AAC HP Realty v. Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. ( 2019 )


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  • AAC HP Realty, LLC v. Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. Restaurants, Inc., No. 1076, Sept.
    Term, 2018. Opinion by Arthur, J.
    QUASI-CONTRACT – UNJUST ENRICHMENT – PRESENCE OF AN EXPRESS
    CONTRACT
    Generally, a quasi-contractual claim cannot arise when an express contract exists between
    the parties concerning the same subject matter on which the quasi-contractual claim rests.
    Potential exceptions to this prevailing rule include when there is evidence of fraud or bad
    faith in the formation of the contract or when the express contract does not fully address
    the subject matter of the quasi-contractual claim.
    In this case, the trial court erred in relying on those exceptions to award the plaintiff
    damages on its claim for unjust enrichment, despite a lease between the plaintiff and the
    defendant. The trial court found that the defendant acted in bad faith when it breached
    the lease, but did not find that the defendant acted in bad faith upon entering into the
    contract. Further, the lease fully addressed the consequences of defendant’s breach and
    provided the plaintiff with an adequate remedy of damages for breach of contract.
    Therefore, a claim of unjust enrichment was unavailable to the plaintiff.
    Circuit Court for Baltimore City
    Case No. 24-C-16-005889
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1076
    September Term, 2018
    ______________________________________
    AAC HP REALTY, LLC,
    V.
    BUBBA GUMP SHRIMP CO.
    RESTAURANTS, INC.
    ______________________________________
    Arthur,
    Leahy,
    Kenney, James A., III
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Arthur, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: October 31, 2019
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2019-10-31 13:24-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. Restaurants, Inc. (“Bubba Gump”), filed suit against
    AAC HP Realty, LLC (“AAC”), alleging that AAC breached its obligation to maintain
    the common areas under a comprehensive written lease between the parties. After a
    bench trial, the Circuit Court for Baltimore City found that AAC breached the lease and
    awarded Bubba Gump damages for certain out-of-pocket costs and attorney’s fees, as
    provided in the lease. The circuit court, however, denied Bubba Gump’s demand for lost
    profits, because Bubba Gump had failed to prove those damages with reasonable
    certainty. Nonetheless, the circuit court went on to award Bubba Gump an “equitable
    rent reduction” on a quasi-contractual claim for unjust enrichment.
    AAC appealed the award of damages on the claim for unjust enrichment. We
    shall reverse that aspect of the judgment.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    We recount the pertinent facts in the light most favorable to Bubba Gump, the
    party that prevailed at trial. Green v. McClintock, 
    218 Md. App. 336
    , 341 (2014) (citing
    L.W. Wolfe Enters., Inc. v. Maryland Nat’l Golf, L.P., 
    165 Md. App. 339
    , 343 (2005)).
    In the spring of 2011, Bubba Gump, a seafood restaurant owned by Landry’s,
    Inc.,1 entered into a lease at Harborplace in Baltimore City with AAC’s predecessor.
    AAC acquired its interest in the lease in November 2012, about six months after Bubba
    Gump began operating at Harborplace.
    1
    Landry’s owns over 35 restaurant brands and 600 restaurants that operate across
    the country.
    The lease is over fifty pages in length, with several exhibits. It includes many
    provisions specifically defining the various rights and obligations of the landlord and
    tenant.
    Article 4 of the lease sets forth Bubba Gump’s obligation to pay a “Minimum
    Annual Rental,” in twelve, equal monthly installments, for its use and occupancy of the
    leased premises. The Minimum Annual Rental exceeds $1 million, or $83,000 a month.
    The rent is to be paid “without deduction or set-off.”
    The Minimum Annual Rental includes the “Joint Use and Operating Expenses”
    that Bubba Gump is required to pay under Article 17 of the lease. According to the
    executive who negotiated the lease on Bubba Gump’s behalf, Bubba Gump contracted to
    include these expenses in the fixed monthly rent, as opposed to paying a lower monthly
    rent and separate common-area maintenance charge.2 Bubba Gump describes those
    payments as advance payments in exchange for the landlord’s commitment to maintain
    the common areas, which are termed the “Joint Use Areas” under the lease.
