Pure Investment Group, LLC and Yunus Dogan v. 11681 Interests, Ltd.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 14, 2024
Docket14-22-00727-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pure Investment Group, LLC and Yunus Dogan v. 11681 Interests, Ltd. (Pure Investment Group, LLC and Yunus Dogan v. 11681 Interests, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pure Investment Group, LLC and Yunus Dogan v. 11681 Interests, Ltd., (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Affirmed in Part, Reversed and Rendered in Part, Reversed and Remanded in Part, and Memorandum Opinion filed May 14, 2024.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-22-00727-CV

PURE INVESTMENT GROUP, LLC AND YUNUS DOGAN, Appellants V.

11681 INTERESTS, LTD., Appellee

On Appeal from the 152nd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2015-76952

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this landlord-tenant dispute involving a commercial lease, Appellants, Pure Investment Group, LLC and Yunus Dogan, appeal the trial court’s judgment in favor of Appellee, 11681 Interests, Ltd. Appellants present three issues with numerous sub-issues. We affirm in part, reverse and render in part, and reverse and remand in part. BACKGROUND

Pure Investment as the tenant and Appellee as the landlord entered into a five-year commercial lease on June 1, 2012. David Greenberg signed the lease on behalf of Appellee,1 and Dogan signed the lease as Pure Investment’s president and as guarantor. Pure Investment opened a restaurant (Harvest Grille) in the leased property (the “property”), which was in a shopping center off Westheimer Road that also housed another restaurant as well as stores like Kohl’s. About a year later, Pure Investment asked Greenberg for approval to remodel the property into a hybrid restaurant and market/grocery store (a “groceraunt”) called Harvest Market. In 2014, the remodeling was complete and Pure Investment operated its groceraunt.

By February 2015, Pure Investment had been hearing rumors that a Trader Joe’s grocery store might be constructed on a parking lot adjacent to Harvest (and used by its customers) in the shopping center. Worried about whether Trader Joe’s was in fact coming to the shopping center, Pure Investment’s representatives, Dogan and Inci Akpinar, met with Greenberg on February 27, 2015. Dogan and Akpinar claimed that Greenberg had told them at the meeting that (1) he heard Kohl’s was selling its property to Trader Joe’s; (2) his permission was needed under a “Common Area Agreement” before Kohl’s could finalize the transaction and Trader Joe’s could build in the shopping center; and (3) he was not planning to grant permission. Greenberg denied making any such statements or promises.2

1 More specifically, the lease provides that Greenberg signed the lease as president of DG Interests, Inc., which is the general partner of Appellee. 2 The trial court excluded evidence (Defendants’ exhibit 61) of the terms of a reciprocal easements and operating agreement (“REOA”) between all the property owners in the shopping center, which required all owners’ consent to reduce the available parking spaces; the construction of Trader Joe’s on the parking lot adjacent to Harvest would have reduced the parking ratio from five parking spots per 1,000 square feet of retail to four parking spots.

2 Prior to hearing rumors about Trader Joe’s coming to the center and the February 27, 2015 meeting, Dogan and Akpinar had asked Greenberg and Greenberg’s property manager, Stephen Soussan, to market the property and find a new tenant. In a March 13, 2015 email to Dogan and Akpinar, Greenberg informed them that “another group has expressed interest” in the property; the offer asked for 4 months rental abatement to build out the property and get permits and also required Pure Investment to pay a standard commission. Dogan rejected the offer, thanked Greenberg for his help, explained that closing Harvest “right now will affect our image” as he was preparing to open groceraunts in three other locations, and stated he would like to keep Harvest open but “may evaluate again 6 months later.”

Two weeks later, Greenberg emailed Dogan to tell him that “one of the groups that had inquired has contacted us and made a verbal offer to lease[;] [b]asically the offer consist[s] of the[m] taking over your lease position as it is.” Greenberg also stated that Kohl’s had sold its property adjacent to Harvest so that a Trader Joe’s would be built there. In response, Dogan asked Greenberg to give him some time to think about the offer and asked whether (1) the group would take the property “as is”; and (2) Pure Investment would get its security deposit, sign, and equipment back. A day later, Dogan emailed Greenberg to inquire if he could visit with Greenberg to discuss the offer. Dogan claimed meeting with Greenberg in person about the offer but then receiving no further information; however, Akpinar testifed that Pure Investment did not accept the offer.

In April 2015, construction of the new Trader Joe’s began. Pure Investment claimed it felt the effects of the construction and business declined by mid-May. It continued approaching Greenberg to find a new tenant for the property. In early September 2015, Pure Investment closed Harvest because it “couldn’t survive.” It

3 paid rent for September in full but had to pay the October rent in two installments; it did not pay rent for November and December. On November 11, 2015, it sent a letter to Appellee stating that it had “vacated the leased premises” and requesting that Appellee “immediately begin the process of locating another tenant to mitigate your damages, if any.” In December 2015, Appellee changed the locks, sent a written demand for $961,053.64, and sued Appellants for breach of the lease agreement and guarantee. Appellants answered and brought counterclaims for common law fraud, statutory fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of contract, promissory estoppel, fraudulent transfer, and constructive eviction.

A jury trial was held from November 1, 2021, to November 10, 2021. Appellants claimed that the loss of the parking spaces as well as a blocked entrance, fencing, and noise from construction and equipment led to a decrease in customers which forced the closure of Harvest in September 2015. Appellee, however, claimed that Pure Investment’s closing of Harvest had nothing to do with Trader Joe’s construction or loss of parking spaces because it was a failing business for some time or Appellants would not have asked Appellee to find another tenant to take over the lease prior to the start of the Trader Joe’s construction.

In support of their constructive eviction claim, Appellants sought to introduce business records and several emails between Greenberg and Bryan Vaughn, who was a development partner in Hawkins Companies—the developer for Trader Joe’s. According to Appellants, business records and emails contained in Defendants’ exhibit 61 would have informed the jury that from February to April 2015, and contrary to Greenberg’s trial testimony, Greenberg (1) knew his approval was necessary before Trader Joe’s could build in the planned location; (2) demanded that the developer pay him monetary compensation tied to the specific

4 monthly rent Pure Investment was paying; (3) refused an offer for $25,000 because that proposal would not cover one month rent; and (4) was paid $125,000 (representing four months of rent plus a commission fee) and, in exchange for that payment, Greenberg signed an agreement giving consent to amend the REOA to reduce the parking spaces in the shopping center which permitted Trader Joe’s to build in the parking lot immediately adjacent to Harvest. The trial court excluded the offered exhibit.

The jury found against Appellants on all their claims, including constructive eviction, and in favor of Appellee on its breach of lease agreement claim, awarding damages accordingly. In December 2021, Appellants filed a motion to disregard the jury’s answers to several damages questions, but the trial court denied the motion. On July 13, 2022, the trial court signed a final judgment in accordance with the jury’s verdict. In August 2022, Appellants filed a motion for new trial which was overruled by operation of law.

ANALYSIS

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Pure Investment Group, LLC and Yunus Dogan v. 11681 Interests, Ltd., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pure-investment-group-llc-and-yunus-dogan-v-11681-interests-ltd-texapp-2024.