Wischermann Partners, Inc. v. Nashville Hospitality Capital

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 2022
Docket21-5604
StatusUnpublished

This text of Wischermann Partners, Inc. v. Nashville Hospitality Capital (Wischermann Partners, Inc. v. Nashville Hospitality Capital) 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
Wischermann Partners, Inc. v. Nashville Hospitality Capital, (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0248n.06

Case Nos. 21-5326/5604

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Jun 21, 2022 DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) WISCHERMANN PARTNERS, INC., et al., ) Plaintiff-Appellees, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR v. ) THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF ) ) TENNESSEE NASHVILLE HOSPITALITY CAPITAL ) LLC, ) OPINION Defendant-Appellant. ) )

Before: SILER, CLAY, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

SILER, Circuit Judge. This is a dispute between a hotel and its former manager. The

manager sued the hotel owner for breach of contract, and the owner counterclaimed for breach of

contract, breach of the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing, breach of fiduciary duty, gross

negligence, and fraud. The district court held an eight-day bench trial and then found for the

manager on every claim and counterclaim. But because the district court’s opinion rests on legal

error, we vacate its judgment and remand for further proceedings.

I

A

Kevin Fee and Seamus Ross decided to open a hotel in downtown Nashville. So they

secured financing, found a suitable parcel of real estate, and selected a hotel brand: The Westin. Nos. 21-5326/5604, Wischermann Partners, Inc., et. al. v. Nashville Hospitality Capital

Then they hired Paul Wischermann, the CEO and sole shareholder of Wischermann Partners,

Incorporated (WPI), to shepherd them through the early stages of hotel development.

Wischermann’s company—WPI—and a limited liability company founded by Fee and

Ross—Nashville Hospitality Capital LLC (NHC)—signed a consulting agreement on December

1, 2013. The agreement included a confidentiality clause but no restrictions on competition.

Wischermann was therefore free, at least at this point, to advise and manage other hotels in the

Nashville area.

Approximately two months later, in February 2014, Wischermann convinced another

client, Joel Pizzuti, to build his own hotel in downtown Nashville. Much as he did for Fee and

Ross, Wischermann advised Pizzuti through the hotel-development process. He helped secure a

site for Pizzuti’s new hotel: Fourth Avenue in downtown Nashville, a couple blocks from The

Westin. He recommended a hotel tier and brand: a luxury brand called “The Joseph.” His

architect even designed the preliminary floor plans.

Then, in late 2014, WPI and NHC signed a lengthy hotel management agreement. This

agreement shifted the WPI-NHC relationship from a consulting relationship, i.e., one where

Wischermann advised Fee and Ross on The Westin’s development, to a management relationship,

i.e., one where Wischermann managed The Westin and oversaw its day-to-day operation.

With this new agreement came new responsibilities, among them new restrictions on

competition. Unlike the earlier NHC-WPI consulting agreement, the management agreement has

an expansive non-compete provision. That provision prohibits WPI and Wischermann from

developing, syndicating, financing, owning, operating, or managing any hotel within a one-mile

radius of The Westin Nashville unless NHC gives “prior written consent.”

-2- Nos. 21-5326/5604, Wischermann Partners, Inc., et. al. v. Nashville Hospitality Capital

23.29 Non-Competition. Neither Manager nor any Affiliate, successor or assignee of Manager shall, without the prior written consent of Owner, develop, syndicate, finance, own, operate or manage (or grant such rights to third parties), either directly, indirectly or by any means, any other hotel within that certain geographic area described on Exhibit D attached hereto (the “Geographic Zone”)1 of the Hotel but excluding any hotel properties within such Geographic Zone currently under management by Manager.

The agreement also has a confidentiality provision. It prohibits both parties, NHC and

WPI, from disclosing or misusing “confidential or proprietary information.”

15.1 Right to Use. Neither party hereto shall use any Confidential or Proprietary Information for any purpose other than with respect to the Construction and Operation of the Hotel pursuant to this Agreement. ... 15.3 Ownership and Non-Disclosure. . . . Manager will at all times use all reasonable means to protect the confidentiality of the Confidential and Proprietary Information, use it only for the sole benefit of the Owner and the Hotel and will not communicate or make it available to, or use it for the benefit of, any unauthorized Persons.

Along with confidentiality and non-compete provisions, the management agreement has

detailed rules for contract termination. Those rules empower NHC to sever its relationship with

WPI in one of three ways.

First is Section 17.1, which allows NHC to terminate the management agreement without

payment of a termination fee if (1) WPI “fails to perform any of [its] obligations contained in th[e]

[a]greement,” (2) NHC notifies WPI of the unperformed obligation(s), and (3) “such failure

continues for a period of thirty (30) days” after NHC provides notice.

17.1 Owner’s General Default Rights. Owner may terminate this Agreement by notice to Manager if Manager fails to perform any of Manager’s obligations contained in this Agreement, and such failure continues for a period of thirty (30) days after notice to Manager setting out the failure in reasonable detail. If the failure is such that it cannot reasonably be cured within such thirty (30) days, Owner may not terminate this Agreement as long as Manager begins the cure within thirty

1 Schedule 4 to the management agreement defines “Geographic Zone” as the area within a one-mile radius of The Westin Nashville.

-3- Nos. 21-5326/5604, Wischermann Partners, Inc., et. al. v. Nashville Hospitality Capital

(30) days and proceeds diligently and in good faith to accomplish the cure within sixty (60) days. Manager shall not be entitled to the Termination Fee if this Agreement is terminated as provided in this Section 17.1.

Next, Section 17.2 allows NHC to terminate the management agreement if WPI fails to

comply either with a “material provision” of the agreement or “a sufficient number of non-material

provisions which, collectively, constitute materiality or evidence a disregard for [WPI’s]

obligations.” Like Section 17.1, Section 17.2 has a thirty-day right-to-cure provision and

authorizes termination without payment of a termination fee.

17.2 Default by Manager – Opportunity to Cure. The following, without limitation, are events of material default by Manager, which entitle Owner, in addition to and cumulative of any and all rights and remedies available to Owner under this Agreement, at law or in equity, to terminate this Agreement without payment of the Termination Fee upon notice to Manager, subject to Manager’s right to cure. The cure period for any default, unless stated otherwise, is thirty (30) days from the receipt of the notice. ... (c) Failure to comply with: (i) any other material provision of this Agreement; or (ii) a sufficient number of non-material provisions which, collectively, constitute materiality or evidence a disregard for Manager’s obligations under this Agreement, provided, however, if such default is such that it cannot reasonably be cured within the thirty (30) days, Owner may not terminate this Agreement as long as Manager begins the cure within thirty days and proceeds diligently and in good faith to accomplish the cure within a period not to exceed sixty (60) days.

The third avenue for termination is Section 17.3. It empowers NHC to terminate the

agreement “at any time, without cause, by written notice to [WPI] . . . not less than sixty (60) days

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Wischermann Partners, Inc. v. Nashville Hospitality Capital, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wischermann-partners-inc-v-nashville-hospitality-capital-ca6-2022.