ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
On March 29, 2006, plaintiff Usha Anand filed this action against defendant BP West Coast Products LLC (“BP”) and certain fictitious defendants. Plaintiff was formerly a party to an ARCO service station franchise agreement with defendant. She alleges that defendant violated the Petroleum Marketing Practices Act (“PMPA”), 15 U.S.C. §§ 2801-2806, by failing to renew the agreement in bad faith and outside of the normal course of business, and by subsequently selling the service station to her at a price above its fair market value. She seeks compensatory damages, punitive damages, attorney’s fees and costs, as well as declaratory relief. On March 5, 2007, defеndant filed a motion for summary judgment.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Anand is a former ARCO service station dealer, whose am/pm MINI-Market and PMPA Franchise Agreements with defendant BP expired on April 1, 2005. 1 *1091 Anand’s service station and the land on which it was situated were owned by BP. 2 In August 2004, as part of its “L.A. Network Plan,” BP decided to cease doing business at plaintiffs location and sell the property, both because there was another ARCO am/pm location nearby and because BP would have had to make a substantial investment in the station to bring it up to current BP standards. 3 As a result, on August 26, 2004, BP sent a notice of franchise non-renewal to Anand via certified mail. The nоtice stated that the franchise agreements would not be renewed when they expired on April 1, 2005, and that she would receive either a sales offer from BP or be given a right of first refusal regarding third-party offers for sale. 4
BP then commissioned an independent MAI appraiser 5 to value plaintiffs station and — consistent with that appraisal — offered to sell the station to Anand for $1,131,000. BP sent Anand a standard form agreement for the sale of service stations to franchisees. 6 The sales agreement contained, inter alia, the following provisions: (1) a mineral reservation, under which BP retained the rights to any minerals, oil, gas, or other hydrocarbon substances below a depth of 500 feet; and (2) a waiver of clаims for delay or termination, under which Anand waived any claims against BP arising from termination of the sales agreement or delay in closing escrow due to the discovery before closing of environmental contamination on the property. 7 The agreement also obligated Anand to execute and deposit into escrow a “Declaration of Environmental Restriction and Other Environmental Covenant and Condition,” 8 under which, inter alia, she (1) waived all claims against BP arising from the presence of any environmentally hazardous materials on the property; (2) agreed, for a period of twenty-five years, not to excavate any soil at a depth *1092 greater than four feet in certain designated “Restricted Areas” on the property, i.e., locations where underground petroleum storage tanks were located or had previously been located, and where the station’s above-ground “dispenser island” was located; and (3) agreed not to install any new underground petroleum storage tanks in the “Restricted Areas,” other than replacements for the existing underground storage tanks. 9
After receiving BP’s offer, Anand applied for a purchase money loan from Citicorp, which commissioned its own appraiser to value the property; 10 that appraiser concluded that the raw land, real property improvements, and other equipment at the site were worth $l,560,000. 11 Thereafter, on June 3, 2005, plaintiffs husband commissioned a third appraiser to value the station; he found that the real property and attendant equipment had a value of $950,000. 12
*1093 II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard Governing Motions For Summary Judgment
A motion
for summary
judgment must be granted when “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” FED.R.CIV.PROC. 56(c). A party seeking summary judgment bears the initial burden of informing the court of the basis for its motion and of identifying those portions of the pleadings and discovery responses that demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. See
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
In judging evidence at the summary judgment stage, the court does not make credibility determinations or weigh conflicting evidence. Rather, it draws all inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See
T.W. Electrical Service, Inc. v. Pacific Electrical Contractors Ass’n,
B. Application Of The PMPA
“Recognizing the vast disparity in bargaining power between franchisors and franchisees in the petroleum industry, Congress enacted the PMPA in an attempt to level the playing field on which these parties interact.”
Beachler v. Amoco Oil Co.,
The provisions of the PMPA must “be liberally construed consistent with the goal of protecting franchisees.”
Afir v. Exxon Corp.,
1. Whether BP’s Non-Renewal Decision Was Made in Good Faith and in the Normal Course of Business
“Under the PMPA, the franchisee has the initial burden of proving that his franchisе was not renewed. The burden then shifts to the franchisor to demonstrate that the non-renewal was proper under the PMPA. The PMPA prohibits the termination or non-renewal of any gasoline industry franchise unless ‘such termination [or non-renewal] is based upon a ground’ described in the PMPA.”
Reyes v. Atlantic Richfield Co.,
There is no dispute that BP did not renew its franchise agreement with Anand. As a result, BP bears the burden of establishing that its non-renewal was proper under the PMPA. To meet this burden, BP has adduced the declaration of Jeff Cary, BP’s Regional Portfolio Manager, who was personally involved in the company’s decision to divest itself of Anand’s service station.
