JIANGMEN KINWAI FURNITURE DECORATION CO. LTD v. IHFC PROPERTIES, LLC et al
Filing
147
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER signed by JUDGE CATHERINE C. EAGLES on 10/22/2015. It is ORDERED that the defendant IHFC Properties, LLC's motion for summary judgment, (Doc. 99 ), is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part as follows: IHF C's motion for summary judgment is GRANTED as to all claims against it by the plaintiff, Jiangmen Kinwai Furniture Decoration Co. Ltd, and all of the plaintiff's claims against IHFC will be dismissed with prejudice in a judgment to b e entered when appropriate; It is established for purposes of the trial on IHFC's counterclaims that there was a valid contract between IHFC and Kinwai and that IHFC did not breach the contract when it relocated Kinwai; IHFC's motion for summary judgment is GRANTED as to the plaintiff's seventh defense to IHFC's counterclaims. Except as stated herein, IHFC's motion for summary judgment on its counterclaims is DENIED. (Coyne, Michelle)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA
JIANGMEN KINWAI FURNITURE
DECORATION CO. LTD,
Plaintiff,
v.
IHFC PROPERTIES, LLC, et al.,
Defendants.
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1:14-CV-689
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Catherine C. Eagles, District Judge.
This is a dispute over who breached a lease for showroom space at the High Point
Furniture Market. The tenant, Jiangmen Kinwai Furniture Decoration Co. Ltd,
(“Kinwai”), has sued the landlord, IHFC Properties, LLC, (“IHFC”), and the landlord has
filed counterclaims. IHFC has offered undisputed evidence that it acted pursuant to an
explicit provision in the lease giving it wide discretion to relocate Kinwai’s showroom,
and Kinwai has offered no evidence to support its contentions that the new space was not
equivalent in size and value and that it did not have time to get the new space ready for
the next furniture market. The Court will grant IHFC’s motion for summary judgment as
to Kinwai’s claims for relief.
I.
BACKGROUND
The basic facts are undisputed.1 Several years ago, the plaintiff Jiangmen Kinwai
Furniture Decoration Co. Ltd began leasing Space D502 in the International Home
Furnishings Center from the defendant IHFC Properties, LLC. (See Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 11-12.)
In 2009, the lease was revised at Kinwai’s request to reduce its space from 12,670 square
feet to 8032 square feet. (Doc. 128-5 at 44-45, 52-53.) This left more than 4500 square
feet behind Kinwai’s showroom, which was difficult to lease. (Doc. 6-1 at ¶ 6.) The
lease contained a provision allowing IHFC, at its sole discretion, to relocate Kinwai to a
different equivalent space. (Doc. 1-1 at § 1.2.)
Zuo Modern Contemporary, Inc., (“Zuo”), a competitor of Kinwai, leased a nearby
showroom in Space D501 for several years. (Doc. 128-6 at 3.) As early as October
2013, Zuo told IHFC it needed a larger showroom space. (Doc. 128-3 at 3; Doc. 128-4 at
79-85.) In early July 2014, IHFC offered Space D502, then occupied by Kinwai, plus the
unoccupied area behind Space D502, to Zuo. (Doc. 128-3 at 27-28.) After negotiations
over price, (id. at 23-27), Zuo and IHFC agreed in July that Zuo would lease the space.
(Id. at 33; see Doc. 128-4 at 92-93.)
Soon thereafter, on July 29, 2014, IHFC notified Kinwai that it would relocate
Kinwai from Space D502 on the fifth floor to Space H724 on the seventh floor of the
same building, pursuant to the relocation clause in the lease. (Doc. 128-5 at 47; Doc. 43.) In addition to Space H724, IHFC offered several alternate locations to Kinwai. (Doc.
1
To the extent they are not, the facts are set forth in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
2
4-6 at 1.) On August 11, Kinwai objected to the relocation, contending that the new
space was not “equivalent” to the old space as required by the relocation clause and that
Kinwai did not have time to get new space ready for the October market. (Doc. 4-4.)
After receiving these objections, IHFC advised Kinwai that same day that it would
proceed with the relocation. (Doc. 4-5.) On August 12, IHFC repeated its offer to make
different space available to Kinwai if it preferred and advised Kinwai that in the absence
of a decision by Kinwai to the contrary, IHFC would prepare Space H724 for Kinwai and
would move Kinwai’s personal property out of Space D502. (Doc. 4-6 at 2.) There is no
evidence that Kinwai responded, and by August 13, IHFC was moving Kinwai’s items
out of Space D502. (Doc. 4-2 at ¶¶ 4-5.) Kinwai filed this lawsuit on August 14. (Doc.