    Article 17 of the lease requires AAC to keep the Joint Use Areas in “good order
    and repair.” Under Article 17, AAC, “in its sole and absolute discretion,” may
    appropriate any portion of the monthly rent toward the expenses of maintaining the Joint
    Use Areas. Those expenses, which are termed “Operating Expenses,” “consist of all
    2
    The commercial real estate industry commonly refers to these payments as
    “CAM” charges. Bubba Gump prefers to incorporate those charges into the fixed
    monthly rental to simplify its costs and to allow the company to “focus on [its] business.”
    According to Bubba Gump, the Joint Use and Operating Expenses represented about
    20.45 percent of its monthly payment obligation under the lease.
    2
    expenditures relating to operating, managing, equipping, policing, protecting, lighting,
    repairing, cleaning, replacing and maintaining the Joint Use Areas in the same or
    improved condition as when originally installed.”
    Shortly after it began its operations at Harborplace in 2012, Bubba Gump
    observed that the landlord was not maintaining the property in good order and repair. At
    trial, the restaurant presented ample evidence of poor conditions in the common areas,
    including water leaks, hanging wires, dirty bathrooms, broken concrete, chipping and
    peeling paint, escalators that did not work, planters containing trash and debris, rusted
    metal stairs, and rodent infestation.
    At first, Bubba Gump continued to pay its rent, but it implored AAC to fulfill its
    obligation to maintain the property in good order and repair. When Harborplace
    remained in a substandard state, and when the restaurant’s revenue fell below
    expectations, Bubba Gump asked AAC to reduce its monthly rent. The parties eventually
    agreed to a temporary, three-month reduction of the monthly rent, which they
    memorialized in an amendment to the lease in March 2015.
    Still unsatisfied with Harborplace’s condition, Bubba Gump began to withhold its
    rent payments in the fall of 2015. Although Bubba Gump eventually paid all of the back
    rent in September 2016, it sent a letter to AAC claiming that the landlord had breached
    the lease because of its failure to maintain the property.
    On November 7, 2016, Bubba Gump commenced this litigation. In a five-count
    amended complaint, Bubba Gump asserted claims for breach of contract, breach of the
    3
    covenant of quiet enjoyment, and unjust enrichment, a request for declaratory relief, and
    a claim for specific performance.
    During a six-day bench trial, the trial court heard testimony from several witnesses
    regarding the conditions of Harborplace during the lease term. Photographs documenting
    the deterioration of the shopping center were admitted into evidence as well. Bubba
    Gump’s expert witness testified about the poor state of the property and its effect on foot
    traffic and sales. Bubba Gump principally claimed to have suffered lost profits of
    approximately $2.5 million as a result of AAC’s breach of the obligation to keep the
    common areas in “good order and repair.”
    On June 14, 2018, the circuit court announced its decision. The court agreed that
    AAC had breached its obligations to keep the common areas in good order and repair and
    to police and protect Harborplace. The court awarded Bubba Gump $32,300 for out-of-
    pocket security costs because of AAC’s breach and $5,000 in attorney’s fees as the
    prevailing party, pursuant to Article 28 of the lease. The court, however, declined to
    award lost profits, because “too many uncertain changing conditions and a multitude of
    factors” prevented Bubba Gump from proving the damages with reasonable certainty.
    Although Bubba Gump could not satisfactorily prove the profits that it had lost
    because of the breach of contract, the circuit court went on to award Bubba Gump
    $1,096,270.51 as an “equitable rent reduction” under the unjust enrichment claim in the
    amended complaint. The circuit court arrived at this award by calculating 20.45 percent
    of Bubba Gump’s gross rent for the period from 2013 through 2017. The 20.45 percent
    figure represented the portion of the rent payment that Bubba Gump attributed to its
    4
    obligation to pay the Operating Expenses for the maintenance of the Joint Use Areas. See
    supra n.2. The court explained that it had rendered that award as an “alternative” to the
    claim for lost profits.