13
Cary states that the non-renewal was prompted by BP’s good-faith determination that the station was a “non-strategic asset,” due both to the fact that it was near another ARCO am/pm location and to the substantial investment that would have been required to bring the station into compliance with current BP standards.
14
Cary asserts that the decision was made “as part of [BP’s] routine business planning,” and was based on a 2004 “periodic review” of the company’s Los Angeles area service station network (the “L.A. Network Plan”).
15
Anand has adduced no evidence controverting Cary’s assertions.
16
As a result, the evidence presented establishes that BP decided not to renew the franchise in good faith and in the normal сourse of business, and a reasonable trier of fact could not con-elude otherwise. The court accordingly adjudicates this issue in BP’s favor. Cf.
BP West Coast Products LLC,
In opposition to defendant’s motion, plaintiff argues — without citation to authority — that BP’s decision
not
to sell the rights to the minerals beneath the station, as well as its inclusion of various waivers and restrictions in the Sales Agreement, raises a triable issue of fact as to whether its decision to sell the station was made in good faith and in the normal course of business.
17
The court does not agree. No reasonable trier of fact could conclude that BP’s stated economic reasons for selling the station were pretextual simply because it retained the rights to the minerals be
*1096
neath the station or because it included various waivers and restrictions in the Sales Agreement. Consequently, this argument does not alter the court’s view that it is appropriate to adjudicate whether BP’s non-renewal was made “in good faith and in the normal cоurse of business” summarily. Cf.
BP West Coast Products LLC,
2. Whether BP’s Offer to Sell the Station Was “Bona Fide”
Whether a bona fide offer has been made “is measured by an objective market standard. To be objectively reasonable, an offer must ‘approach[] fair market value.’ ”
Ellis,
Because a range of prices may reasonably be found to approach fair market value, the mere fact that the parties have submitted competing appraisals and/or offers does not necessarily preclude the entry of summary judgment in one party’s favor. See, e.g.,
Rhodes,
To evaluate whether BP’s offering price approached the fair market value of Anand’s station, therefore, the court must review the evidence in the record to determine, given the specific dynamics of the property market in which the station is located, what range of prices might be considered reasonably to approximate fair market value. Cf.
Rhodes,
Defendant argues that its offering price of $1,131,000, which was based on the Key Appraisal, falls with the range of “a reasonable fair market value determination,” given that the Williams Appraisal valued the property at $950,000, while the Hopkins Appraisal valued it $1,560,000. 19 Defendant asserts that Anand’s own appraiser, Eve Williams, conceded at deposition that BP’s offered price fell within the reasonable range of fair market values. 20 Anand counters that, as a matter of law, “fair grounds for litigation exist[ ] and the question [of reasonableness] must be submitted to a jury when the difference in competing [appraisal] values is in excess of ten to fifteen percent.” 21 Because the Key Appraisal is nineteen percent higher than the Williams Appraisal, Anand argues that she has raised a triable issue of fact as to whether the offering price approached the fair market value of the station. 22 Anand also argues that BP’s reservation of mineral rights and other waivers and restrictions in the Sales Agreement render the offer not “bona fide,” as that term is used in the PMPA, “because [BP] has not transferred 100% of its interest in the premises.” 23
Having reviewed the undisputed evidence in the record, the court concludes that defendant’s offering price of $1,131,000 approached the fair market value of the station. This price, which was based on the Key Appraisal, is not substantially different from the Williams Appraisal’s valuation of $950,000; depending on which valuation is used as a baseline, the spread between the two appraisals ($181,000) constitutes a differential of merely sixteen
24
or nineteen
25
percent. Given the relatively insubstantial size of the differential, both Anand’s and BP’s expert appraisеrs testified that each ap
*1098
praisal could be said to represent the fair market value of Anand’s station. In her deposition, for example, Williams, Anand’s appraiser, admitted that there is “[n]ot a chance, most of the time,” that two competent MAI appraisers will arrive at “pretty-much the same value” for a commercial property.
26
With respect to gas stations in particular, Williams testified that different estimates of the depreciation of a station’s fixtures and equipment may lead to “fairly substantial” differences in two competent appraisals for even “a fairly small piece of real estate,” i.e., differences of a “couple of hundred grand.”
27
Defendant’s expert appraiser likewise states that, “given the nature of the appraisals performed,” differences “as much as 20 percent or more” could separate two competent appraisals.
28
From this testimony, the court concludes that both the Key Appraisal and the Williams Appraisal fell with the range of values that have a “reasonable claim[ ] to being [i.e., approaching] fair market value,”
Slatky,
In opposition to defendant’s motion, plaintiff argues that the PMPA obligated BP to offer to “transfer! ] 100% of its interest in the [station] premises” before its offer could be considered “bona fide,” and that the mineral reservation (as well as the waivers and restrictions in the Sales Agreement) show that BP’s offer was not bona fide as a matter of law.