1.)
After Kinwai’s requests for preliminary injunctive relief were denied, (Docs. 9,
22), Zuo moved into Space D502 and the adjoining space, modified the space for its
needs, and exhibited there during the October 2014 market. (See Doc. 128-4 at 161-67.)
In late August, Kinwai asked IHFC for confirmation that the new space would be
ready by September 30 and asked again for different space and for improvements not
required by the lease. (Doc. 39-4 at 8.) In early September, Kinwai rerouted its
shipments of items to display at the October market from High Point to California. (Doc.
100-1 at 32-33.) In August and September, IHFC moved some walls, painted, and put in
new carpet in Space H724. (Doc. 39-3 ¶ 6.) This work was finished in late September.
(Id.) Kinwai did not hire a contractor or designer to get the space ready for the October
3
market, (see Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 33-34), and in September or October it moved its property out
of Space H724 and its environs. (Doc. 39-4 at ¶¶ 5-6; Doc. 35-3; Doc. 37-1 at ¶¶ 7-8.)
Kinwai did not participate in the October 2014 market. (Doc. 130-6 at 66.) It
rented space from an entity unaffiliated with IHFC for the April 2015 market, (Doc. 355), and exhibited there. (Doc. 130-7 at 26.)
II.
CLAIMS
Kinwai asserts claims against IHFC for breaching the lease by moving Kinwai to a
different location within the Home Furnishings Center, for constructive eviction, and for
breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing arising out of the lease. (Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 5171.) Kinwai further asserts claims against IHFC for violating North Carolina’s Unfair
and Deceptive Trade Practices Act and for civil conspiracy with Zuo. (Id. at ¶¶ 72-77,
83-85.) By counterclaim, IHFC asserts that Kinwai breached the lease by failing to
exhibit during the October 2014 and April 2015 markets and by exhibiting elsewhere
during the April 2015 market. (Doc. 31 at 11-14.)
III.
THE LEASE
Section 1.2 of the lease governs relocation. It gives IHFC substantial rights to
relocate Kinwai in IHFC’s sole discretion and states that IHFC has the explicit authority
to act “in the best interest of the Home Furnishings Center in the conduct of its business”
when making a relocation decision. (Doc. 1-1 at 2.) Under the clause, Kinwai has no
right to select or veto the new premises. Rather, IHFC has the right to relocate Kinwai to
premises selected by IHFC that are “equivalent to or greater than the original Premises in
size and value (all as determined by IHFC in its sole discretion).” (Id.) The timing is
4
also within IHFC’s discretion, requiring only that IHFC notify Kinwai within “a
reasonable period of time (as determined by IHFC in its sole discretion) to refixture,
redecorate, and prepare to show at [the next] Market.” (Id.)
The relocation clause follows in full:
§1.2. Relocation. Lessee acknowledges and agrees that it is essential
to the orderly and efficient operation of the Home Furnishings Center
by IHFC that IHFC have the right from time to time to relocate
lessees in order to achieve optimum utilization of all space in the
Home Furnishings Center. Consequently, IHFC shall have the
absolute right to relocate Lessee as provided in this Section if IHFC
determines in its sole discretion that relocation of Lessee is in the best
interest of the Home Furnishing Center in the conduct of its business.
IHFC shall exercise its right to relocate Lessee in the following
manner: (a) the premises to which Lessee is to be relocated (the “New
Premises”) shall be selected by IHFC and shall be equivalent to or
greater than the original Premises in size and value (all as determined
by IHFC in its sole discretion); (b) IHFC shall notify Lessee of its
intent to relocate Lessee within a time period prior to the
commencement of the next Market such that the Lessee has a
reasonable period of time (as determined by IHFC in its sole
discretion) to refixture, redecorate, and prepare to show at that Market
and identify the New Premises, (c), the New Premises shall be
automatically substituted for the original Premises as of the date IHFC
gives such notice, (d) all alternations, additions and improvements to
the original Premises shall become the property of IHFC, (e) all
references in this Lease to the Premises shall thereafter be
conclusively be deemed to refer to the New Premises, (f) IHFC, at its
expense, shall move Lessee’s property to the New Premises, and (g)
this Lease shall continue in full force and effect without any other
change; provided, however, that until such time as IHFC shall move
Lessee’s property to the New Premises, the property insurance
provisions of §10.1 and the provisions of §10.2 and §10.3 shall
continue to apply with respect to any loss of or damage to Lessee’s
property until such property has been moved to the New Premises.
