Shoney's LLC v. MAC EAST, LLC

27 So. 3d 1216, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 173, 2009 WL 2343674
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 31, 2009
Docket1071465
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 27 So. 3d 1216 (Shoney's LLC v. MAC EAST, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shoney's LLC v. MAC EAST, LLC, 27 So. 3d 1216, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 173, 2009 WL 2343674 (Ala. 2009).

Opinion

PARKER, Justice.

This case is before this Court on a certified question from the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. MAC East, LLC (“MAC East”), sued Shoney’s LLC (“Shoney’s”) 1 in state court, alleging breach of contract. 2 Specifically, the complaint alleged that Shoney’s wrongfully withheld approval of MAC East’s assignment or sublease of a ground lease Sho-ney’s had assigned to MAC East.

*1218 Shoney’s removed the action to the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama. Both parties filed motions for a summary judgment. The federal district court granted MAC East’s motion and denied the motion filed by Shoney’s, applying a “commercial reasonableness” standard to a clause in the agreement between MAC East and Sho-ney’s assigning the ground lease to MAC East that allowed Shoney’s, in its sole discretion, to withhold permission to sublease the property. Shoney’s appealed the federal district court’s decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.

The federal appellate court, finding no clear, controlling precedent in Alabama law, has, pursuant to Rule 18, Ala. R.App. P., certified the following question to this Court:

“Under Alabama law, when an assignment contract gives the assignor ‘sole discretion’ to withhold consent to the assignee’s proposed sublease, is the assignor’s exercise of that discretion subject to a commercial reasonableness standard, or any other standard?”

MAC East, LLC v. Shoney’s, 535 F.3d 1293, 1299 (11th Cir.2008). As discussed below, we answer the question in the negative.

Facts

Shoney’s, on April 13, 1979, entered into a ground-lease agreement as a tenant for certain property located on the Eastern Bypass in Montgomery. On February 20, 2002, Shoney’s and MAC East entered into an “Assignment and Assumption of Lease Agreement” (“the assignment agreement”) under which Shoney’s assigned some of its rights and obligations under the ground-lease agreement to MAC East, which intended to develop a shopping center on the property.

Paragraph 19 of the assignment agreement contained the following language:

“Assignee [MAC East] shall not enter into any assignment or sublease of any portion of the Property or the improvements thereon without the prior written consent of Assignor [Shoney’s] (and Lessor, if required by the Lease), which Assignor [Shoney’s] may withhold in its sole discretion.”

On April 18, 2005, MAC East prepared a proposal to sublease the property to City Café Diners (“City Café”). 3 On May 9, 2005, MAC East sent the proposal and supporting documentation to Shoney’s for its evaluation and approval.

On July 17, 2005, Shoney’s advised MAC East that it would approve the sublease if MAC East would pay Shoney’s $70,000 and arrange to have Shoney’s released from its 1979 ground-lease agreement. It also advised MAC East, as an alternative, that Shoney’s would approve the sublease if MAC East would pay Shoney’s $90,000 and Shoney’s would remain hable under its 1979 lease. MAC East then filed the underlying action.

Analysis

The sole question before this Court is whether an assignor’s reservation in an assignment agreement of the power to withhold consent to an assignee’s proposed sublease in the assignor’s “sole discretion” is subject to any mitigating standard, such as a commercial-reasonableness standard, when the applicable provision in the agreement does not contain a limitation that *1219 such consent will not be unreasonably withheld.

This Court addressed this issue in Homa-Goff Interiors, Inc. v. Cowden, 850 So.2d 1035 (Ala.1977), a case to which the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit looked for guidance. In Homa-Goff, the main opinion, authored by Justice Jones and concurred in by a second Justice, stated:

“ “Where the lease merely contains a provision — without more — granting a person, normally a landlord, the power to withhold consent, regardless of whether explicitly qualified to reasonable exercises of that power ... the courts have held the person’s refusal to consent to a person acceptable by reasonable commercial standards to be an unreasonable exercise and thus violative of the lease.’ [Arrington v. Walter E. Heller Int’l Corp., 30 Ill.App.3d 631, 640-41,] 333 N.E.2d [50,] 58 [ (1975) ]. (Emphasis added.) “Guided by this rationale, we hold
that, even where the lease provides an approval clause, a landlord may not unreasonably and capriciously withhold his consent to a sublease agreement. The landlord’s rejection should be judged under a test applying a reasonable commercial standard.”

350 So.2d at 1038. Three Justices concurred with Justice Beatty, who concurred specially, saying, in part:

“I concur with the majority opinion of Justice Jones in which he maintains that the lessor may not arbitrarily reject a sublessee chosen by the lessee. In my opinion, clauses which restrict subleasing should be interpreted to call for the application of reasonable commercial standards unless the parties themselves expressly agree that the lessor’s decision, for whatever reason, is binding. This is so because it is probable that when contracting the parties expect each other to act reasonably.”

350 So.2d at 1039 (emphasis added). Justice Bloodworth dissented with an opinion, which two other Justices joined. Justice Bloodworth wrote:

“I respectfully dissent.
“Since 1853, this Court has upheld lease provisions which provide that there shall be no subletting without the express consent of the lessor. See: Nave v. Berry, 22 Ala. 382 (1853); Crommelin v. Thiess & Co., 31 Ala. 412 (1858); Maddox v. Wescott, et al., 156 Ala. [4]92, 47 So. 170 (1908); City Garage & Sales Co. v. Ballenger, 214 Ala. 516, 108 So. 257 (1926); Faucett v. Provident Mut. Life Ins. Co. of Philadelphia, 244 Ala. 308, 13 So.2d 182 (1943).
“To overturn a century and a quarter of existing real estate law without giving contracting parties “fair notice’ is my principal complaint with the majority’s opinion. At the very least, I think the majority ought to make the rule they have adopted ‘prospective.’
“There must be literally tens of thousands of existing leases with similar ‘consent’ provisions as to subletting as those in this case. Lawyers and judges should have a right to rely on existing well-settled property law interpretations by our courts. See my special concurrence in Nunn v. Keith, 289 Ala. 518, 524, 268 So.2d 792 (1972).
“As Mr. Justice Almon points out in his dissent, in quoting from Mr. Justice Bouldin’s opinion in Faucett,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 So. 3d 1216, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 173, 2009 WL 2343674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoneys-llc-v-mac-east-llc-ala-2009.