30
Plaintiff is incorrect. The PMPA does not require a franchisor to offer 100% of its interest in a gas station to the franchisee to make a “bona fide” offer. Instead, the law requires only that the franchisor’s offer еnable the franchisee “to continue operating [her] facility as a service station if [she] exercise[s][her] right to buy.”
Ellis,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons stated, defendant’s motion for summary judgment is granted. Given the court’s resolution of this motion, there is no longer any live controversy between BP and Anand regarding BP’s non-renewal decision and the bona fide nature of its offer to sell the station. As a result, the court dismisses BP’s counterclaim for declaratory relief as moot. Defendant seeks an award of attorneys’ fees pursuаnt to 15 U.S.C. § 2805(d)(3), which authorizes the court, in its discretion, to award attorney’s fees if it deems plaintiffs action frivolous. The court declines to find that the action was frivolous and therefore denies defendant’s request for an award of fees.
Notes
. Statement of Uncontroverted Facts and Conclusions of Law in Support of BP West Coast Products LLC’s Motion for Summary Judgment, or Alternatively, for Summary Adjudication of Plaintiff Usha Anand's First and Second Claims for Relief ("Def.’s Facts”), ¶ 1; Statement of Genuine Issues and Uncontro-verted Facts in Support of Plaintiff's Opposition to BP West Coast Products LLC's Motion for Summary Judgment, or Alternatively, for *1091 Summary Adjudication of Plaintiff Usha Anand's First and Second Claims for Relief ("PL’s Facts”), ¶ 1.
. Def.’s Facts, ¶ 1; PL's Facts, ¶ 1.
. Def.’s Facts, ¶ 2; PL’s Facts, ¶ 2.
. Def.’s Facts, ¶ 3; PL’s Facts, ¶ 3.
. "Real estate appraisers, like professionals in some other industries, may earn from private associations 'unofficial' designations and certifications which serve as extra indicators of their prowess. An appraiser need not earn any of these designations to work in this field, but many appraisers find them useful for attracting business and some appraisers earn more than one.”
Appraisers Coalition v. Appraisal Institute,
No. 93 C 913,
. Def.’s Facts, ¶ 4 (citing, inter alia, Declaration of Jeff Cary in Support of BP West Coast Products LLC's Motion for Summary Judgment, or Alternatively, Motion for Summary Adjudiсation ("Cary Decl.”), Exhibit B: Limited Appraisal/Summary Report prepared by Herron Companies for Bradley A. Lindskog, Real Estate Manager, BP Arco West Coast Business Unit ("Key Appraisal”)); PL’s Facts, ¶ 4. In fact, the appraiser valued the station property, improvements, and equipment at $1,175,000; this figure included $44,000 for certain equipment that was not being sold, however. (Def.’s Facts, ¶ 4; PL’s Facts, ¶ 4.)
. Cary Decl., Exhibit D: Agreement for PMPA Sale of Real Estate to Nonrenewed Lessee Dealer Accepting BP’s Bona Fide Offer To Sale ("Sales Agreement”), §§ 4, 12.9
. Id., §§ 7.2(a), 12.4
. Id., §§ 3, 6.2-5.
. Def.’s Facts, ¶ 5. Plaintiff has asserted evi-dentiary objections to paragraph fivе of defendant’s statement of uncontroverted facts. Her objections (which the court overrules infra ) are not directed to this fact, however. In addition, the deposition testimony of plaintiff’s husband, Narinder Anand, which defendant has submitted in support of its motion for summary judgment, supports a finding that this fact is uncontroverted. (Declaration of Kurt Osenbaugh in Support of BP West Coast Products LLC’s Motion for Summary Judgment, or Alternatively, Motion for Summary Adjudication ("Osenbaugh Decl.”), Exhibit E: Deposition of Narinder Anand ("Anand Depo.’’) at 54:22-55:25.) The court therefore considers the fact undisputed.
. Def.'s Facts, ¶5 (citing Osenbauch Deck, Exhibit B: Complete Appraisal and Self-Contained Report prepared by Hopkins Appraisal Services for Trish Hullen, Citicorp Leasing, Inc., ("Hopkins Appraisal"), and Anand Depo. at 54:22-55:25). Plaintiff asserts three objections to admission of the Hopkins Appraisal: (1) that the appraisal is hearsay; (2) that it is not properly authenticated; and (3) that it is irrelevant. None of these objections has merit. First, the Hopkins Appraisal is not hearsay, because it is not being offered for the truth of the matters stated (e.g., that the actual value of Anand's station at the time of the appraisal was $1,560,000), but merely to prove that thе appraisal was conducted. Second, the Hopkins Appraisal is properly authenticated, as Anand produced it to defendant during discovery. (See Osenbaugh Deck, ¶ 3.) Documents produced in response to discovery requests are admissible on a motion for summary judgment since they are self-authenticating and constitute the admissions of a party opponent. See
Architectural Iron Worlcers Local No. 63 Welfare Fund
v.
