Ali Alfоrookh manages and operates restaurants in Wisconsin, Illinois, and Missouri under franchise agreements with International House of Pancakes (“IHOP”). He created several companies to hold the IHOP franchises he acquired over the years, including A & F Enterprises, Inc. II. Alforookh and his companies (collectively “A & F”) are currently in Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings. Their primary assets are 17 separate IHOP franchise agreements and the corresponding building and equipment leases.
The issue for us оn this appeal, however, is slightly different. A & F and IHOP fought this legal battle in bankruptcy court, and A & F lost on the merits. The bankruptcy judge issued orders deeming the building leases rejected and the franchise agreements and equipment leases expired. A & F appealed this decision to the district court. A & F also sought a stay pending appeal, which both the bankruptcy court and thе district court denied. Both courts thought that A & F’s position lacked merit because the text of § 365(d)(4) contains no exception for leases tied to franchises. A & F filed this appeal seeking review of the district court’s order denying the stay and also moved for an emergency stay. We granted the emergency motion аnd issued a stay order freezing the status quo during the
I.
The standard for granting a stаy pending appeal mirrors that for granting a preliminary injunction. In re Forty-Eight Insulations, Inc.,
The contractual relationship between the parties is undisputed. For all but four of the restaurants, there are three separate contracts: a franchise agreement, a building sublease (IHOP leases the buildings from third parties and subleases them to A & F), and an equipment lease, all of which contain cross-default provisions
II.
IHOP maintains that the text of § 365(d)(4) plainly controls, leaving no room for an exception for franchise-bound leases. It cites Sunbeam Products, Inc. v. Chicago American Manufacturing, LLC,
There are powerful arguments in favor of A & F’s position. Chapter 11 is premised on giving debtors a full opportunity to reorganize, and provisions like § 365(d)(4) that limit this opportunity are the exception, not the rule. The franchise agreement is clearly the dominant contract and the focus of the parties’ bargaining, so prioritizing the lease lets the tail wag the dog. Furthermore, what little caselaw there is on this prеcise issue favors A & F’s position. Two bankruptcy courts have held on nearly identical facts that § 365(d)(4) does not apply to a lease that is so tightly connected to a franchise arrangement. In re FPSDA I, LLC,
Becаuse the legal issue does not have a clear-cut answer, we rest our decision on whether to grant the stay primarily on the balance of potential harms. We don’t have the benefit of any factual findings — the bankruptcy judge denied A & F’s request for an evidentiary hearing because he concluded that the legal question wasn’t even close — but that doesn’t preclude us from deciding whether to grant a stay. This analysis is at best a rough estimation, and we are persuaded that A & F has more to lose than IHOP.
A & F fears that it will permanently lose its franchises without a stay. If a stay is denied, IHOP, which wants to sell the franchises, may do so before A & F’s appeal has finished. Both parties assume that if IHOP were able to find new franchisees, A & F would have no way to recover the franchises, even if it were to win on appeal. Although neither side offers support for that assumption, we note that under equitable principles in bankruptcy law, courts sometimes refuse to undo certain business transaсtions. SEC v. Wealth Mgmt. LLC,
Even so, IHOP argues that the loss of the franchises would not be irreparable because A & F could be fully compensated by money.
Valuation problems aside, damages are also insufficient to protect Alforookh’s interest in continuing to operate his business of choice. See Roland Mach.,
On the other side, IHOP contends that the goodwill associated with its trademark will be damaged if A & F continues to operate its restaurants while the appeal is pending. IHOP points us to customer complaints, failed inspections, some bad press at one location, and a temporary shutdown at two other locations due to a licensing issue. As IHOP reminds us, we have frequently said that trademark violations are irreparable, primarily because injuries to reputation and goodwill are nearly impossible to measure. E.g., Abbott Labs. v. Mead Johnson & Co.,
III.
Because A & F has demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits and the potential harm to A & F is greater than that to IHOP, a stay is warranted. Aсcordingly, the district court’s order denying A & F’s motion for a stay is REVERSED. Our emergency stay shall remain in place. Enforcement of the bankruptcy court orders dated August 5, 2013, and September 18, 2013, deeming the debtors’ leases and subleases rejected, and the order dated September 23, 2013, deeming the debtors’ franchise agreements and equipment leases expired, is stayed until final disposition of A & F’s appeal.
Notes
. There were 19 sets of agreements, but A & F has rejected two of them.
. For some of the restaurants, the contractual arrangement is slightly different. A & F leases four of the buildings directly from third parties, rather than IHOP. These leases contain an addendum, to which IHOP is a party, making them functionally similar to the subleasing arrangement (though perhаps different enough to matter, see infra note 4). In the event A & F defaults on the lease or on the franchise agreement, IHOP succeeds to A & F's rights under the lease and may sublease it to a new franchisee.
. From this point forward, we will ignore the equipment leases and refer to the building leases simply as "the leases” since the analysis of the equiрment leases matches that of the franchise agreements.
. This may not be true for the four franchises for which A & F leases the buildings directly from third parties. See supra note 2. The lease addendum says that "the anticipated use of the Demised Premises is the conduct of an ... IHOP [rjestaurant,” but doesn’t make clear that an alternate use would constitute a breach. This, and the fact that the lease is with a third party, may make the substantive result different for these restaurants. We don't need to decide this now, however, because as long as A & F has a likelihood of success with regard to many of the franchises, and the balance of harms tips in its favor, a stay is warranted.
. A & F suggests that the appeal will be mooted if the franchises were sold, preventing them from even recovering damages. A & F doesn’t cite any authority for this, and we doubt that it is correct. See In re Res. Tech. Corp.,
