ORDER DENYING MOTION TO ASSUME AND ASSIGN UNEXPIRED LEASE
THIS MATTER came before the Court for hearing on August 19, 2011, on the Chapter 11 Trustee for Prestige Motorcar Gallery, Inc.’s Motion for Approval of the Assumption and Assignment of an Unexpired Lease (“Motion”) to Napleton’s Tallahassee Imports, LLC pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365(a). Craig Hornsby, a party in interest, filed an objection to the Motion and suggested that the Trustee does not have the legal right to assume and assign the lease. This is a core proceeding and jurisdiction is proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(A).
BACKGROUND
Prestige Motorcar Gallery, Inc. (“Debt- or”) filed a petition for relief under Chapter 11 on January 6, 2011. The Debtor is a new and used car dealership that operates in Tallahassee, Florida. Joseph Luz-
An auction sale, held by the trustee, of a majority of the Debtor’s assets, took place on June 3, 2011, in which the main dealership property and assets were sold to Na-pleton’s Tallahassee Imports (“Napleton”) with a winning bid of $1.5 million. Prior to the auction sale, Napleton and Hornsby negotiated over the sale of the property, but were unable to reach an agreement.
I entered an order on May 5, 2011, granting the Trustee’s Motion to Approve the Form of the Asset Purchase Agreement (“APA”) and other Motions regarding the auction sale (Doc. 143). The APA in paragraph 2.1(c) states that the' Seller shall sell to the Purchaser “the Seller’s rights and privileges under certain contracts or agreements, including vendor service contracts, distribution contracts, leases ... as more specifically identified on Schedule 2.1(c).” (Doc. 132). Schedule 2.1(c), attached to the APA, is titled “Assumed Contracts,” and “NONE” is listed. The order I entered approving the APA states in paragraph 20 that the “Trustee shall seek approval of the Court at the Sale Approval Hearing to assume and assign to the Prevailing Bidder the Dealer Agreement, as well as any executory contract or unexpired lease identified in the APA.” (Doc. 143). The order approving the auction sale to Napleton was entered on June 14, 2011. Paragraph 5 of the sale order states “no executory contract or unexpired lease of the Debtor shall be assumed and assigned to the purchaser. The Trustee may seek to assume additional executory contracts, but will do so upon separate motion.” (Doc. 170). On July 5, 2011, the Trustee filed the Motion at issue here seeking to assume and assign the unexpired lease of the adjacent property to Napleton. Up until this point and throughout the sale process, the lease of the adjacent property, although clearly part of the dealership, was never included in any of the sale documents as property to be sold or transferred.
Hornsby has objected to the Motion arguing that (1) the Trustee does not have the legal right to assume or assign the lease; (2) the Trustee has waived assuming or assigning the lease; and (3) the purported lease is not an executory contract that can be assumed or assigned. (Doc. 211). A basis of Hornsby’s objection to the assumption and assignment of the lease is that the lease is invalid because it was originally signed by Hornsby in his individual capacity, and not by the trustees of the Hornsbys’ individual trusts. Thus, Hornsby argues, he did not have the legal right to lease the adjacent property.
The Trustee responds that because the lease was not listed in the Debtor’s schedules, the lease was only discovered by the Trustee during the sale process. The Trustee contends that the assumption and assignment of the lease to Napleton would relieve the estate from paying any amounts curing the arrearage from the
DISCUSSION
The issue presented here is whether I should approve the Trustee’s decision to now assume and assign the lease of the adjacent property to Napleton. Section 365 of the Bankruptcy Code gives the trustee, subject to the court’s approval, authority to “assume or reject any executory contract or unexpired lease of the debtor.” 11 U.S.C. § 365(a). The policy behind Section 365 is that the trustee is empowered to make decisions that assist in the debtor’s reorganization and benefit the estate.
See In re Government Securities Corp.,
[The assignees in an “assignment in bankruptcy”] were not bound ... to accept property of an onerous and unprofitable nature, which would burden instead of benefit the estate, and they could elect whether they would accept or not, after due consideration and within a reasonable time ...
In re Talley,
at 221 (quoting
Sparhawk v. Yerkes,
I discussed the 11th Circuit’s process of reviewing the trustee’s decision to assume or reject an executory contract in
In re Weaver Oil Company, Inc.,
and found that the court should give perfunctory approval of the decision of the trustee subject only to review of the business judgment rule. No. 08-40379-LMK,
As to the Trustee’s argument that the Trustee was not aware that there was a lease on the adjacent property until the sale process because the Debtor did not include the lease in the schedules, I find that the Trustee and Napleton should have been aware that this property could have been included with the sale under the APA. Through the sale process, the parcel at issue, although clearly part of the dealership, was never included in the property to be sold or transferred. By virtue of the fact that the parcel was a part of the dealership, the parties should have been on notice that the property could have been dealt with under the APA.
Napleton was originally unable to come up with a deal for this property with Hornsby. In a move to accommodate Na-pleton after the sale, the Trustee filed the Motion to assume and assign the unexpired lease. Paragraph 5 of the order approving the sale to Napleton states that the Trustee may seek to assume additional executory contracts upon a separate motion, but does not include unexpired leases. Further, the Trustee failed to meet the burden of showing a benefit to the estate other than the avoidance of a rejection claim by Hornsby.
See In re Weaver Oil Company, Inc.,
No. 08-40379-LMK,
ORDERED and ADJUDGED that the Trustee’s Motion for Approval of the Assumption and Assignment of an Unexpired Lease to Napleton’s Tallahassee Imports, LLC (Doc. 183) is DENIED.
DONE and ORDERED.