    In awarding the “equitable rent reduction,” the court acknowledged the general
    rule that unjust enrichment is unavailable when the parties have an enforceable contract,
    but it cited County Commissioners of Caroline County v. J. Roland Dashiell & Sons, Inc.,
    
    358 Md. 83
     (2000), for the proposition that a claim for unjust enrichment may lie when
    there is evidence of fraud or bad faith, or when an express contract does not fully address
    the subject matter. The court reasoned that AAC had acted in bad faith in failing to
    maintain Harborplace in good order and repair and that the lease does not fully address
    the remedy for breach of AAC’s obligation to maintain the property.3
    AAC noted its timely appeal thereafter. Bubba Gump did not note a cross-appeal.
    QUESTIONS PRESENTED
    AAC presents three questions for review, which we consolidate into one: Did the
    trial court err in awarding Bubba Gump an “equitable rent reduction” on its unjust
    enrichment claim, despite the presence of a lease between AAC and Bubba Gump? 4
    3
    In announcing its decision, the court mentioned § 39 of the Restatement (Third)
    of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment (2011). Section 39 applies in “exceptional cases”
    (id. comment a) in which the profits derived from a deliberate breach of contract exceed
    the potential damages that the plaintiff can recover. Cases under § 39 are rare because
    “[t]he defendant’s potential liability for incidental and consequential damages, over and
    above the cost of a substitute performance, limits the occurrence of profitable breaches
    almost to the vanishing point.” Id. comment f. Bubba Gump does not rely on § 39 to
    support the judgment below.
    4
    AAC formulated its questions as follows:
    5
    For the reasons stated herein, we shall reverse.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When a case is tried without a jury, the standard of review in this Court is
    governed by Maryland Rule 8-131(c):
    When an action has been tried without a jury, the appellate court will
    review the case on both the law and the evidence. It will not set aside the
    judgment of the trial court on the evidence unless clearly erroneous, and
    will give due regard to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the
    credibility of the witnesses.
    This Court defers to factual findings by the trial court unless they are clearly
    erroneous. Ryan v. Thurston, 
    276 Md. 390
    , 392 (1975). We review the trial court’s legal
    conclusions de novo. Goff v. State, 
    387 Md. 327
    , 337-38 (2005). The circuit court’s
    determinations that Bubba Gump could prevail on the unjust enrichment claim because of
    bad faith or because the lease did not fully address the subject matter are legal
    conclusions, which we review de novo. See Janusz v. Gilliam, 
    404 Md. 524
    , 537 (2008)
    (citing Griffin v. Bierman, 
    403 Md. 186
    , 195 (2008)). De novo review requires this Court
    1. Did the Circuit Court err in awarding Bubba Gump an “equitable rent
    reduction” on its unjust enrichment claim where there is a Lease that
    governs the relationship between AAC, as Landlord, and Bubba Gump, as
    Tenant?
    2. Did the Circuit Court err in citing bad faith as a ground for its unjust
    enrichment award to Bubba Gump where there was no bad faith as a matter
    of law?
    3. Where Bubba Gump’s unjust enrichment claims arose entirely out of the
    Lease, did the Circuit Court err in finding that the Lease did not fully
    address the remedy for the Landlord’s breach of the duty of care and
    maintenance?
    6
    to determine whether the trial court’s conclusion was “legally correct.” Walter v. Gunter,
    
    367 Md. 386
    , 392 (2002).
    DISCUSSION
    “‘[U]njust enrichment is notoriously difficult to define.’” Hill v. Cross Country
    Settlements, LLC, 
    402 Md. 281
    , 295 (2007) (quoting Daniel Friedmann, Restitution of
    Benefits Obtained Through the Appropriation of Property or the Commission of a Wrong,
    
    80 Colum. L. Rev. 504
    , 504 (1980)). For our purposes, it is sufficient to observe that
    Bubba Gump’s claim for unjust enrichment is, by all accounts, a quasi-contract claim.
