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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION WILMINGTON TRUST NA, as § Trustee for the benefit of the registered § holders of UBS Commercial Mortgage § Trust 2017-C1, Commercial Mortgage § Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2017- § C1, § § Plaintiff, § § v. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:20-CV-3352-B § CHETANKUMAR D. PATEL and § SUNITABAHEN N. PATEL, § § Defendants and Third-Party Plaintiffs, § § v. § § DATD HOLDINGS, LLC, § § Third-Party Defendant. § MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court is Plaintiff Wilmington Trust, National Associationâs Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 22) and Motion for Leave to File Supplemental Affidavit in Support of its Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 33). As detailed below, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Plaintiffâs summary-judgment motion (Doc. 22). Specifically, the Court GRANTS the motion insofar as it seeks a determination that Defendants Chetankumar D. Patel and Sunitabahen N. Patel are liable for breach of guaranty, but the Court DENIES the motion on the issue of damages and attorneysâ fees. Further, the Court GRANTS the motion for leave to file a supplemental affidavit - 1 - (Doc. 33). I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background1 This is an action for enforcement of a guaranty. In April 2017, Plaintiffâs predecessor-in-interest (âLenderâ) loaned Ashiyana Hospitality, LLC (âBorrowerâ) $5,500,000. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 14â17. This loan (âthe Loanâ) was documented by a promissory note (âthe Noteâ) and an agreement (âthe Loan Agreementâ). See id. at 14â17, 19â140. Under the Loan Agreement, Borrower agreed to pay Lender $5,500,000, along with interest incurred, in monthly installments through May 2027. Id. at 25, 37. Defendants guaranteed the Loan pursuant to a guaranty agreement (âthe Guarantyâ). Id. at 142â53.2 Additionally, Borrower pledged the Comfort Inn Cleveland Airport Hotel (âthe Hotelâ) and its revenue as security for the Loan. Id. at 155â75. Lender perfected its liens in the Hotel by filing a UCC financing statement. Id. at 188â95 (citations omitted). In June 2017, Lender assigned all of its rights under the Loan Agreement, the Guaranty, and associated documents to Plaintiff. Id. at 202â06, 208â17.3 The Loan Agreement and the Guaranty contain choice-of-law clauses stating they are governed by and construed in accordance with Ohio law. See id. at 25, 92â93, 149. Since March 5, 2020, Borrower has failed to pay the principal, interest, and reserves due 1 The Court draws the facts from the partiesâ briefing and appendices submitted in conjunction with Plaintiffâs motion for summary judgment. 2 The Court will describe the relevant provisions of the Guaranty and the Loan Agreement in greater detail in its analysis. 3 Lender also delivered an allonge to Plaintiff to make the Note payable to Plaintiff. Id. at 17. - 2 - under the Loan Agreement. Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 7 (citations omitted); Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 5 (citation omitted). Further, Borrower has incurred additional liens encumbering the Hotel without Plaintiffâs consent. Doc, 23, Pl.âs Br., 7. First, on December 20, 2017, Endison Sterling, whom Borrower had hired âto provide renovation and repair services at the Hotel,â recorded a mechanicâs lien due to Borrowerâs failure to pay Sterling (âthe Sterling Lienâ). Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 219â22; Doc. 31, Defs.â App., 7. Borrower explains that because it was âunsatisfied with Sterlingâs work,â and Sterling âwalked off the job,â Borrower paid him $10,000, rather than the $27,000 Sterling billed. Doc. 31, Defs.â App., 7. Plaintiff states it did not consent to the Sterling Lien, nor did it discover the Sterling Lien until August 2020. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 7. Second, in February 2020, âBorrower obtained a $100,000 line of credit financing from Ascentium Capital (the âAscentium Financingâ)[.]â Id. According to Defendants, Borrower obtained the line of credit âto alleviate the Hotelâs financial burdens related to the COVID-19 pandemicâ and used all of the funds âto support the Hotel.â Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 4 (citations omitted); Doc. 31, Defs.â App., 8. Borrower pledged the Hotelâs personal property as security for the Ascentium Financing; accordingly, in February 2020, Ascentium Capital filed a UCC financing statement to reflect this security interest. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 224â25. Plaintiff did not discover the Ascentium Financing until August 2020. Id. at 8. âOn September 16, 2020, Borrower paid off the full balance of the Ascentium Capital line of credit and the lien was released on September 18, 2020.â Doc. 31, Defs.