Vei Catonsville, LLC v. Einbinder Properties, LLC

68 A.3d 872, 212 Md. App. 286, 2013 WL 3198414, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 2013
DocketNo. 265
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 A.3d 872 (Vei Catonsville, LLC v. Einbinder Properties, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vei Catonsville, LLC v. Einbinder Properties, LLC, 68 A.3d 872, 212 Md. App. 286, 2013 WL 3198414, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 74 (Md. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

DAVIS, J.

This appeal from a declaratory judgment presents the question of whether a commercial real estate appraisal was rendered in compliance with the dictates of the option agreement to purchase the subject property. VEI Catonsville, LLC (VEI) seeks our review of a declaration rendered by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County that an appraisal of the property at issue complied with the dictates of the “Agreement Regarding Right of First Refusal and Option to Purchase.” VEI maintains that the chancellor erred by declaring that an appraisal of the property at issue did not adhere to the requirements of the Option. Appellee, Einbinder Properties, Inc. (Einbinder) disagrees, and moves to dismiss VEI’s appeal, urging, in the alternative, that we affirm.

We decline Einbinder’s invitation to dismiss VEI’s appeal, but shall affirm the chancellor’s declaration for the reasons set forth below.

Background 1

On March 18, 1997, Circuit City Stores, Inc., a “national retailer of consumer electronics,” the predecessor on the lease to VEI, entered into a commercial ground lease (Lease) with Joseph Y. Einbinder,2 contracting to rent approximately 7.657 acres of land (Property) in Baltimore County for an initial term of twenty years, with six five-year renewable terms. The Property is known as 6026-6030 Baltimore National Pike and, at the time of the lease, had been the site of the Westview Cinema. The theater has since been razed and replaced by retail establishments—“HH Gregg, Vitamin World and Staples.” The Lease contained a separate “Agreement Regard[289]*289ing Right of First Refusal and Option to Purchase.” The “option to purchase” includes the following:

Option to Purchase. Landholder does hereby grant to CC the exclusive and irrevocable option to purchase the interest of Landholder in the property on and subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth.

The agreement also established the method by which the purchase price would be determined:

The purchase price (“Purchase Price”) payable upon the closing shall be the greater of FOUR MILLION FOUR HUNDRED TWENTY-EIGHT THOUSAND AND NO/ 100 DOLLARS ($4,428,000.00) or the appraised value of the Property subject to adjustments at closing as more fully set forth in subparagraph 2(d) below, which appraisal shall take into account (i) CC’s right of first refusal, (ii) the extension rights granted to the holder of the leasehold estate in the Property, and (iii) the absence of a brokerage commission to be paid by Landholder, and which appraisal shall not take into account the value of the leasehold improvements then-existing on the Property, and which appraisal shall be conducted by an independent M.A.I. appraiser having at least fifteen (15) years experience in the field of commercial real estate and whose primary area of expertise is Baltimore County, Maryland reasonably satisfactory to Landholder and CC. (Emphasis added).

Circuit City filed for bankruptcy protection and, “on or about” March 17, 2009, “sold and assigned its interest as Lessee under the Lease to Vanguard Commercial Development, Inc.” On August 10, 2009, Vanguard in turn assigned its interest in the lease to VEI.

In April, 2010, pursuant to the Option’s requirement that they secure the services of an independent appraiser, the parties retained Ronald Lipman, a real estate consultant and appraiser, “to appraise the Property in accordance with the Option.” Lipman submitted his appraisal of the Property on May 5, 2010. In the cover letter that accompanied the appraisal, Lipman outlined the “appraisal methodology”:

[290]*290The classic method for valuing vacant land is the sales comparison approach, wherein transactions involving properties considered similar to the subject are obtained, analyzed and adjusted to the subject property, utilizing a common denominator of value. In the appraisal of commercial sites similar to the subject, price per sq. ft. is the typical common denominator with, however, consideration of the amount of frontage the property enjoys on the commercial corridor.
If not for language contained in the Agreement Regarding Right of First Refusal and Option to Purchase, we would utilize the sales comparison approach exclusively. However, in paragraph 2 of that document, the appraiser is instructed to “take into account” Circuit City’s right of first refusal, extension rights granted to the holder of the leasehold estate and the absence of a brokerage commission to be paid by the Lessor/Seller.
We interpret consideration of the leasehold estate’s extension rights to mean that the existing land lease should be “taken into account”. For this reason, we have also considered valuation of the leased fee (reversionary) estate (i.e. the right to the triple net income stream and the property reversion at the end of the lease) because of its influence on the “value” of the land in the context of this assignment. We would normally expect a well written lease to have been more explicit, but we believe that this alternative interpretation of the option language may also be relevant.
Therefore, we will consider both the sales comparison and the income approaches, the latter addressing value of the leased fee estate. In that valuation, we will estimate market value of the lessor’s position. This is typically accomplished by use of direct capitalization wherein the ground lease income stream is translated into value by use of a market-abstracted capitalization rate.

Lipman submitted two figures based on separate valuation methods and explained this approach in his cover letter:

[291]*291As a result of our investigation and by virtue of our experience, it is our opinion that, utilizing the sales comparison approach, market value of the subject property as of April 27, 2010 was $6,050,000 based on a sq. ft. rate of $22.50 applied against the subject’s usable area (269,223 sq. ft.). It is further our opinion that, as of that same date, market value of the leased fee position of the subject property was $7,450,000 utilizing the current NNN rent, deducting modest expenses and applying a capitalization rate of 7.0%. Lipman warned that there could be “no possible correlation” of the two values:
If the lease and the accompanying purchase option clearly stated that the unimproved land value, free and clear of the ground lease, with no references thereto, were the determinate of value in the context of the options then we would estimate value based exclusively on the sales comparison approach, ie. SIX MILLION FIFTY THOUSAND (6,050,-000) DOLLARS.
If, on the other hand, the option to purchase would have clearly instructed the appraiser to value the leased fee estate or Lessor’s reversionary interest, in consideration of the land lease, our value would be based exclusively on the leased fee, ie. SEVEN MILLION FOUR HUNDRED FIFTY THOUSAND ($7,450,000) DOLLARS.

He explained the discrepancy:

M. Ronald Lipman has read numerous documents relating to real estate transactions over his 50 years of appraisal and consulting activity. Unfortunately, the purchase option in this matter is imprecise, vague and subject to interpretation. It simply states that the appraiser should “take into account” ...

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Bluebook (online)
68 A.3d 872, 212 Md. App. 286, 2013 WL 3198414, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vei-catonsville-llc-v-einbinder-properties-llc-mdctspecapp-2013.