WC 1899 Mckinney Ave., LLC v. STK Dall., LLC

380 F. Supp. 3d 595
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedMay 13, 2019
DocketCAUSE NO.: AU-17-CA-00687-SS
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 380 F. Supp. 3d 595 (WC 1899 Mckinney Ave., LLC v. STK Dall., LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WC 1899 Mckinney Ave., LLC v. STK Dall., LLC, 380 F. Supp. 3d 595 (W.D. Tex. 2019).

Opinion

SAM SPARKS, SENIOR UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

BE IT REMEMBERED on this day the Court reviewed the file in the above-styled cause, and specifically WC 1899 McKinney Avenue, LLC, World Class Capital Group, LLC, and Natin and Sheena Paul (collectively, World Class)'s Motion for Summary Judgment [#79], STK Dallas, LLC and The One Group Hospitality, Inc. (collectively, STK)'s Response [#82] in opposition, and World Class's Reply [#92] in support.1 Having reviewed the documents, the governing law, the arguments of counsel, and the file as a whole, the Court now enters the following opinion and orders.

*598Background

This dispute concerns a lease agreement between World Class and STK. STK is a restaurant group that sought to open a restaurant in Dallas, Texas. Resp. [#82-1] Segal Decl. at 1.2 Towards that end, STK entered into discussions with World Class in 2014 regarding a potential lease of retail space at 1899 McKinney Avenue (the Premises). Id.

I. Lease Negotiations

During the lease negotiations, STK discovered the Premises lacked onsite parking and expressed concern about its ability to secure nearby offsite parking for its planned restaurant. Mot. Summ. J. [#79] at 106. In an attempt to allay these concerns, World Class undertook a search for offsite parking in early 2015. Internal emails exchanged within World Class around that time suggest World Class had considered eight possible parking lots in the vicinity, of which four were unavailable. Mot. Seal [#83-1] Ex. A at 2-6. World Class concluded the other four lots were likely only available on a month-to-month basis "if they are available at all." Id.

By May 2015, neither party had identified a parking solution, and on May 17, 2015, STK proposed "add[ing] a contingency [to the proposed lease agreement] for finding acceptable offsite parking for intended use" because "[o]perations has not had a chance to secure a lot." Segal Decl. at 8-9. World Class responded that there was "plenty of parking nearby in garages and surface lots" and assured STK that it would "help in any way as needed." Id. But World Class resisted adding a parking contingency to the Lease Agreement on the ground that the addition of another contingency would "throw a monkey wrench in execution." Id. STK ultimately conceded and informed World Class that it was "okay forgoing a parking contingency" but asked World Class to provide information on "the company that provided parking services for the previous tenant." Segal Decl. at 12.

II. The Lease Agreement

The Lease Agreement and a corresponding Guaranty Agreement were executed by the parties on June 5, 2015, and several of their provisions are relevant here. Mot. Summ. J. [#79] Ex. 2-A (Lease Agreement) at 62; Am. Compl. [#14] at 52-53 (Guaranty Agreement).

First, the Lease Agreement contains an "as-is" clause specifying that the Premises were to be leased "as-is" and without reliance upon any warranty as to the fitness of the Premises for any particular purpose. Lease Agreement § 3.1. The "as-is" clause does, however, require World Class to deliver the Premises to STK "in compliance with" all local codes and regulations. Id.

Second, the Lease Agreement contains a parking disclaimer clause. Lease Agreement § 3.2. Under the terms of that clause, STK acknowledged and agreed that the Premises "may not contain sufficient parking" for the Premises's intended use. Id. In turn, World Class agreed "at the request of [STK] but at no cost to [World Class], to assist [STK] in identifying and locating offsite parking." Id.

Third, the Lease Agreement contains a provision establishing a contingency period. Under the terms of that provision, if the Premises were unable to be operated for their intended use because STK cannot "obtain the necessary permits" despite using "commercially reasonable best efforts," STK could terminate the Lease Agreement so long as STK provided written *599notice on or before August 3, 2015. Lease Agreement § 2.2(ii).3

Fourth and finally, the Lease Agreement contains provisions affecting the timing of STK's rent obligations. Under Lease Agreement § 1.1 (i), the Rent Commencement Date falls on the earlier of (i) the date on which STK opened its restaurant to the public, or (ii) February 1, 2016, "subject to extension as provided for in Section 28.18." In turn, Lease Agreement § 28.18 provides the Rent Commencement Date "shall be extended by one day for each such day of delay" caused by a "Force Majeure Event." The Lease Agreement defines a "Force Majeure Event" as "any delay[ ] due to strikes, riots, acts of God, shortages of labor or materials, war, governmental laws, regulations or restrictions or any other causes of any kind whatsoever which are beyond the reasonable control of such party." Id. § 28.6.

III. Parking Problems

After the parties signed the Lease Agreement, subsequent attempts to locate offsite parking failed. See Segal Decl. at 2 ("In July 2015, One Group retained Lone Star, a parking consulting company, to assist in securing the deeded parking spaces needed for operation of a restaurant ... [but] [n]either One Group nor its consultants were ever able to secure the required number of deeded parking spaces under Dallas' local codes and regulations ..."). Yet, in spite of the obvious obstacle the parking situation posed to opening a restaurant, STK failed to provide written notice within the contingency period of intent to terminate the Lease Agreement. See Segal Decl. at 3. STK also failed to pay its rent, and in March 2016, STK received a letter from World Class demanding that STK begin paying rent due under the terms of the Lease Agreement. Id. STK Group then made two rent payments to World Class "in the hopes that the needed parking would be found." Id.

The needed parking was not found. In April 2016, STK informed World Class it was "unable to get car parking," that it had not received any substantial assistance from World Class,4 and that the City of Dallas (the City) was unwilling to grant STK a parking variance. Segal Decl. at 3. As a result of these obstacles, STK concluded it could not proceed with the restaurant and ceased making rent payments to World Class. Id.

Around the same time, STK learned a prior lessee had encountered similar parking problems and had applied for a parking variance from the City. Id. at 3-4. In conjunction with the parking variance application, the prior owner of 1899 McKinney Avenue had written a letter to the City asserting the owner had "tried in vain" to secure an offsite parking agreement but had been unable to do so. Segal Decl. at 4. Despite this entreaty, the City had denied the variance application in January 2014. Id.

In October 2016, World Class and STK arranged an in-person meeting to discuss how to proceed. Segal Decl. at 4. STK

*600

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
380 F. Supp. 3d 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wc-1899-mckinney-ave-llc-v-stk-dall-llc-txwd-2019.