    According to the Court of Appeals, a “quasi-contract” is a “‘[l]egal fiction
    invented by common law courts to permit recovery by contractual remedy in cases where,
    in fact, there is no contract, but where circumstances are such that justice warrants a
    recovery as though there had been a promise.’” County Comm’rs of Caroline Cty. v. J.
    Roland Dashiell & Sons, Inc., 
    358 Md. 83
    , 94 (2000) (quoting BLACK’S LAW
    DICTIONARY 324 (6th ed. 1990)).
    “It is not based on intention or consent of the parties, but is founded on
    considerations of justice and equity, and on doctrine of unjust enrichment.
    It is not in fact a contract, but an obligation which the law creates in
    absence of any agreement, when and because the acts of the parties or
    others have placed in the possession of one person money, or its equivalent,
    under such circumstances that in equity and good conscience he ought not
    to retain it.”
    
    Id. at 94-95
     (quoting BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY, supra, 324).
    “‘[Q]uasi-contracts are not based on the apparent intention of the parties to
    undertake the performances in question, nor are they promises.’” Id. at 95 (quoting
    7
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 4 (1981)). “‘They are obligations created by law for
    reasons of justice.’” Id. at 95 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts, supra, § 4).5
    More than three decades ago, this Court recognized “‘[t]he general rule’” that “‘no
    quasi-contractual claim can arise when a contract exists between the parties concerning
    the same subject matter on which the quasi-contractual claim rests.’” Mass Transit
    Admin. v. Granite Constr. Co., 
    57 Md. App. 766
    , 776 (1984) (quoting Industrial Lift
    Truck Serv. Corp. v. Mitsubishi Int’l Corp., 
    432 N.E.2d 999
    , 1002 (Ill. App. Ct. 1982)).
    “‘It is,’” now, “‘settled law in Maryland, and elsewhere, that a claim for unjust
    enrichment may not be brought where the subject matter of the claim is covered by an
    express contract between the parties.’” County Comm’rs of Caroline Cty. v. J. Roland
    Dashiell & Sons, Inc., 
    358 Md. at 96
     (quoting FLF, Inc. v. World Publ’ns, Inc., 
    999 F. Supp. 640
    , 642 (D. Md. 1998)); accord Janusz v. Gilliam, 
    404 Md. 524
    , 537 (2008);
    Francis O. Day Co. v. Montgomery Cnty., 
    102 Md. App. 514
    , 521 (1994), overruled on
    other grounds, Harford Cnty. v. Town of Bel Air, 
    348 Md. 363
     (1998); First Nat’l Bank v.
    Burton, Parsons & Co., 
    57 Md. App. 437
    , 451-52 (1984); Cunney v. Patrick
    Communications, LLC, 
    191 F. Supp. 3d 480
    , 502-03 (D. Md. 2016), aff’d, 703 Fed.
    App’x 204 (4th Cir. 2017) (per curiam); Swedish Civil Aviation Admin. v. Project Mgmt.
    5
    Bubba Gump asserts that its claim for unjust enrichment is equitable in nature.
    To the contrary, “[a]lthough quasi-contract is often described as ‘equitable’ and indeed
    recovery in restitution is based upon notions of justice and fairness, ‘this refers merely to
    the way in which a case should be approached, since it is clear that the action is at law
    and the relief given is a simple money judgment.’” Mass Transit Admin. v. Granite
    Constr. Co., 
    57 Md. App. 766
    , 775 (1984) (quoting 1 George E. Palmer, The Law of
    Restitution § 1.2 (1978)).
