Can A Landlord Extract A Piece Of The Action
From A Tenant-seller In The Sale Of A Dry Cleaners?
In
an action involving a 10 year dry-cleaning business lease in Garden Grove,
California, the lessee proposed to sell the business to a prospective buyer and
required the consent of the lessor to the assignment of the lease. The assignment provision, however, contact a
profit-shifting clause:
“[S]hould Tenant receive rent or other
consideration either initially or over the term of the assignment or sublease, in
excess of the minimum rent called for hereunder, or in case of the sublease
of a portion of the Premises in excess of such rent fairly allocable to such
portion, Tenant shall pay to Landlord an additional rent hereunder, one-half
(½) of the excess of each such payment of rent or other consideration
received by Tenant promptly after its receipt.”
A
few years after entering into the lease, the lessee sold his business to a
buyer and entered into a sublease with the buyer, approved by the lessor. The sublease provided that it would terminate
in the event the interest of the lessee under the original lease terminated for
any reason.
Subsequently,
the lessee filed a petition in bankruptcy and was ultimately discharged. The lessor advised the buyer that the
bankruptcy had terminated the sublease and that a new lease would have to be
executed in order for the buyer to remain in possession of the premises. The lessor presented a lease and assured the
buyer that it was basically the same lease as the original lease.
The
new lease, however, not only increased the percentage of additional rent to
which the lessor was entitled, but also granted the lessor a percentage of the
sales price of the business.
The
new lease provision between the lessor and the buyer provided as follows:
“If in connection with the transaction
involving the proposed assignment or sublease, tenant receives rent or other
consideration, including without limitation any consideration for tenant’s
business, business opportunity, good will, a covenant not to compete and/or the
like, either initially or over the term of the assignment or sublease, in
excess of all sums then payable hereunder, whether as minimum rent, percentage
rent, or otherwise, . . . tenant shall pay to landlord as
additional rent hereunder three-quarters (3/4) of the excess of each such
payment of rent or other consideration received by tenant promptly after
its receipt.”
A
year after entering into the new lease, the buyer sold his dry-cleaning
business to a second buyer for $120,000.
The escrow instructions allocated $80,000 to fixtures and equipment and
$40,000 to a covenant not to compete.
The buyer and the second buyer determined that the existing lease
provided for a rent higher than the current market rent, and that therefore the
value of the lease added nothing to the sales price of the business.
The
lessor demanded payment of three-quarters of the value of the covenant not to
compete, or $30,000, to be paid to the lessor through escrow before the lessor
would consent to the assignment of the lease.
The
buyer and the second buyer closed the escrow without the lessor’s consent to
the assignment. Subsequently, the lessor
would not accept checks signed by the second buyer. As a result of the controversies between the
parties, the second buyer reduced the price he was willing to pay for the
business from $120,000 to $80,000.
Eventually,
litigation erupted, with the matter ultimately reaching the appellate courts.
The
court of appeal observed that “A party to a commercial lease who is trapped in
a bad bargain has only one escape route left: to evoke the doctrines of
adhesion and unconscionability.” The
court noted that this doctrine was codified in California, permitting the court
to refuse to enforce an unconscionable provision in a contract:
“If the court as a matter of law finds the
contract or any clause of the contract to have been unconscionable at the time
it was made the court may refuse to enforce the contract, or it may enforce the
remainder of the contract without the unconscionable clause, or it may so limit
the application of any unconscionable clause as to avoid any unconscionable
result.”
In
summarizing the law regarding unconscionable contracts, the court noted that an
analysis of unconscionability has procedural and substantive elements,
both of which must be present to invalidate a provision in a contract.
The
procedural element includes (1) oppression “arising from an inequality
of bargaining power which results in no real negotiation and ‘an absence of
meaningful choice’; and (2) surprise “involving the extent to which the
supposedly agreed-upon terms of the bargain are hidden in a prolix [unduly
long] printed form drafted by the parties seeking to enforce the disputed
terms.
The
substantive element includes terms that are one-sided, lacking in
justification, and “reallocate the risks of the bargain in a objectively unreasonable
or unexpected manner.”
The
court of appeal observed that in this case, “The profit-shifting clause was
buried in diminutive print in the middle of one of five lengthy paragraphs
under the heading “Assignment and Subletting.”
In addition, the buyer was assured by the lessor that the new lease was
basically the same as the original. The
lessor, however, did not point out that “the profit-shifting clause in the new
lease was very different,” specifying that the lessor was now entitled to 75%
“of any consideration for the business itself.”
The
court of appeal determined that the lessor’s “attempt to appropriate a portion
of the sales price for the business was blatant overreaching.” In addition, since the lessor’s refusal to
consent was wrongful and resulted in the second buyer reducing the price he was
willing to pay for the business from $120,000 to $80,000, the court affirmed
the trial court’s determination that the buyer was entitled to $40,000 in
damages.
The
moral of the story? Although transfer
restrictions in commercial leases are generally not subject to attack, in view
of the ability of the courts to find unconscionability under certain
circumstances, commercial lessors may not gouge their tenants in the name of
freedom of contract!
[This column is intended to provide general information only and
is not intended to provide specific legal advice; if you have a
specific question regarding the law, you should contact an
attorney of your choice. Suggestions for topics to be discussed
in this column are welcome.]
Reprinted from Fabricare
Myles M. Mattenson © 2007