Green Tree Servicing v. Pillsbury-Landmark Towers, et al., No. 10-2757 (8th Cir. 2011)
Annotate this CaseThe owners of Landmark Towers appealed the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Green Tree Servicing, LLC (Green Tree), permitting Green Tree to vacate office space it subleased from the owners' tenant (DBSI). The lease agreements at issue in this case arose from a complex real estate transaction that DBSI and its affiliates commonly structured in order to generate revenue. DBSI, a tenant in common syndicator, or an affiliate - here DBSI Landmark, LLC - acquired commercial property and leased it to another affiliate - here DBSI Leaseco. The court found that, irrespective of 11 U.S.C. 365(h), principles of contract law dictated that DBSI Leaseco and Green Tree were no longer required to perform their obligations to each under the sublease. The court also found that the sublease contained promises between the tenants in common (TIC) and Green Tree via the attornment provision and therefore, the parties were in privity of contract regardless of their status as master landlord and sublessee. The court further found that the only surviving contractual interest in the sublease was the TIC's right to attornment, which was triggered only when the TIC succeeded to the interest of DBSI Leaseco. Therefore, the sublease did not require Green Tree to attorn to the TIC here.
Court Description: Civil case - Bankruptcy. Sublease did not require Green Tree to attorn to the tenants in common.
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