(Id.)
5
The reasons for this broad grant of almost unfettered discretion to IHFC are clear
from the record. The Home Furnishings Center is huge: approximately 3.5 million
square feet of showroom space in a fourteen-story complex. (Doc. 6-1 at ¶ 2.) IHFC
works to make the best use of space for its own economic benefit as well as to increase
buyer traffic for all exhibitors. (E.g., id. at ¶¶ 7, 12.) When one tenant moves, whether
voluntarily or involuntarily, there is often a cascading effect that requires flexibility and
management in order to provide maximum use of the premises during the twice-a-year
market. (See id. at ¶¶ 11, 18, 21; see generally Doc. 39-1.)
A. Kinwai’s Claims Against IHFC
1. Breach of Contract and Duty of Good Faith
When “a court is called upon to interpret a contract its primary purpose is to
ascertain the intention of the parties.” Lane v. Scarborough, 284 N.C. 407, 409-10, 200
S.E.2d 622, 624 (1973). For a contract that is plain and unambiguous on its face, the
court will find the parties’ intention as a matter of law. Id. at 410, 200 S.E.2d at 624.
The relocation provision in this lease is unambiguous. It gives IHFC the “sole
discretion” to relocate Kinwai, the “sole discretion” to determine if substitute premises
are equivalent in size and value, and the “sole discretion” to determine if Kinwai has
enough time to make the new premises ready. (Doc. 1-1 at 2.) Kinwai thus agreed that
IHFC could move Kinwai where and when it wanted, subject only to an implied basic
duty to exercise its discretion in good faith and with honest judgment. See Mezzanotte v.
Freeland, 20 N.C. App. 11, 17, 200 S.E.2d 410, 415 (1973) (discretionary contractual
powers “must be exercised in a reasonable manner based upon good faith and fair play”).
6
IHFC offered evidence that Space H724 contained 5481 square feet as of the date
of the relocation letter and that IHFC planned to add 2551 square feet from the empty
adjoining Space C759 to give Kinwai the same total area it had in Space D502. (Doc. 391 at ¶¶ 18-19; Doc. 130-3 at 47-48, 55-56.) It offered additional evidence that at
Kinwai’s request, (Doc. 100-1 at 24-25), IHFC proposed alternate spaces on other floors.
(Doc. 6-1 at ¶ 22; Doc. 130-3 at 49-51; Doc. 4-6 at 1.) It offered evidence that there was
plenty of time to prepare the space for Kinwai to participate in the October market, set to
begin some two and a half months later. (Doc. 6-2 at ¶ 7; Doc. 39-3; Doc. 14.) Finally,
IHFC offered evidence that significant space behind Space D502 was being wasted,
(Doc. 6-1 at ¶¶ 6-7), that Zuo was willing to lease the entire space, (Doc. 39-1 at ¶¶ 1113), that it had tenants lined up for all the spaces that Zuo would vacate, that the lease
changes dependent on the relocation of Kinwai would benefit IHFC by more than a
million dollars, (Doc. 6-3 at ¶ 7), and that the relocation of Kinwai provided other
benefits to the Home Furnishings Center. (Id. at ¶ 8.) This evidence is sufficient to show
that IHFC acted in accordance with the lease and in good faith.
Kinwai contends that it produced evidence sufficient to prove IHFC breached both
the contract and its duty of good faith and fair dealing in three overlapping ways: that the
showroom selected by IHFC for Kinwai’s relocation was not equivalent in space and
value, that Kinwai did not have enough time to get the space ready for the October
market, and that IHFC never turned over finished space to Kinwai. (Doc. 129 at 9, 12,
16.)
7
First, Kinwai contends that because Space H724 only had some 5600 square feet
and Space D502 had some 8000 square feet, Space H724 was not equivalent in size.
Kinwai points to no disputed questions of fact, (see id. at 9-12), and relies on the
language of the lease and on testimony by IHFC’s leasing agent that the relocation
provision required IHFC to provide a relocating tenant “the same square footage, if not
more.” (Doc. 130-3 at 67.)
While it is undisputed that Space H724 as configured in early August was
substantially smaller than Space D502, it is also undisputed that IHFC intended from the
beginning to reconfigure Space H724 by moving non-structural demising walls so that it
would have the same size as the original showroom. (Doc. 39-1 at ¶ 11B; see generally
Doc. 6-1 at ¶ 4, explaining “demising walls.”) This is in fact what happened. (Doc. 39-3
at ¶ 6.) The contract did not require IHFC to have the finished space available on the day
it sent the relocation letter. Given the high degree of discretion IHFC had under the lease
to select a relocation space and the fact that the reconfigured Space H724 was similar in
size, there was no breach as a matter of law.
