Valley View Shopping Center Ltd. v. United States

535 F.2d 42, 210 Ct. Cl. 89, 1976 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 8
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 12, 1976
DocketNo. 96-75
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 535 F.2d 42 (Valley View Shopping Center Ltd. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valley View Shopping Center Ltd. v. United States, 535 F.2d 42, 210 Ct. Cl. 89, 1976 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 8 (cc 1976).

Opinion

BeNNett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff brings this suit seeking judgment for certain proceeds of a “lease rental guarantee insurance policy” written by the Small Business Administration (SBA) and [91]*91running to plaintiff as beneficiary. First enacted in section 316(a) of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965, 79 Stat. 482 (now codified in 15 U.S.C. § 692 (1970)), section 401 of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 allows SBA in its discretion to guarantee payment of rentals under leases of commercial and industrial property entered into by qualified small business concerns, all to the end of creating an inducement for property owners to rent business properties to small business tenants.1 The parties’ research, as well as our own, indicates that no reported decisions have to date examined this provision of law. As more particularly described below, the instant case involves an insured landlord who could not collect from its tenant and was forced, when efforts to accommodate the needs of the tenant failed, to call upon SBA to make good its obligation as guarantor of defaulted rent.

The cross-motions for summary judgment, exhibits, and supporting briefs show that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact. The case is ripe for decision at this time under Rule 101. We agree with the position of the plaintiff for reasons given below.

On April 6, 1971, Central Cinema Company, Inc. (CCC), as lessee, and plaintiff, as lessor, executed a lease for space in the Valley View Shopping Center, Overland Park, Kansas. The lessor demised to the small business lessee a term of 15 years to commence in June 1972, reserving a minimum monthly rental of $3,612.50. The SBA, on June 10,1972, issued a “lease rental guarantee insurance policy” to CCC, [92]*92naming plaintiff as beneficiary. The policy undertook to guarantee payment of up to 75 percent of the rent set forth in the lease. The total “guaranteed rent” for the 15-year term was $487,620, subject to a “three-month rent deductible endorsement.” Thus, SBA’s liability as guarantor was limited to rent which might accrue to the lessor subsequent to the first' 3 months of any default in payment by CCC.

Plaintiff and defendant agree that COC paid its rent only sporadically after the term commenced. Defendant takes no issue with an exhibit filed by plaintiff showing that the check drawn by CCC to plaintiff’s order for July 1972 rent was returned for lack of sufficient funds on deposit with the drawee. 'On May 2,1973, plaintiff sent a written notice of the tenant’s default simultaneously to CCC and to SBA, listing past-due rent and charges in the amount of $26,472.61.'2 A further notice dated June 6,1973, advised SBA’of the lessor’s intention to terminate CCC’s tenancy and to file claims under the policy. A claim for insurance benefits was filed on June 14,1973, of which defendant has paid no part. Both the SBA regional office in Kansas City and the Washington agency headquarters took the position that SBA’s liability under the insurance policy attached only for past-due rent payments accruing to the lessor after (1) formal notice of default was served (here, May 2,1973) and (2) the 3-month' deductible period thereafter had gone by. So, in SBA’s view, the deductible period ended August 1, 1973, and its obligation thereafter would be reduced by the amount of rent paid by the new tenant. Hence, SBA maintained then, as it maintains in this court, that it encounters no liability at all since the property was rented to a new tenant in August. Plaintiff filed its petition here on April 23,1975.

[93]*93The principal issue framed for our decision by the parties is whether under this insurance policy the lessor-beneficiary is entitled to ¡recover past-due rent from SBA accrued prior to plaintiff’s formal notice of default. Defendant answers this in the negative, referring us to the words found in the policy’s “insuring agreement”:

The Small Business Administration (* * * hereinafter called “SBA”) agrees with the Lessee, in consideration of the payment of the premium * * * subject to all of the terms and conditions of Part II, to guarantee the payment of that portion of the Insured Bent which shall be due and unpaid to the Lessor during the policy period by reason of the Lessee’s default. [Emphasis added.]

The term “default” is defined in Part II, Conditions, paragraph 1(f):

(f) Default — Any failure by Lessee to perform any of the covenants and conditions of the Lease, which results in a written demand for possession by Lessor, shall constitute a “default”. [Emphasis added.]

Defendant first observes that a “default” within the meaning of the policy differs from a default under the lease. While a failure to pay rent might ordinarily be considered a default under the lease, such failure of payment does not assume the status of default as the term is understood in the policy until such time as the lessor provides “a written demand for possession.” Thus, while the rent may go unpaid for months, no default occurs under the policy, defendant tells us, unless and until the lessor makes it a default by giving a written demand for possession. Under this concept only the final failure of payment by the lessee — being the failure which precipitates the demand — constitutes a default. Defendant then bolsters its position by emphasizing the words “Insured Bent which shall be due [emphasis added].” Use of the future tense indicates to defendant the meaning that only rent becoming due after notice of default falls within the coverage of the policy, subject to the 3-month deductible endorsement. Defendant tells us that this technical interpretation must be approved so that a lessor will not sit idly by, declaring a default only when most advantageous to it and thereby maximizing the liability of SBA.

[94]*94We do not attach much weight to the argument that unless-we adopt defendant’s interpretation, lessors will allow defaulted rent to accumulate. First, the policy in this case covered only 75 percent of the rent reserved in the lease. Moreover, during the time the lessor would allow rent to accrue without notice of default it would not have the use of the funds. It does not seem reasonable to expect that an insurance beneficiary would be content to do nothing while, as a practical matter, accumulating nothing more than a claim to 75 percent of that which may be presumed to be the reasonable value of the leased premises. The consequences defendant conjures up are imagined, not real.

Other language in the policy indicates that its coverage reaches back in time, compensating for rent which is past due at the time of a formal notice of default. Thus, in paragraph 9, Part II, it is said:

* * * This notice [the notice of default] shall include the total amount of umpaid guaranteed rent and the dates on which each unpaid installment was due, * * *. [Emphasis added.]

In paragraph 12(c), Part II, the policy continues:

* * * The Lessor’s claim and SBA’s liability shall be limited to that portion of the Insured Pent which is due and payable without regard to any provision of the Lease the effect of which is to accelerate the due date of any installment. * * *.

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Bluebook (online)
535 F.2d 42, 210 Ct. Cl. 89, 1976 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valley-view-shopping-center-ltd-v-united-states-cc-1976.