Trudy's Texas Star, Inc. v. Weingarten Realty Investors

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2004
Docket03-03-00538-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Trudy's Texas Star, Inc. v. Weingarten Realty Investors (Trudy's Texas Star, Inc. v. Weingarten Realty Investors) 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
Trudy's Texas Star, Inc. v. Weingarten Realty Investors, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-03-00538-CV

Trudy's Texas Star, Inc., Appellant



v.



Weingarten Realty Investors, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 261ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. GN301352, HONORABLE MARGARET A. COOPER, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


Trudy's Texas Star, Inc. and Weingarten Realty Investors dispute which of two provisions in their lease agreement controls the determination of Trudy's rental payments for the extension period of their lease of restaurant space. Trudy's contends that the arbitration provision controls; Weingarten insists that the trial court properly ordered Trudy's to abide by the lease's appraisal provision. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court's summary judgment in favor of Weingarten.



BACKGROUND

In 1996, Trudy's leased restaurant space in the Brodie Oaks shopping center from Austin Retail BOA I and II for an initial term of six years. Weingarten purchased the center and the lease in 1998, becoming Trudy's' landlord. The lease provides that Trudy's would pay both a base rent ("minimum guaranteed rental") and a percentage rent ("percentage rental") each month. Under the lease, the base rent increased twice during the six-year term, once after three years, and again after five years. (1) The percentage rent amounted to six percent of monthly gross sales (defined in the lease) when they exceeded $200,000 (the "breakpoint").

The lease also granted Trudy's an option to extend the term of the lease for one five-year period by giving Weingarten notice of such intent at least nine months before the expiration of the initial six-year term: "Such extended term shall be upon all of the terms and conditions set forth in this lease except that Minimum Guaranteed Rental shall equal the 'fair market rental value' of the Premises as determined under Section 4.6 below."

Section 4.6 provides



If Tenant exercises its 60-month extension operation . . . and Landlord and Tenant are not able to reach an agreement with respect to the fair market rental value of the Premises within six (6) months prior to the commencement of such option period, Landlord and Tenant shall each within fifteen (15) days thereafter, name a professional appraiser who is a qualified, professional, licensed appraiser and shall notify the other party in writing in accordance with the notice provision of this lease of the name of such appraiser. If the two appraisers cannot agree on a fair market rental value, the two appraisers thus appointed shall, by agreement between them within forty-five (45) days of their appointment, appoint a third appraiser who shall also be a qualified, professional, licensed appraiser, and the three appraisers shall determine the fair market rental value of the Premises. By written communication mailed or delivered on or before the date which is two (2) months prior to the commencement of the sixty (60) month option period, the appraisers shall notify both Landlord and Tenant of their findings. If the three appraisers are unable to agree upon a valuation, the value agreed upon by any two of them shall be binding. If none of the three appraisers thus selected are able to agree on the valuation by the date which is two (2) months prior to the date of commencement of the option period, then the average of the valuations of the two appraisers closest to each other shall be binding. Landlord and Tenant shall each bear the cost of the appraiser appointed by them and shall each pay for one-half (½) of the cost of the third appraiser.



In mid-April 2002, Trudy's gave Weingarten notice that it was exercising its option to extend the lease. By early October 2002, the parties had each engaged an appraiser under section 4.6 of the lease; (2) the two appraisals of fair market rental value were highly incompatible. Their disagreement centered on whether a fair market rental value must take into account the additional percentage rental based on gross sales. In an e-mail dated October 8, 2002, Weingarten's representative wrote to Trudy's' counsel: "I believe before we go to the expense of hiring a third appraiser, we need to confirm the ground rules for what we are trying to determine. In reviewing the lease with our attorneys, I believe it is very clear that the only item subject to negotiation between the appraisers is the Minimum Guaranteed Rental." It was Weingarten's position that a fair market rental value could be calculated without regard to the percentage rental. Trudy's, which had proved exceedingly successful in this location, wished to lower from six percent the percentage used to calculate the percentage rental and to increase the breakpoint above $200,000 in gross sales. To urge this adjustment it combined the base rent and percentage rent to calculate an overall rent per square foot for bargaining purposes. Weingarten was willing to negotiate new rental terms but never agreed to the percentage or breakpoint figures proposed by Trudy's.

Negotiations continued for several months, during which both Trudy's and Weingarten proposed to invoke the appraisal process as a last resort if their negotiations proved unsuccessful. In February 2003, Trudy's sent a letter to Weingarten indicating that it intended "to pursue the hiring of a third appraiser to resolve this matter. [Trudy's] will speak with the appraiser which Trudy's previously used and will provide third appraiser to you as soon as possible so that you may consider the person and determine if he or she is acceptable to you." About a week later, Trudy's decided instead to proceed to arbitration pursuant to section 30.2 of the lease agreement, which provides that the parties shall submit "any dispute related to this lease" to binding arbitration. Trudy's sent Weingarten a formal demand for arbitration in mid-April.

Shortly thereafter, Trudy's filed a lawsuit seeking to compel arbitration due to the parties' dispute over the "method of calculation and proper amount of rent to be paid." Weingarten filed an answer and counterclaim, in which it sought a declaratory judgment that Trudy's must comply with section 4.6 to determine fair market rental value. Weingarten then filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that the lease clearly expresses the intent of the parties to resolve their dispute over base rent for the extension period through the specific appraisal process outlined in section 4.6, rather than the general arbitration clause in section 30.2. The trial court granted the motion, and Trudy's appeals that judgment.



DISCUSSION



Trudy's first asserts that the trial court erred in declaring that section 4.6 of the lease controls this dispute rather than ordering the parties to arbitration. Trudy's cites section 30.2 of the lease, providing that the parties shall submit "any dispute related to this lease" to binding arbitration, after unsuccessfully resolving it on their own or through mediation.

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Trudy's Texas Star, Inc. v. Weingarten Realty Investors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trudys-texas-star-inc-v-weingarten-realty-investors-texapp-2004.