    8
    Enters., Inc., 
    190 F. Supp. 2d 785
    , 792 (D. Md. 2002); see also Ver Brycke v. Ver Brycke,
    
    379 Md. 669
    , 693 n.9 (2004) (observing that a quasi-contractual claim for unjust
    enrichment “would have been untenable” had plaintiffs argued that they had a contract
    with defendants).
    This Court has explained the law’s rationale:
    “When parties enter into a contract they assume certain risks with an
    expectation of a return. Sometimes, their expectations are not realized, but
    they discover that under the contract they have assumed the risk of having
    those expectations defeated. As a result, they have no remedy under the
    contract for restoring their expectations. In desperation, they turn to quasi-
    contract for recovery. This the law will not allow.”
    Mass Transit Admin. v. Granite Constr. Co., 57 Md. App. at 776 (quoting Indus. Lift
    Truck Serv. Corp. v. Mitsubishi Int’l Corp., 
    432 N.E.2d at 1002
    ).
    The Court of Appeals has listed four potential exceptions to the prevailing rule
    barring unjust enrichment when an enforceable contract exists. These “narrow
    exceptions”6 may apply: “when there is evidence of fraud or bad faith, there has been a
    breach of contract or a mutual recission of the contract, when recission is warranted, or
    when the express contract does not fully address a subject matter.” County Comm’rs of
    Caroline Cnty. v. J. Roland Dashiell & Sons, Inc., 
    358 Md. at 100
     (footnotes omitted);
    see also Janusz v. Gilliam, 
    404 Md. at 537
    . No reported decision applying Maryland law
    has ever upheld a judgment based on any of these exceptions.
    In this case, the circuit court relied on two of the exceptions in justifying the
    equitable reduction in rent. First, the court reasoned that AAC’s failure to comply with
    6
    Cunney v. Patrick Communications, LLC, 191 F. Supp. at 503.
    9
    its obligation to keep the property in good order and repair amounted to bad faith.
    Second, the court reasoned that the lease does not fully address the remedy for AAC’s
    breach of its obligation to keep the property in good order and repair.
    The circuit court erred in relying on the exception for bad faith. For this exception
    to apply, Bubba Gump needed evidence of bad faith or fraud in the formation of the
    contract, as opposed to the performance of the contract. See Jones v. Pohanka Auto
    North, Inc., 
    43 F. Supp. 3d 554
    , 573 (D. Md. 2014) (citing Kwang Dong Pharm. Co. v.
    Han, 
    205 F. Supp. 2d 489
    , 497 (D. Md. 2002)); accord Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Apex Oil
    Co., 
    113 F. Supp. 3d 807
    , 822 (D. Md. 2015); J.E. Dunn Constr. Co. v. S.R.P. Dev. L.P.,
    
    115 F. Supp. 3d 593
    , 608 (D. Md. 2015). AAC, however, did not participate in the
    formation of the contract (i.e., the original lease): it received its interest in the lease
    through an assignment more than a year after the original lease was signed. And while
    AAC and Bubba Gump did enter into a lease amendment in March 2015, the circuit court
    did not find that AAC acted in bad faith when it entered into the lease amendment.
    Instead, the court found only that AAC acted in bad faith in failing to comply with the
    landlord’s obligation to keep Harborplace in good order and repair. That finding, of a
    bad faith breach of contract, will not support a deviation from the general rule that a
    claim for unjust enrichment does not lie if the plaintiff has an enforceable contract.
    The circuit court also erred in relying on the exception for express contracts that
    do not fully address the relevant subject matter. The comprehensive, fifty-page lease not
    only addresses AAC’s obligation to maintain the common areas in good order and repair,
    but Bubba Gump pursued and received relief under the lease for AAC’s material breach
    10
    of that obligation. Bubba Gump has “‘turn[ed] to quasi-contract for recovery’”7 only
    because it failed in its obligation to demonstrate its right to the contractual remedy of lost
    profits as a result of AAC’s breach. In short, the lease covers the same subject matter as
    the unjust enrichment claim that Bubba Gump purported to assert; therefore, no quasi-
    contractual claim could arise. County Comm’rs of Caroline Cty. v. J. Roland Dashiell &
    Sons, Inc., 
    358 Md. at 100
    ; Mass Transit Admin. v. Granite Constr. Co., 57 Md. App. at
    776.