United Contractors, Inc.,
.Def.’s Facts, ¶ 6; Ph's Facts, ¶ 6. In her report, this appraiser stated that the appraisal was "intended ... to assist [Narinder Anand] and his attorney in their negotiations with [BP]” of the offering price for the station (see Osenbaugh Deck, Exhibit A: Summary Appraisal Report prepared by Eve D. Williams, MAI for Nick Anand ("Williams Appraisal”) at 1). Anand’s husband insists, however, that he commissioned the is third appraisal "to determine whether [BP's] offered purchase рrice was fair” (see Declaration of Narinder *1093 Anand in Support of Plaintiffs Opposition to BP West Coast Products LLC's Motion for Summary Judgment, or Alternatively, Motion for Summary Adjudication of Plaintiff Usha Anand’s First and Second Claims for Relief, ¶ 4). The reason Anand and her husband commissioned the Williams Appraisal is immaterial to resolution of defendant's motion for summary judgment.
. Cary Decl., ¶ 1.
. Id., ¶ 2.
. Id.
. Indeed, both Anand and her husband admitted at deposition that they know of no information suggesting that BP’s decision to sell the franchise was made in bad faith or outside the normal course of business. (See Osenbauch Decl., Exhibit D: Deposition of Usha Anand, at 24:13-25:7; Anand Depo. at 39:4-21.) In fact, Anand’s husband conceded that the sole reason he had his wife file this action against BP was his belief that the price she paid for the station was too high, not because BP’s decision to sell was improper under the PMPA. (Anand Depo. at 76:16-21.)
.See Pl.’s Opp. at 3.
. Given the clarity and consistency with which this “objective reasonableness” standard has been articulated by courts within and outside the Ninth Circuit, the court cannot accept BP’s repeated assertion (see Def.’s Mem at 7, 9) that its subjective belief regarding the fair market value of Anad’s station is relevant in determining whether its offering price was "bona fide” under the PMPA.
. Id. at 8-10.
. Id. at 10.
. Pl.’s Opp. at 4 (citing
Kamel v. Equilon Enterprises LLC,
No. CV 00-10433 MMM (Ex), Slip. Op. at 21-22 (Morrow, J.) (Unpub. Disp. filed Jan. 8, 2002), in turn citing
Rhodes,
.Id. at 5.
. Id. at 3.
. The Williams Appraisal is sixteen percent less than the Key Appraisal, as indicated by the following calculation: 181,000/1,131,000 = 0.160.
. The Key Appraisal is nineteen percent more than the Williams Appraisal, as indicated by the following calculation: 181,000/950,-000 = 0.191.
. Osenbaugh Dec!., Exhibit C: Deposition of Eve D. Williams, at 14:18-21.
. Id. at 16:19-17:6. The differences in the Key Appraisal and the Williams Appraisal are, as Williams' testimony suggested, almost entirely the result of differences in the two experts' valuation of the depreciation of the building- and site-improvements at the premises. Both experts arrived at nearly equivalent valuations of the raw value of the land (Williams: $685,000; Key: $689,000) as well as the depreciated value of the station equipment (Williams: $175,000; Key: $181,000). (See Williams Appraisal at 50; Key Appraisal at 31-32.) Williams, however, depreciated the station’s building- and site-improvements at a rate of 75% (i.e., Williams concluded that 3/4ths of the useful lives of both building- and site-improvements had passed), while Key depreciated the station’s building improvements at 30% and the station's site improvements at 50%. (See Williams Appraisal at 46; Key Appraisal at 27, 31-32.) This resulted in vastly different valuations of the station's combined building- and site-improvements (Key: $90,000; Williams: $261,000). (Sеe Williams Appraisal at 48; Key Appraisal at 31-32.) Indeed, the difference in the two experts’ valuations of the building- and site-improvements constitutes ninety-four percent of the total differential between the appraisals.
. Declaration of Jeffrey M. Key, MAI in Support of BP West Coast Products LLC’s Motion for Summary Judgment, or Alternatively, Motion for Summary Adjudication of Plaintiff Usha Anand's First and Second Claims for Relief, ¶ 2.
. This conclusion is reinforced when one considers that the Hopkins Appraisal, obtained after BP made its offer of sale in connection with Anand’s application for a purchase money loan, estimated the property’s value at $1,560,000, some $429,000 more than the price BP offered to Anand.
. PL's Opp. at 3.