Kinwai next contends that IHFC did not give Kinwai enough time to get ready for
the market set to begin on October 18. While Kinwai asserts that these issues are “fact
related” and inappropriate for summary judgment, it does not point to any disputed
questions of fact that support this contention, (see Doc. 129 at 12-13), and the contract
itself is unambiguous. See supra p. 6.
IHFC has offered substantial evidence to support its discretionary decision that
two and a half months is enough time to get new showroom space ready. This includes
8
undisputed evidence that Zuo got its new, larger space ready in that time, (Doc. 39-3 at ¶¶
4-5), that Kinwai only needed sixty-two days to prepare its showroom in another building
for the April 2015 market, (Doc. 100-5 at 9-10, showing that work began on February 15
and market began on April 18), and that a contractor who regularly worked at the Home
Furnishings Center and who demised the walls in Space H724 for IHFC was available to
do Kinwai’s work on that same space as late as the end of August. (Doc. 15.)
Kinwai offers only the speculative opinions of its agents that this was not enough
time. For example, in response to a question about what Kinwai did to prepare to use
Space H724 after it was notified of the relocation, “Raymond” C.J. Zhao said “we
look[ed] at the space.” (Doc. 100-1 at 21.) Mr. Zhao took no further action, and simply
reached the conclusion that “we really don’t have enough time. So it’s too short from the
very beginning.” (Id. at 22.) There is no evidence that Kinwai contacted designers or
contractors when it received the relocation notice in August or that it was unable to
obtain those services. Kinwai’s evidence that it contacted a few contractors and a
designer three weeks later who could not take the job, (Doc. 16-4 at 11-12; Doc. 16-5 at
9-10), is not evidence that those contractors and designers could not have handled the
project three weeks earlier. Kinwai’s evidence also does not contradict IHFC’s evidence
that another contractor, Mark Silver, was willing to take on and complete the job in late
August. (Doc. 15.) In view of the substantial discretion Kinwai gave to IHFC in the
contract to decide the timing of relocations and IHFC’s evidence that two and a half
months was plenty of time, there was no breach as a matter of law.
In a related argument, Kinwai contends that by the time IHFC finished the
9
demising work, Kinwai did not have time to get the space ready for the October market.
(Doc. 129 at 12.) To the extent this claim is before the Court,2 it is a red herring. First,
IHFC has offered evidence from Mr. Silver, a contractor who regularly works at IHFC
and who did the demising work on Space H724, that he could have afterwards gotten the
space ready for the market, (Doc. 15), and Kinwai has offered nothing to show this was
not true. Second, Kinwai has offered no evidence that IHFC prevented Kinwai or its
contractor from working on the space at the same time IHFC’s contractor was working on
it, (see Doc. 39-3 at ¶¶ 8-9), and there is nothing to indicate Kinwai ever hired anyone to
work on the space. Third, Kinwai decided in early September to redirect the furniture
samples on their way to High Point to California, (Doc. 100-1 at 32-33), which shows
that Kinwai had decided by then not to exhibit in October, regardless of whether IHFC
had the space ready.3 Finally, the space was ready for occupancy by the end of
September, (see Doc. 39-3 at ¶ 6), which Kinwai had earlier stated would be enough time
for it to get ready for the market. (See Doc. 39-4 at 8.) While the space did not have the
2
The amended complaint making these allegations was struck, (Text Order at Doc. 67), and
the original complaint, (Doc. 1), does not contain these factual allegations. “A plaintiff may not
amend [its] complaint through argument in a brief opposing summary judgment.” Gilmour v.
Gates, McDonald & Co., 382 F.3d 1312, 1315 (11th Cir. 2004) (per curiam).
3
Kinwai contends that “[a]n IHFC witness previously testified that a tenant getting a new
space six weeks prior to market would be insufficient time to prepare.” (Doc. 129 at 13.)
Kinwai directs the Court to IHFC Properties, LLC v. Whalen, No. 1:10cv568 (M.D.N.C. 2013),
Doc. 56 at p. 18 ¶ 36. The Court found no reference to such testimony in that order. Findings by
that court that “tenants need time to prepare their showrooms before market,” and that “finding
tenants who would agree to a lease only six weeks before market . . . was a nearly impossible
task,” id., are not the same as testimony by a witness. Even if they were, the time needed to find
a new tenant is not the same as the time needed to prepare a showroom.
