Onal v. BP Amoco Corp.

275 F. Supp. 2d 650, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13792, 2003 WL 21887770
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 6, 2003
DocketCIV.A. 01-0286
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 275 F. Supp. 2d 650 (Onal v. BP Amoco Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Onal v. BP Amoco Corp., 275 F. Supp. 2d 650, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13792, 2003 WL 21887770 (E.D. Pa. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

ROB RENO, District Judge.

Plaintiff Murat Onal brought this breach of contract action against BP Amoco Corporation (“Amoco”) in connection with Amoco’s alleged breach of a ground lease. Amoco counterclaimed for Onal’s alleged breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing and tortious interference with contractual relations.

After a trial, the jury found in favor of Onal on the breach of contract claim and against Amoco on all counterclaims. The jury awarded Onal $109,999.92 in damages for rent owed by Amoco up until the time of trial, and $28,317.23 for past unpaid taxes. However, the jury awarded Onal no damages for future rents, insurance premiums and taxes from the time of trial until the expiration date of the lease.

Both parties have filed post-trial motions. Amoco attacks the finding of liability on the grounds that it was privileged to terminate the lease based on two separate provisions in the lease. Onal, on the other hand, contests the limited amount of damages awarded on the theory that, under Pennsylvania law, he is entitled to collect, in addition to the damages to the time of trial actually awarded by the jury, rents, taxes and insurance payments that will fall due after trial and continuing until the expiration of the lease. For the reasons that follow, the court will affirm the jury’s finding that Amoco was liable for breach of lease, and will also affirm the jury’s award to Onal of past damages only in the amount of $138,317.15.

I. FACTS

In 1992, Murat Onal borrowed money from lender GE Capital, T.T. 9/25/02 (doc. no. 86) at 16, 88, with which to purchase certain real estate located in Bristol, Pennsylvania. T.T. 9/25/02 (doc. no. 86) at 7-8. At the time of the purchase, the property housed a restaurant and a check cashing agency. T.T. 9/25/02 (doc. no. 86) at 7-9.

On December 12, 1996, Onal entered into a ten year Ground Lease (“1996 Ground Lease”) with defendant BP Amoco Corporation (“Amoco”). Ex. P-1. Amoco intended to construct a gas station and large convenience store on the premises. T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 29. Under the terms of the 1996 Ground Lease, Amoco leased from Onal only that portion of the property designated as “Parcel A,” on which the restaurant was located. T.T. 9/25/02 (doc. no. 86) at 25. The check cashing agency remained on “Parcel B,” the portion of the property not leased to *655 Amoco. T.T. 9/25/02 (doc. no. 86) at 25; T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 29, 32. Under the terms of the 1996 Ground Lease for Parcel A, Onal was to receive from Amoco monthly rent in the amount of $4,583.33 for the first five years of the lease. Ground Lease, at 11. During the second five years of the term, Onal was to receive monthly payments from Amoco in the amount of $5,041.66. Ground Lease, at ¶1.

Amoco’s duty to pay rent on the property did not, however, commence immediately upon execution of the 1996 Ground Lease. Rather, the parties provided that Amoco would be liable for rents beginning “on the day gasoline [was] first sold ... but in no event later than ninety (90) days subsequent to the date all permits mentioned in Paragraph 6 hereof have been obtained and all provisions of Paragraph 7 have been fulfilled .... ” Ground Lease, at ¶ 1. In addition to being responsible for payment of rent, Amoco was to pay the property’s taxes and insurance. 1996 Ground Lease, at ¶¶ 5, 7.

Paragraph 6 of the 1996 Ground Lease, referenced in Paragraph 1, required Amoco, at its own cost and expense, to procure “the issuance from the proper municipal, county, state and other duly constituted authorities such unconditional permits ... satisfactory to Lessee” for the improvements and construction necessary to convert the premises into a gas station, convenience store, and car wash. Ground Lease, at ¶ 6. The Ground Lease explicitly provided that Amoco could not be deemed in breach of the lease if it “duly pursue[d]” the necessary permits and “diligently carried out” the proceedings necessary to obtain the permits, but ultimately was unsuccessful. Ground Lease, at ¶.6.

Paragraph 6 also afforded Amoco the privilege of terminating the lease if it proved “unable to obtain [the necessary] permits ... within six (6) months of the full execution” of the Ground Lease. Amoco was permitted to extend the time in which to obtain the permits for up to three additional months upon paying Onal $3500 for each month that the permitting period was extended. Ground Lease, at ¶ 6.

Diming the permitting and due diligence periods following the execution of the 1996 Ground Lease, Amoco discovered that the leased property was considerably smaller in size than anticipated, T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 31-33, and that the actual size of the property made constructing a facility of the size that Amoco had originally intended infeasible. T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 33-34. Although Amoco redesigned its facility to a size that could fit on a smaller property, it determined that Parcel A alone could not accommodate the redesign, and therefore approached Onal in an attempt to lease Parcel B in addition to Parcel A. T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 36, 40. For Onal, leasing Parcel B to Amoco necessitated evicting the check cashing station that had been paying rent to Onal since Onal first purchased the property and was then the current tenant. T.T. 9/25/02 (doc. no. 86) at 8-9, 26; T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 40.

Amoco did not obtain the necessary permits for the property within the six-month Permitting Period established in Paragraph 6, or during either of the two three-month permitting period extensions that Onal granted at its request after Amoco discovered that the property was much smaller than it had anticipated and after it began negotiating with Onal to lease more of his property. T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 28, 44-46; T.T. 10/2/02 (doc. no. 90) at 9-10.

In order to speed the check cashing agency’s eviction, Amoco offered Onal $50,000 as “up front money,” which Onal accepted. T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 49-51. In April 1998 Amoco began paying *656 Onal rent, notwithstanding that Paragraph 1 of the 1996 Ground Lease provided that Amoco’s obligation to pay rent would not take hold until the property was properly permitted. T.T. 9/27/02 (doc. no. 88) at 50; T.T. 10/2/02 (doc. no. 90) at 26. In a lease dated December 10, 1997, Onal, having evicted the check cashing station, leased the entirety of his property, i.e., both Parcel A and Parcel B, to Amoco. Ex. P-13; T.T. 9/25/02 (doc. no. 86) at 26-28.

As it attempted to permit the property, Amoco sent to Onal for his signature my-lars containing a final site plan. T.T. 10/2/02 (doc. no. 90) at 13-14. On November 1, 1999 Onal’s attorney, William Weiner, responded to this request by letter, and informed Amoco, due to his concerns over whether a formal lease had actually been executed by his client and Amoco, he was “holding” the mylars until the legal issue had been resolved. Ex. P-31. Weiner also stated that “[a]s soon as this lease issue is resolved, I shall have my client execute the foregoing mylars and prints and return them to you for filing.” Ex. P-31. Onal ultimately did not sign the mylars, and the property was never permitted for a gas station. T.T. 10/2/02 (doc. no. 90) at 15.

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Bluebook (online)
275 F. Supp. 2d 650, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13792, 2003 WL 21887770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/onal-v-bp-amoco-corp-paed-2003.