Nickels Midway Pier, LLC v. Wild Waves, LLC (In Re Nickels Midway Pier, LLC)

341 B.R. 486, 2006 WL 1072490
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedApril 24, 2006
DocketCiv.A. No. 05-5514 (JEI), Bankruptcy No. 3-49462 (GMB)
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 341 B.R. 486 (Nickels Midway Pier, LLC v. Wild Waves, LLC (In Re Nickels Midway Pier, LLC)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nickels Midway Pier, LLC v. Wild Waves, LLC (In Re Nickels Midway Pier, LLC), 341 B.R. 486, 2006 WL 1072490 (D.N.J. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

IRENAS, Senior District Judge.

This matter comes before the Court on the appeal of Debtor Nickels Midway Pier, LLC (“Nickels”) and cross-appeal of Wild Waves, LLC (‘Wild Waves”), from the Bankruptcy Court’s order of September 14, 2005, authorizing Nickels to reject an executory contract with Wild Waves, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365(a), and holding *490 that Wild Waves is entitled to the protections set forth in § 365(i).

I.

Nickels is a real estate purchasing, leasing and management company. Nickels owns a pier located at 3500 Boardwalk, Wildwood, New Jersey (“Pier”), which it purchased in 1976. In or about the early spring of 1999, Nickels entered into a written lease agreement (“Lease”) with Wild Waves, in which Wild Waves would lease 70% of the Pier (“leased premises”) for the purpose of constructing and operating a water park. 1 (See Lease; Nickels Appendix: 2 19-30)

The Lease specifies a term of approximately sixteen years, beginning on May 15, 1999, and terminating on December 31, 2014. (Lease at ¶ 3; NA:20) The Lease also provides that Wild Waves may extend the Lease for three additional five-year terms. (Lease at ¶34; NA:27) Nickels was required to give possession of the leased premises to Wild Waves on October 1, 1999, although Wild Waves was permitted limited access to the leased premises before that date. (Lease at ¶¶ 7, 10; NA:21-22) Wild Waves was obligated to make five rental payments of $50,000 each year, beginning on January 1, 2000, with an increase in rent effective January 1, 2003. (Lease at ¶ 4; NA:20) Wild Waves was also required to pay annually to Nickels one-third of the real estate taxes for the entire Pier. (Lease at ¶ 9; NA:21)

The Lease includes a provision in which Nickels acknowledges that Wild Waves will be seeking financing to construct a water park on the Pier and permits a lien to be placed on the Pier by Wild Waves’ financing institution. (Lease at ¶ 20(c); NA:25) The provision specifies that Nickels is not obligated to assume personal responsibility for the payment of the lien or to subordinate any existing mortgage to the lien of Wild Waves’ financing institution. (Id.)

The Lease does not mention any agreement between the parties that Nickels would sell the entire Pier to Wild Waves. Wild Waves asserts, however, that it also had an oral agreement with Nickels to buy the Pier in 2003. A written document entitled Agreement for the Sale of Real Estate (hereinafter “Agreement for Sale”) was prepared but was not executed, as it was not signed by a representative of Nickels. (Agreement for Sale; NA48-62) Nickels maintained that it never agreed to sell the Pier to Wild Waves. Wild Waves never furnished any payment called for by the Agreement for Sale and Nickels never delivered the deed.

On September 29, 1999, the parties agreed to several amendments to the Lease which were memorialized in a written and executed document entitled Amendment to Lease. (NA:488-89) The amendments include a provision obligating Wild Waves to pay $400,000 as additional collateral in consideration of Nickels permitting Wild Waves to encumber the Pier in order to obtain financing for the water park. (Id.) Nickels was obligated to hold the money as collateral until Wild Waves’ mortgage from Sun Bank matured in or about 2004, but could use the money in the interim to cure any defaults by Wild Waves on the Sun Bank mortgage. (Id.) The Amendment to Lease does not mention any agreement to sell the Pier.

*491 In 2001, Nickels instituted a civil action against Wild Waves in New Jersey Superi- or Court, Chancery Division (“State Court Action”). 3 Wild Waves filed a counterclaim in the State Court Action seeking a determination that an oral contract for sale of the Pier existed between the parties.

Before the State Court Action could be resolved, Nickels filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy on December 8, 2003. On December 16, 2003, Nickels filed a motion to reject the Lease, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365 (“Motion to Reject”). Wild Waves filed a motion for stay relief to pursue its counterclaim in the State Court Action, which the Bankruptcy Court granted on February 20, 2004. The Bankruptcy Court also reserved its decision on the Motion to Reject until the resolution of the State Court Action.

In a letter opinion dated April 12, 2005, Presiding Judge George Seltzer of the Superior Court, Chancery Division, held that an oral contract for sale of the Pier existed between Nickels and Wild Waves. Nickels Midway Pier v. Wild Waves, No. CPM-53-01 (N.J.Super.Ct. Ch. Div. Apr. 12, 2005)(hereinafter “Letter Op.”) Judge Seltzer held that the contract for sale required Nickels to sell and Wild Waves to buy the Pier for a price of $5.5 million in 2003. (Letter Op. at 1) Wild Waves was to pay $3.490 million 4 in cash with Nickels taking back a $2 million mortgage. (Letter Op. at 14)

He determined that the agreement to sell was reached in May, 1999, and the final terms of the sale were contained in the unexecuted Agreement for Sale, which was sent from Nickels’ counsel to Wild Waves on May 17, 1999. (Letter Op. at 2) The unexecuted Agreement for Sale provided that the sale was contingent upon Wild Waves receiving a written commitment from an institutional lender to make a mortgage loan in the amount of $5.4 million 5 on or before three months of the date of the closing. 6 (Agreement for Sale at ¶ 4; NA:50-51) The date of the closing was set for January 31, 2003. (Id. at ¶ 5; NA:51)

After reviewing other contemporaneous communications between Nickels and Wild Waves, Judge Seltzer concluded:

I am, therefore, satisfied, beyond any hesitation, that Nickels Midway Pier and Wild Waves had reached an agreement that would require Wild Waves to lease a portion of the Pier for a three year period and thereafter purchase it in accordance with the terms of [Agreement for Sale]. I am further certain that the lease and sale were two aspects of a thoroughly integrated agreement. Although only the portion of agreement [sic] respecting the lease was committed *492 to an executed writing, I remain absolutely convinced that these parties intended to be bound as to the sale, even in the absence of an executed writing.

(Letter Op. at 9-10) He determined that the Lease was one component of a transaction that was to culminate in the sale of the Pier, and was entered into in part to aid Wild Waves in securing financing for the water park. (Letter Op. at 11)

After resolution of Wild Waves’ counterclaim in the State Court Action, Nickels sought to proceed with its Motion to Reject in Bankruptcy Court.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
341 B.R. 486, 2006 WL 1072490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickels-midway-pier-llc-v-wild-waves-llc-in-re-nickels-midway-pier-njd-2006.