This summary was computer-generated without any editorial revision. It is not official, has not been checked for accuracy, and is NOT citable.
Facts
- Cottonwood Phase V, LLC (CPV) leased land to Circuit City, which built a store on the property. CPV later purchased the building improvements from Circuit City and re-leased the property to them. To finance this purchase, CPV obtained a loan from Lincoln Jefferson-Pilot Life Insurance Company, predecessor-in-interest to Jefferson-Pilot Investments, Inc. (JPI). After Circuit City filed for bankruptcy and vacated the property, CPV defaulted on the loan. A settlement in Circuit City's bankruptcy case awarded CPV approximately $1,350,000 for breach of the lease. Dispute arose over who was entitled to these funds, leading to legal action between CPV and JPI (paras 2-7).
Procedural History
- [Not applicable or not found]
Parties' Submissions
- CPV: Argued that the Circuit City funds should not be awarded to JPI and contested the decision without an evidentiary hearing. CPV also claimed that the Assignment's language did not cover the Circuit City funds as they were lease-rejection damages, not rents or profits (paras 9, 13, 15-16, 18).
- JPI: Countered that it was entitled to the Circuit City funds based on the Assignment agreement and disputed CPV's claims regarding the necessity of an evidentiary hearing and the nature of the Circuit City funds (para 9).
Legal Issues
- Whether the Circuit City funds should be awarded to JPI or CPV.
- Whether the district court erred in making a decision without holding an evidentiary hearing (paras 9, 18).
Disposition
- The district court's decision to award the Circuit City funds to JPI was affirmed (para 1).
Reasons
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Per M. Monica Zamora, with James J. Wechsler and Jonathan B. Sutin concurring, the court found the Assignment agreement unambiguous and inclusive of the Circuit City funds as "Rents and Profits." The court determined that the funds, resulting from lease-rejection damages, fell within the scope of the Assignment. CPV's arguments for an evidentiary hearing were deemed insufficient as they failed to justify ambiguity in the Assignment. Additionally, JPI's request for attorney fees was granted based on the Assignment's indemnification clause, while its request for damages was denied due to lack of evidence that CPV's appeal was frivolous or not in good faith (paras 11-23).
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