10
specialty lighting or raised platforms Kinwai wanted, those were not IHFC’s
responsibility under the lease,4 and the absence of those improvements did not prevent
Kinwai from exhibiting. In view of the substantial discretion Kinwai gave to IHFC in the
lease, IHFC’s undisputed evidence that the space could have been ready with similar
improvements to Space D502 had Kinwai hired Mr. Silver, and the overwhelming and
undisputed evidence that Kinwai undertook no timely effort to get Space H724 ready to
use at the October market, this argument also fails.
Finally, Kinwai contends that IHFC never delivered the space to Kinwai. (Doc.
129 at 12, 14.) Kinwai relies on IHFC’s leasing agent, Richard Krapfel, who testified
only that he did not notify Kinwai that the demising work had been completed on Space
H724. (Doc. 130-3 at 76.) Kinwai also cites Mr. Zhao’s blanket assertion that no one
informed him the new space was ready. (Doc. 129 at 12; Doc. 37-1 at ¶ 6.) The contract
does not require formal delivery of the premises or any particular method of delivery or
notice. (See Doc. 1-1 at 2.) There is nothing to indicate Kinwai did not have access to
Space H724 whenever it wanted from August to mid-October. It is undisputed that
Kinwai’s agents visited the space several times, (e.g., Doc. 16-4 at ¶ 3; Doc. 37-2 at ¶ 2),
and in early October IHFC emailed Kinwai about re-keying the locks, which confirms
that the space was available to Kinwai. (See Doc. 37-8.)
4
While Kinwai contends that IHFC breached by failing to deliver a new showroom
equivalent to the original showroom in terms of improvements, (Doc. 129 at 11-12; see Doc.
100-1 at 34-36), the language of the lease explicitly says otherwise. The lease required Kinwai,
not IHFC, to “refixture, redecorate, and prepare” the space for the Market, (Doc. 1-1 at 2), and
IHFC had no contractual duty to upgrade the space to Kinwai’s specifications.
11
Kinwai also contends that IHFC breached the duty of good faith and fair dealing
because of “negotiations behind Kinwai’s back with a competitor for over a year
followed by executing the relocation through trespass and conversion.” (Doc. 129 at 13.)
Kinwai contends there are disputes of fact on this issue but argues only law, not facts.
Nothing in the lease requires IHFC to notify Kinwai about negotiations with other tenants
for Kinwai’s existing showroom. (See Doc. 1-1.) Kinwai knew that IHFC wanted a
long-term lease on the empty space behind Kinwai’s showroom. (See Doc. 6-1 at ¶¶ 6-7;
Doc. 130-3 at 101.) While Mr. Zhao asked Mr. Krapfel in 2012 to let him know if
someone else was interested in the 4000 square feet in the back so that he could re-lease
it if business allowed, (Doc. 100-1 at 13-16), that request did not give Kinwai a right of
first refusal or impose any duty on IHFC. As to the alleged conversion and trespass,
IHFC had a contractual duty to enter Space D502 and move Kinwai’s furniture and other
items upon relocation. (Doc. 1-1 at 2.) It was neither a trespass nor a conversion for
IHFC to move Kinwai’s furniture.
2. Constructive Eviction
Kinwai contends that IHFC constructively evicted Kinwai from Space D502.
(Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 60-64.) Kinwai again offers only a conclusory argument unsupported by
reference to any evidence about Space D502. (See Doc. 129 at 14.) For the reasons
discussed supra, Kinwai was not entitled to remain in Space D502 once IHFC relocated it
to Space H724. A claim for constructive eviction requires proof that the tenant was
entitled to beneficial enjoyment of the premises. Marina Food Assocs., Inc. v. Marina
12
Rest., Inc., 100 N.C. App. 82, 92, 394 S.E.2d 824, 830 (1990). In the absence of that
evidence, this claim must be dismissed.5
3. Chapter 75
Kinwai’s unfair and deceptive trade practices claims against IHFC under North
Carolina law depend on a breach of contract accompanied by other conduct. As there has
been no breach of contract and there is no other conduct that can be characterized as
unfair or deceptive, this claim also fails. See Tar Heel Indus., Inc. v. E.I. duPont de
Nemours & Co., 91 N.C. App. 51, 56-57, 370 S.E.2d 449, 452 (1988) (holding that it is
not unfair or deceptive to exercise a contract’s termination clause or to seek alternatives
to a contractual relationship without informing the other party).
