).) In short, under the Letter Agreement, if the Debtors were not able to assign a short-term lease with an extension or renewal to Nextel by ninety days after the closing date, Nextel could notify the Trust that it wished to exclude the lease from the sale and recover $125,000 per lease from the retained escrow funds, but Nextel would then be barred from opening a facility in the same shopping complex for a year. Under another provision of the Letter Agreement, Nextel could recover from the escrow funds any rent increases of greater than 10% for the leases the Debtors were successful in assigning.

According to the affidavit of Rand S. Bailin, then Director of Strategic Planning in charge of negotiating the transaction between Nextel and the Debtors, at.closing on May 1, 2001, Bailin informed a representative of the Trust that Nextel intended to make an immediate demand on the escrow agent for a disbursement of funds for certain leases Nextel wished to exclude from the asset purchase. As the Debtors desired “the opportunity to continue negotiating with the landlords in order to try to arrange lease extensions that would be acceptable to Nextel” and “the Parties were in the process of ongoing negotiations at that time concerning the extensions of certain of the Short-Term Leases,” Bailin “agreed to wait to make a demand until a final refund amount could be determined.” (Bailin Aff. If 10, at 134a.)

[727]*727By July 30, 2001, the Debtors had not obtained the desired extensions of the short-term leases. According to Bailin, the representative for the Trust telephoned him and “requested that [they] negotiate a further amendment to the agreements so that [the Debtors] would have additional time to negotiate extensions of the remaining Short-Term Leases.” (Bailin Aff. H13, at 134a.) They “discussed the best way to give the Debtors additional time to perform. In the end, the decision was made to give notice to the Escrow Agent of a demand for disbursement in an indefinite amount. Nextel agreed to allow the Debtors to continue negotiations with the lessors, in an attempt to complete their performance under the Asset Purchase Agreement.” (Id.) Nextel has not argued that, in this conversation or otherwise, the Letter Agreement was ever modified, nor has it contended that any assurances were ever given upon which a claim of promissory estoppel could be based.

Nextel gave a general notice of a desire to draw on the escrow on July 31, 2001. It did not state that it desired to exclude any leases from the transaction. On August 23, 2001, the Trust made a demand on the escrow agent for a disbursement of the remaining escrow funds, claiming that Nextel gave its notice a day late, ie., on the 91st day after closing. The next day, Nextel made a demand on the escrow agent for a disbursement of $1,625,000, corresponding to the non-assignment of thirteen (13) leases, and $77,858, corresponding to rent increases of greater than 10% in leases that were assigned. The Trust filed an action against the escrow agent to compel disbursement, and Nextel intervened and opposed the disbursement, claiming it was entitled to $2.2 million of the funds for the short-term leases as to which extensions had not been obtained.

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Bluebook (online)
124 F. App'x 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nextel-retail-stores-inc-v-ltcw-trust-ca3-2005.