Tel-Towne Properties Group v. Toys "R" Us-Delaware, Inc.

123 F. App'x 656
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 2005
Docket02-1251
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 123 F. App'x 656 (Tel-Towne Properties Group v. Toys "R" Us-Delaware, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tel-Towne Properties Group v. Toys "R" Us-Delaware, Inc., 123 F. App'x 656 (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

OBERDORFER, District Judge.

This contract dispute concerns the interpretation of a lease that was signed more than thirty years ago by the predecessors in interest of Plaintiff-Appellant TelTowne Properties Group (“Tel-Towne”) and Defendant-Appellee Toys “R” Us-Delaware, Inc. (“TRU”). The sole issue is whether the lease expired before the lessee, TRU, exercised its option to renew it. Tel-Towne, the lessor, sought a declaration that the lease expired January 31, 2001. TRU maintains that the lease term extended through January 31, 2002. TRU notified Tel-Towne on May 24, 2001, of its intent to extend the lease an additional five years; the timeliness of this notice depends on whether the lease had already expired.

Tel-Towne moved for judgment on the pleadings below, which motion the district court denied. Instead, the district court granted TRU judgment sua sponte. It held that the lease unambiguously provided for a 2002 termination date. TelTowne moved for reconsideration, pointing to parol evidence supporting its interpretation of the lease. Tel-Towne also moved to amend the complaint to add a count to reform the contract to express what it perceived as the shared intent of the original parties. The district court denied both motions. Because the district court should have considered any admissible parol evidence proffered by Tel-Towne in interpreting the lease, we REVERSE and REMAND for reconsideration.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

1. The Current Dispute

On September 25, 1970, the predecessors in interest to Tel-Towne and TRU entered into a commercial lease for store premises in Southfield, Michigan (the “Lease”).

The Lease provides that its “initial term ... shall commence upon the date hereof and shall terminate on the 31st day of January after the completion of the thirty-first (31st) full ‘lease year, ’ as said term is hereinafter defined.” Section 2.01 (emphasis added). A “lease year” is defined to “mean any twelve month period during the term of this Lease commencing upon a February 1st, except, however, (a) the first lease year shall commence upon the date hereof and end on January 31, 1971....” Art. 35,11B (emphasis added).

*658 The parties dispute whether the Lease establishes an expiration date of January-81, 2001, as Tel-Towne claims, or January 31, 2002, as TRU alleges. The question is whether the “first lease year” — the four-month period from the signing of the Lease on September 25,1970 through January 31, 1971 — is one of the thirty-one lease years to be counted in determining the initial term of the Lease. If so, the Lease expired on January 31, 2001. If not, it extended through January 31, 2002.

The Lease provides an option for the lessee to extend its term for an additional five years. To exercise that option, the lessee must notify the lessor of its intent to do so at least six months before the Lease expires. Art. 5. If the lessee remains after expiration of the Lease without any further written agreement, the lessee would hold over as a tenant from month to month. Art. 25.

The present dispute arose when TRU attempted to exercise its option to renew the Lease. On May 24, 2001, TRU sent Tel-Towne a letter giving notice that it was exercising its option to extend the Lease for five years. Tel-Towne took the position that the Lease had expired on January 31, 2001, and that the notice was therefore untimely.

2. Evidence of the Original Parties’ Understanding of the Lease

Tel-Towne acquired the leasehold property from the original lessor on July 7, 1976. The 1976 sales agreement lists January 31, 2001, as the expiration date of the Lease. The same expiration date is listed in the original lessor’s Form 10-K for the fiscal year prior to the sale. This is consistent with the 1972 Annual Report of the original lessor, which described the purchase-and-leaseback transaction that led to the Lease as “providing for [an] initial term[ ] of approximately 30 years.”

In addition, on April 27, 1976, a representative of the original lessor, Daniel L. Reit, sent a letter reflecting the January 31, 2001 expiration date to the Tel-Towne affiliate through which the leasehold property was acquired. Tel-Towne proffered evidence that while Mr. Reit was associated with the initial lessor at the time of the 1976 sale, he had originally signed the Lease in 1970 on behalf of the then lessee. He also signed a guaranty in 1970 on behalf of the initial lessee’s parent company. That company later became TRU.

B. Procedural History

1. Teh-Towne’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings

Tel-Towne filed this action on July 10, 2001. On September 5, 2001, Tel-Towne moved for a declaration on the pleadings that the Lease had expired and that TRU had no right to renew it. Tel-Towne argued that the Lease unambiguously established a January 31, 2001 expiration date.

TRU argued that the initial term of the Lease extended through January 31, 2002, and that its exercise of the option to renew on May 24, 2001, was therefore timely. In the alternative, TRU asked that, if its attempted exercise of the option was untimely, the court equitably intervene to allow TRU to renew the lease. TRU asked that “Tel-Towne’s Motion ... be denied,” but did not move to dismiss the complaint or otherwise seek judgment in its favor.

In reply, Tel-Towne claimed that not only was its interpretation correct, but it was also “the same interpretation understood by the original parties” to the Lease. Tel-Towne supported this claim with parol evidence. Tel-Towne also argued that if the court rejected its position and “believe[d] the Lease is in some manner ambiguous, then it must conduct a hearing rather than accept the unsupported arguments Defendant makes in its brief.”

*659 2. The Initial District Court Decision

On January 28, 2002, the district court denied Tel-Towne’s motion. It went on to grant judgment sua sponte to TRU, which had not requested that relief.

The district court found persuasive TRU’s argument that the first lease year — which lasted only four months, per the definition in Paragraph B of Article 35 — should not be considered one of the thirty-one “full ‘lease years’ ” comprising the initial term of the Lease. Relying explicitly on what it termed a “controlling rule of contract construction ... [that] no word should be rejected as mere surplus-age if the court can discover any reasonable purpose thereof,” the court found the Lease “to be unambiguous, and its interpretation to be a question of law to be determined only from the terms of the contract itself.” Finding that counting the first lease year as one of the thirty-one “full lease years” would require it “to ignore the word ‘full’ in front of ‘lease year’ in paragraph 2.01,” the district court held that the Lease extended through January 31, 2002. In finding the Lease unambiguous, the court did not mention or consider any of Tel-Towne’s evidence as to the parties’ understanding of the termination date.

3.

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Related

Tel-Towne Properties Group v. Toys "R" Us-Delaware, Inc.
630 F. Supp. 2d 766 (E.D. Michigan, 2007)
Ford Motor Co. v. Kahne
379 F. Supp. 2d 857 (E.D. Michigan, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
123 F. App'x 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tel-towne-properties-group-v-toys-r-us-delaware-inc-ca6-2005.