    Bubba Gump appears to argue that the lease “does not fully address” the
    landlord’s failure to allocate a portion of the rent payments to maintain the Joint Use
    Areas because the document contains no specific remedy for that breach. To the
    contrary, Bubba Gump had a remedy for that breach (a common-law action for damages
    for breach of contract), Bubba Gump availed itself of its remedy with some measure of
    success, and Bubba Gump seeks an additional remedy only because it is dissatisfied
    about the amount of damages that it was able to attribute to the breach. To afford Bubba
    Gump the additional remedy of an “equitable rent reduction” in these circumstances, a
    court would have to rewrite the lease to eliminate part of Article 4, which states that the
    Minimum Annual Rental must be paid in full and “without deduction or set-off.” To
    award an “equitable rent reduction” in the amount that Bubba Gump claimed to have paid
    for the maintenance of the common areas, a court would have to rewrite part of Article
    7
    Mass Transit Admin. v. Granite Constr. Co., 57 Md. App. at 776 (quoting Indus.
    Lift Truck Serv. Corp. v. Mitsubishi Int’l Corp., 433 N.E.2d at 1002).
    11
    17, which states that AAC, “in its sole and absolute discretion,” may appropriate any
    portion of the monthly rent toward the expenses of maintaining the Joint Use Areas.
    As additional support for its contention that it can assert a quasi-contractual claim
    for unjust enrichment even though the comprehensive, fifty-page contract exhaustively
    defines its rights, Bubba Gump cites Article 31 of the lease. That provision states:
    All rights and remedies of Landlord and Tenant under this Lease or at law
    are cumulative, and the exercise of one or more rights or remedies shall not
    exclude or waive the right to the exercise of any others. All rights and
    remedies may be exercised and enforced concurrently, whenever and as
    often as desirable.
    Article 31 simply says that if Bubba Gump has multiple remedies, the exercise of
    one does not preclude the exercise of another, and vice versa. Article 31, however, does
    not confer any remedies on Bubba Gump. Article 31 certainly does not give Bubba
    Gump the right to assert a quasi-contractual claim for unjust enrichment even though the
    lease fully addresses the consequences of the landlord’s breach.
    In summary, the lease gave Bubba Gump a remedy for AAC’s failure to maintain
    and repair the Joint Use Areas, and the record lacks any evidence demonstrating bad faith
    by AAC during the formation of the lease. As a matter of law, therefore, Bubba Gump
    could not bring a claim of unjust enrichment, and the circuit court erred in awarding
    Bubba Gump an equitable rent reduction of $1,096,270.51.8
    8
    Although Bubba Gump requested declaratory relief, the circuit court appears not
    to have entered a separate written order in which it formally declared the rights of the
    parties, as the law requires. See, e.g., Point’s Reach Condo. Council of Unit Owners v.
    Point Homeowners Ass’n, Inc., 
    213 Md. App. 222
    , 282 (2013). The error is, however,
    harmless, because the court’s written judgment adequately explains the basis of its ruling
    and its assessment of the parties’ rights. See id. at 282-83. On remand, the court shall
    12
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR BALTIMORE CITY, AWARDING
    DAMAGES FOR UNJUST ENRICHMENT
    UNDER COUNT III OF THE AMENDED
    COMPLAINT, REVERSED; JUDGMENT
    AFFIRMED IN ALL OTHER RESPECTS;
    CASE REMANDED TO THE CIRCUIT
    COURT FOR BALTIMORE CITY WITH
    DIRECTIONS TO ENTER A
    DECLARATORY JUDGMENT
    CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION;
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLEE.
    enter a declaratory judgment that comports with this opinion and the portions of its ruling
    that were not challenged on appeal.
    13