OPINION
In this condemnation proceeding, appellant, Motiva Enterprises, LLC (“Motiva”), challenges the trial court’s summary judgment granted in favor of appellees, Audeen McCrabb, Norma Ann Euton, Connie Mendez, Tom Mendez, Kirk McCrabb, Kathy McCrabb, Scott McCrabb, Sarah McCrabb, Joseph McCrabb, and Rebecca McCrabb (“the McCrabbs”), awarding the McCrabbs $304,000 for the value of 7,677 square feet of land actually condemned. In its sole issue, Motiva contends that the trial court erred in determining that Moti-
We affirm.
Factual and Procedural Background
In 1971, Motiva, through Shell Oil Company, entered into a long-term ground lease with the McCrabbs for the purpose of operating a gas station and convenience store. Article 14 of the lease, in relevant part, provides,
If all of the Demised Premises shall be condemned or taken by lawful authority or if such portion of the premises be so condemned or taken making it unreasonable or imprudent to use the remaining portion for its intended use, this lease shall terminate as of the date when possession is required to be given in such condemnation. The rent shall be adjusted to such date and all further rights and liabilities of the parties under this lease shall terminate, except that Tenant shall be entitled to receive out of the proceeds of such condemnation the amount attributed to any of the following: buildings or other improvements installed on the Demised Premises by Tenant; any damages to Tenant’s personal property resulting from said condemnation; removal or relocation costs of Tenant’s anticipated business proceeds lost to Tenant; or any special damages of Tenant.
(emphasis added).
On behalf of the Texas Transportation Commission, the State filed a petition to condemn and acquire 7,677 square feet of the 27,086 square foot tract of land, owned by the McCrabbs and leased to Motiva, for the expansion of the Katy Freeway. The special commissioners appointed by the trial court in the condemnation proceeding found the value of the condemned property to be $1,705,000, and the State deposited that amount into the registry of the court on November 7, 2005, thus establishing the date of the taking in this case. Motiva determined that the remaining portion of the property was not suitable for continued use as a gas station and chose to terminate the lease.
Motiva and the McCrabbs both filed objections to the award of the special commissioners, thus converting the case into a judicial proceeding. See Tex. Prop.Code Ann. § 21.018 (Vernon 2004). The McCrabbs filed a cross-claim for declaratory judgment, seeking a determination from the trial court that the lease between the parties terminated by its own terms on November 7, 2005 and that Motiva was not entitled to any additional compensation for its “leasehold advantage.” 1 Motiva filed a general denial and cross-claim against the McCrabbs, seeking a declaration of its entitlement to compensation for its leasehold interest in the property under article 14 of the lease.
The parties then filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The trial court denied Motiva’s motion for summary judgment and rendered a final judgment in favor of the McCrabbs. It concluded that Motiva owned the improvements to the land and was entitled to recover the $1,401,000 of the compensation allocated for those improvements, the McCrabbs were entitled to recover the remaining $804,000 allocated for the land, and Motiva was not entitled to any compensation for its “leasehold advantage” under the terms of the lease.
Standard of Review
To prevail on a summary judgment motion, a movant has the burden of proving
“Special Damages”
In its sole issue, Motiva argues that, based on its reservation of the right to recover its “special damages,” it is entitled to “recover its damages for its lost leasehold,” i.e., the market value of its leasehold interest in the property under the ground lease. The McCrabbs argue that because Motiva’s leasehold rights terminated on November 7, 2005, Motiva is not entitled to compensation for future benefits under the lease. They also assert that the general reference in the lease to “special damages” in regard to Motiva’s reserved rights upon the termination of the lease does not overcome Motiva’s specific, contractual relinquishment of its leasehold rights that occurred upon condemnation.
Under Texas law, parties have a right to contract for termination of a lease in the event of condemnation.
J.R. Skillern, Inc. v. leVison,
In
Texaco Refining & Marketing,
Crown had leased to Texaco 22,500 feet of land at $975 per month for fifteen years, with options to renew for two additional five-year terms.
Id.
at 341. The lease provided that it was solely Texaco’s option to terminate the lease in the event of condemnation.
Id.
at 342. After the condemnation award was filed in the county court, Texaco exercised its option to extend the lease for five years and reserved the right to exercise any future options.
Id.
at 341. Thereafter, Texaco tendered monthly rent to Crown, but Crown refused
In
Evans Prescription Pharmacy, Inc. v. County of Ector,
the owners of a commercial building in Odessa, Texas, had entered into a ten-year lease agreement with a pharmacy.
Texaco Refining & Marketing
and
Evans Prescription Pharmacy
are illustrative of two well-settled principles when dealing with a leasehold interest that has been subjected to condemnation: (1) when a lease does not terminate upon condemnation, unless a lessee has waived the right, a lessee has the right to share in the condemnation award with the lessor; and (2) when a lease does automatically terminate upon condemnation, a lessee has no com-pensable interest.
See, e.g., Texaco Ref. & Mktg., Inc.,
Here, the lease does not define the term “special damages.” In construing a written contract, the primary concern of the court is to ascertain the true intentions of the parties as expressed in the instrument.
Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
Motiva argues that “[b]ecause damages to a leasehold are ‘special damages’ in a condemnation case as a matter of law, Motiva was entitled to recover its damages for the reasonable value of its leasehold interest in the land.” In other words, “all of the damages to be paid by the State, including the proceeds attributable to the land taken, are ‘special damages’ and would be subject to Motiva’s reservation in the ground lease.” However, “special damages” is actually a term of art used in condemnation proceedings.
The Texas Constitution provides that “[n]o person’s property shall be taken, damaged or destroyed for or applied to public use without adequate com
In contrast, under the common law, actual damages can either be “direct damages,” also known as “general damages,” which compensate for the loss, damage, or injury conclusively presumed to have been foreseen or contemplated by a party as a consequence of a breach of contract or wrongful act, or “consequential damages,” also known as “special damages,” which result naturally, but not necessarily, from the acts complained of.
See Henry S. Miller Co. v. Bynum,
Motiva argues that damages to its leasehold, or “leasehold advantage,” are “special damages as that term is understood under the common law” because “damages to a leasehold ... are distinct from these ‘general damages’ that typically result from a condemnation,” such as the damages to a fee owner for the taking of his property. However, Motiva does not cite any authority suggesting that the inclusion in a lease agreement of the phrase “special damages” in regard to reserved rights upon termination of a lease entitles a lessee to recover from a lessor its lost future “leasehold advantage” after the lease is terminated.
Here, the lease agreement specifically provided that the lease itself would “terminate as of the date when possession is required to be given” in condemnation. Because the lease automatically terminated upon condemnation, Motiva had no compensable interest in regard to the termination of the lease.
See Texaco Ref. & Mktg., Inc.,
We overrule Motiva’s sole issue.
Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. Motiva refers to the difference between the contract rent that it was required to pay under the ground lease and the market value of the lease as its “leasehold advantage.”