4. Civil Conspiracy
Finally, Kinwai brought a civil conspiracy claim against IHFC and Zuo, alleging
they acted “in concert” and “pursuant to a common plan or scheme designed to damage”
Kinwai. (Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 83-85.) There is no evidence of an agreement to damage Kinwai
or of any wrongful conduct, and this conspiracy claim also fails.6
5. Damages
5
In its brief, Kinwai appears to contend that it was constructively evicted from Space H724.
(See Doc. 129 at 14.) That claim is not made in the complaint, and “[a] plaintiff may not amend
[its] complaint through argument in a brief opposing summary judgment.” Gilmour, 382 F.3d at
1315. In any event, the argument fails for the same reason Kinwai’s argument that IHFC did not
finish its demising work in time fails. See supra pp. 9-11.
6
The Court discusses the civil conspiracy claim in greater detail in the order granting Zuo’s
motion for summary judgment.
13
Because IHFC has no liability to Kinwai, the Court need not address the issues
raised by IHFC concerning Kinwai’s alleged damages. (See Doc. 129 at 17-20.)
B. IHFC’s Counterclaims Against Kinwai
IHFC has also moved for summary judgment as to its second counterclaim. In
that counterclaim, IHFC seeks specific enforcement of “Use and Radius Restrictions” in
the lease. (Doc. 99 at 2.) Under that provision, Kinwai agreed that during the term of the
lease, when the Market was open to buyers, Kinwai would not exhibit in any showroom
within five miles of the Home Furnishings Center. (See Doc. 35-1 at p. 4 § 4.5.)
As discussed supra pp. 6-12, the undisputed evidence establishes that there was a
valid contract between IHFC and Kinwai and that IHFC did not breach when it relocated
Kinwai. There is no need for a trial on that issue, whether in connection with Kinwai’s
claims or IHFC’s claims.
IHFC did not address the merits of its counterclaim in its brief in support of
summary judgment. It simply referred the Court to the briefing filed in connection with
its earlier motion for preliminary injunction. (Doc. 100 at 21, referencing Docs. 35, 39,
51, 58.)7 While that earlier briefing did address questions of contract interpretation,
which are a legal matter for the court and not a matter for trial, the earlier briefing did not
address a number of defenses raised in Kinwai’s answer to the counterclaims. (See Doc.
32.) Nor did IHFC address the appropriate summary judgment standard or the standard
7
By adopting other briefs by reference, IHFC has essentially submitted briefing that exceeds
the page limits imposed by the Local Rules without Court permission.
14
for a permanent injunction. Even if the Court puts aside IHFC’s violation of the Local
Rules, IHFC has not established that it is entitled to summary judgment on its Second
Claim for Relief.8
CONCLUSION
The undisputed evidence shows that IHFC and Kinwai were parties to a showroom
lease and that IHFC did not breach the lease or constructively evict Kinwai when it
exercised the substantial discretion it had under the terms of the lease to relocate Kinwai.
The undisputed evidence further shows that IHFC did not breach its duties of good faith
and fair dealing, commit unfair trade practices, or participate in a civil conspiracy. For
these reasons, IHFC is entitled to summary judgment as to all claims against it.
It is ORDERED that the defendant IHFC Properties, LLC’s motion for summary
judgment, (Doc. 99), is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part as follows:
1. IHFC’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED as to all claims against it
by the plaintiff, Jiangmen Kinwai Furniture Decoration Co. Ltd, and all of the
plaintiff’s claims against IHFC will be dismissed with prejudice in a judgment
to be entered when appropriate;
8
It seems unlikely that a trial will be needed on all of these defenses. For example, the
statute of limitations defense, (Doc. 32 at 5), appears frivolous, as the undisputed evidence
indicates that IHFC filed suit within a few months of the conduct giving rise to the cause of
action. The Court trusts that pretrial submissions required by Rule 26(a)(3) of the Federal Rules
of Civil Procedure and the Local Rules will clarify what issues are actually for trial.
15
2. It is established for purposes of the trial on IHFC’s counterclaims that there
was a valid contract between IHFC and Kinwai and that IHFC did not breach
the contract when it relocated Kinwai;
3. IHFC’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED as to the plaintiff’s
seventh defense to IHFC’s counterclaims.
4. Except as stated herein, IHFC’s motion for summary judgment on its
counterclaims is DENIED.
This the 22nd day of October, 2015.
__________________________________
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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