In the Matter of AUSTIN DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, Debtor. EASTOVER BANK FOR SAVINGS, Appellant, v. SOWASHEE VENTURE, et al., Appellees, v. AUSTIN DEVELOPMENT COMPANY and J.C. Bell, Trustee, Appellees.
No. 93-7127.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
May 3, 1994.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi. Before HIGGINBOTHAM, DAVIS, and JONES, Circuit Judges.
EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
The debtor was a lessee under a ground lease and sublessor of a movie theater it built; it assigned its interest in the ground lease and the theater‘s income stream to a bank as security for various loans. During its Chapter 11 proceeding, the debtor‘s inaction led to an automatic rejection of its ground lease.
BACKGROUND
The facts in this case are straightforward. Austin Development Company (Austin) entered
On January 2, 1991 Austin filed for reorganization under Chapter 11. Austin did not assume the Sowashee ground lease within 60 days after it filed its bankruptcy petition, nor did Eastover file a motion to compel Austin to assume or reject. Sowashee thereupon filed a motion and complaint requesting that the bankruptcy court terminate 1) Austin‘s interest as lessee in the ground lease, 2) Eastover‘s deed of trust on Austin‘s leasehold interest, and 3) Eastover‘s interest in the sublease with R & S. Eastover‘s counterclaim asked the bankruptcy court to order Sowashee to enter into a ground lease with Eastover, as provided for under paragraph 21 of the ground lease. That lengthy “paragraph” granted Austin permission to mortgage all or part of its leasehold estate and granted any future leasehold mortgagee numerous rights as a third-party beneficiary of the ground lease. These creditor rights, similar to those found in nondisturbance agreements between landlords and leasehold mortgagees, included: 1) a requirement that the parties to the ground lease obtain the leasehold mortgagee‘s written consent prior to cancellation, surrender, or modification of the ground lease; 2) the right to cure lessee‘s defaults; 3) the right, if termination were to be declared by the landlord, to nullify the termination or indefinitely postpone it by curing all conditions of default; and 4) the right, if termination were to be realized, of the leasehold mortgagee to enter into a new lease with the landlord on the same terms as the terminated lease.
The bankruptcy court found for Sowashee and against Eastover in all respects. It ruled that
DISCUSSION
The question presented in this case is what it means when a debtor as a lessee of nonresidential real property fails within 60 days after filing a Chapter 11 case to assume an unexpired lease. Under
This question, although arising infrequently, has generated starkly conflicting opinions among the bankruptcy courts.3 The bankruptcy and district courts here relied upon the line of cases that construe rejection under
Flawed by their failure to analyze
Turning to
The decision to reject is thus not correctly viewed as a “power to breach” the executory contract or lease. As one commentator put it,
[w]hat the estate‘s representative is rejecting is the contract or lease asset, which conceivably could carry continuing obligations with it into the estate on an administrative basis. Rejection simply prevents the estate from unadvisedly stepping into such liabilities. The liabilities are not repudiated; to the contrary, as the rejection-as-breach doctrine is designed to insure, the contract or lease liabilities remain intact after rejection and give the non-debtor party a claim in the distribution of the estate.
Andrew, supra at 883 (footnote omitted).
Further, Congress knew how to authorize the termination of executory contracts and leases in
It is also worth pointing out, as several courts have done, that breach and termination of leases or executory contracts are not synonymous terms under state law. See e.g., In re Storage Technology, supra; In re Picnic ‘N Chicken, Inc., 58 B.R. 523, 525 (Bankr.S.D.Cal.1986) (California law); Resolution Trust Corp. v. Cramer, 6 F.3d 1102, 1108 (5th Cir.1993) (describing options available to landlords under Texas law). Congress could have chosen to depart from the state law meanings of these terms, but taken as a whole,
The cases that equate rejection with lease termination under
If, notwithstanding the foregoing discussion, a
For these reasons, we conclude that a debtor‘s inaction in timely deciding to assume or reject a lease of nonresidential real property under
As applied to the case at hand,
Because the lease did not terminate upon its deemed rejection, Eastover retained rights in it against Sowashee as a third-party beneficiary of ¶ 21 of the Austin-Sowashee lease. The extent of Eastover‘s rights, an issue not adjudicated below, should be decided in state court, because after rejection the debtor‘s estate had no remaining interest in the outcome of that controversy, which is
CONCLUSION
The judgments of the district and bankruptcy courts are REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
[I]f the trustee does not assume or reject an unexpired lease of nonresidential real property under which the debtor is the lessee within 60 days after the date of the order for relief, or within such additional time as the court, for cause, within such 60-day period, fixes, then such lease is deemed rejected, and the trustee shall immediately surrender such nonresidential real property to the lessor.
