Nylim Real Estate Mezzanine Fund v. Lembi CA1/4

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 19, 2013
DocketA135507
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nylim Real Estate Mezzanine Fund v. Lembi CA1/4 (Nylim Real Estate Mezzanine Fund v. Lembi CA1/4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nylim Real Estate Mezzanine Fund v. Lembi CA1/4, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 7/19/13 Nylim Real Estate Mezzanine Fund v. Lembi CA1/4 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

NYLIM REAL ESTATE MEZZANINE FUND II, L.P., Plaintiff and Respondent, v. A135507 FRANK LEMBI, as Trustee, etc., (City & County of San Francisco Defendant and Appellant. Super. Ct. No. CGC-11-510281)

This appeal has been taken from the trial court‟s ruling that granted plaintiff‟s motion for summary judgment and the subsequent entry of judgment in favor of plaintiff in an action for breach of a loan guaranty agreement. Appellant claims the agreement was not supported by consideration, and breach of the agreement did not cause damages to plaintiff. He also challenges the liquidated damages provision of the agreement as an unenforceable penalty. We conclude that the loan and guaranty modification was supported by consideration, the breach of the agreement by failure to pay the loan caused plaintiff damages, and the damages provision was not unreasonable. We therefore affirm the judgment. STATEMENT OF FACTS In March of 2007, Personality Hotels III, LLC and Hotel Metropolis II, LLC (the Borrowers), obtained a loan from plaintiff‟s predecessor, Nomura Credit & Capital, Inc. (Nomura or the Lender) in the total amount of $75.9 million, to finance the renovation of hotel properties. The loan was secured by two promissory notes executed by the Borrowers in favor of Nomura on March 30, 2007: Note A in the amount of $58.4 million; Note B to secure the remaining $17.4 million. The loan agreement provided that the lender was entitled to sell all or any portion of the loans and security interests to third party investors as collateralized debt obligations, and required the Borrowers to execute any amendments to the loan documents or new component notes as requested by the Lender to facilitate the most favorable loan-to-value ratios and rating levels for the securities. Concurrently, defendant Frank Lembi, acting in his individual capacity and as Trustee for the Olga Lembi Revocable Trust (the Trust), and his son Walter Lembi, who were indirect owners of the Borrowers, executed two documents guaranteeing the Borrowers‟ indebtedness to Nomura pursuant to Notes A and B: a Guaranty of Payment Obligations (the Payment Guaranty), and an Indemnity and Guaranty Agreement (the Indemnity Agreement).1 The Guarantors were required by the Indemnity Agreement to execute any documents requested by the Lender which did not alter the “essential economic terms of the indebtedness” or impose a “greater personal liability in connection with the indebtedness” of the guaranteed loan. On August 27, 2007, the original loan indebtedness of the Borrowers was modified and split into two loans: one, secured by the real estate, in the amount of $58.9 million; the other, a “mezzanine loan” to two affiliates of the Borrowers, Personality Hotels III Mezz, LLC, and Hotel Metropolitis II, Mezz, LLC, “special purpose entities” which secured the mezzanine loan in the amount of $17.4 million with stock of the real estate holding companies owned by the Guarantors.2 Pursuant to the Modification Agreement the Borrowers executed two amended promissory notes in favor of Nomura. Amended Note A secured the Borrower‟s repayment of $44.4 million of the $58.9 million “Senior Loan.” Amended Note B in

1 We will refer to defendant Frank Lembi and his son Walter collectively as the Guarantors. Walter Lembi died before this action was commenced and is not a party to this appeal. 2 Although the Mezzanine Loan borrowing entities under the original and modified loan agreements were different, even if related, for the sake of convenience we will refer to them as the Borrowers.

2 favor of Nomura as the “Mezzanine Lender” secured the $17.4 million balance of the loan, and provided that the entire debt was immediately payable upon any defined default event by the Borrowers. The amount of the loan guaranteed by the Guarantors under the original agreement was effectively reduced from $17 million to $5 million. According to the Mezzanine Loan Agreement the Borrowers agreed to make monthly interest payments over the life of the loan, and a balloon payment equal to all outstanding balances and accrued interest at the maturity date of the loan on November 9, 2009. The same day, Lembi, in his individual capacity and as Trustee of the Trust, executed a Mezzanine Payment Guaranty and a Mezzanine Indemnity Guaranty at the request of Nomura, that effectively guaranteed payment of the Mezzanine Note. According to the Mezzanine Payment Guaranty, the Guarantors unconditionally and irrevocably guaranteed the Lender and its assigns “payment and performance of the Guaranteed Obligations as and when [those become] due and payable,” and unconditionally agreed to be “liable for the Guaranteed Obligations as a primary obligor” in the amount of $12 million, plus accrued interest, costs, and attorney fees, immediately upon the Borrower‟s default and the Lender‟s request for payment. On September 17, 2007, Nomura assigned all rights and obligations under the Mezzanine Loan Agreement, the Mezzanine Payment Guaranty and the Mezzanine Indemnity Guaranty to plaintiff NYLIM Real Estate Mezzanine Fund, L.P. (Nylim). The Borrowers defaulted on the loans, and after February of 2009 made no payments on the Mezzanine Loan, including the $17 million principal balance due on the maturity date. In March of 2010, the Borrowers filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization petition in an effort to avoid foreclosure. When outside investors failed to materialize to recapitalize the Borrowers, the reorganization proceeding was converted into a Chapter 7 liquidation. A bankruptcy trustee was appointed to effectuate non- judicial foreclosure sales of the hotels by the Lender in May of 2010. Plaintiff NYLIM repeatedly demanded payment of the Mezzanine Loan and costs by the Guarantors pursuant to the Mezzanine Payment Guaranty. The Guarantors did not respond.

3 The present action for breach of contract was initiated by plaintiff NYLIM against defendants Lembi individually and as trustee of the Trust on April 18, 2011.3 The trial court granted plaintiff‟s motion for summary judgment, and entered judgment against Lembi as trustee in the amount of $32,461,026.73 on February 28, 2012. This appeal followed. DISCUSSION I. The Consideration for the Loan Modification. Defendant complains that triable issues of fact remain to be litigated in plaintiff‟s breach of contract case, one of which is whether consideration was received for the loan modification in August of 2007. He claims that only plaintiff benefitted from the modification, so the contract was not supported by consideration and is unenforceable. He therefore claims the trial court erred by granting plaintiff‟s motion for summary judgment. We evaluate the trial court ruling on plaintiff‟s motion for summary judgment in accordance with well-settled law. (Sacks v. FSR Brokerage, Inc. (1992) 7 Cal.App.4th 950, 962.) “ „[T]he party moving for summary judgment bears the burden of persuasion that there is no triable issue of material fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.‟ [Citation.]” (Behnke v. State Farm General Ins. Co. (2011) 196 Cal.App.4th 1443, 1463; see also Nalwa v. Cedar Fair, L.P.

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