â App., 8 (citation omitted). Third, in July 2020, Borrower pledged the Hotelâs personal property to secure a $102,000 loan from the United States Small Business Administration (âthe SBA Loanâ). See Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., - 3 - 227â32. Consequently, the SBA filed a UCC financing statement asserting a lien on the Hotelâs personal property (âthe SBA Lienâ). See id. at 227â32, 282â83. Plaintiff discovered the SBA Lien in August 2020. Id. at 8. Fourth, in September 2020, Defendantsâowners of Borrowerâs membership interestsâ âtransferred all of their membership interests in Borrower to a third party, DATD Holdings, LLC (âDATDâ)[.]â Id.; see also id. at 234â41. Plaintiff did not consent or otherwise receive notice of this transfer (âthe LLC Transferâ). Id. at 8â9. In November 2020, however, âattorneys for DATD sent a letter to [Defendants] stating that DATD considered the [LLC Transfer] to be null and voidâ or, alternatively, rescinded. Doc. 31, Defs.â App., 9, 121. In light of Borrowerâs default on the Loan, Plaintiff sent borrower a notice of default on June 12, 2020. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 243â45. Under the Loan Agreement, the notice of default triggered âa Cash Management Period . . . in which all Hotel revenue received by Borrower must be deposited into a Deposit Account controlled and managed by [Plaintiff.]â Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 16â17 (citing Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 26, 43). Two months after the notice of default, Plaintiff sent a notice of acceleration and demanded payment. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 247â49. Then, on October 27, 2020, Plaintiff sent Defendants a letter indicating that under the Guaranty, they were liable for the entire balance of the Loan. Id. at 251â54. Defendants have not paid Plaintiff, and Plaintiff asserts that as of the filing of its motion, Defendants owe Plaintiff $7,696,511.92 plus $62,964.78 in attorneysâ fees and costs, for a total of $7,759,476.70. Id. at 10â11, 276. B. Procedural Background Plaintiff filed this breach-of-guaranty suit against Defendants on November 9, 2020. See generally Doc. 1, Compl. About four months later, Defendants filed a motion for leave to name - 4 - DATD as a third-party defendant. Doc. 18, Am. Mot., 2. Defendants explained that due to the LLC Transfer to DATD, DATD may be liable to Plaintiff âpursuant to a contractual indemnification provision.â Id. The Court granted Defendantsâ motion. Doc. 25, Mem. Op. & Order, 1. Before the Court granted the motion for leave, however, Plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment against Defendants (Doc. 22). After this summary-judgment motion was fully briefed, Plaintiff moved for leave to file a supplemental affidavit in support of its summary-judgment motion (Doc. 33). Now, both the motion for summary judgment and the motion for leave to file a supplemental affidavit are fully briefed. Accordingly, the Court considers both motions below. II. LEGAL STANDARD Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a) provides that summary judgment is appropriate âif the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The substantive law governing a matter determines which facts are material to a case. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). The summary-judgment movant bears the burden of proving that no genuine issue of material fact exists. Latimer v. Smithkline & French Labâys, 919 F.2d 301, 303 (5th Cir. 1990). Usually, this requires the movant to identify âthose portions of the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with affidavits, if any, which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.â Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986) (quotation marks omitted). If the movant âbear[s] the burden of proof at trial . . . , to obtain summary judgment it must establish beyond peradventure all of the essential elements of [its] claim.â Altec Cap. Servs., LLC v. Weir Bros., Inc., 2013 WL 866193, at *2 (N.D. Tex. Mar. 8, 2013) (citation - 5 - omitted and cleaned up). Once the summary-judgment movant has met this burden, the burden shifts to the non-movant to âgo beyond the pleadings and designate specific factsâ showing that a genuine issue exists. Little v. Liquid Air Corp., 37 F.3d 1069, 1075 (5th Cir.1994) (per curiam) (citing Celotex, 477 U.S. at 325). âThis burden is not satisfied with âsome metaphysical doubt as to the material facts,â by âconclusory allegations,â by âunsubstantiated assertions,â or by only a âscintillaâ of evidence.â Id. (citations omitted). Instead, the non-moving party must âcome forward with specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.â Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986) (emphasis in original) (quotation marks omitted). â[C]ourts are required to view the facts and draw reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the party opposing the summary[-]judgment motion.â Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 378 (2007) (alterations incorporated) (quotations marks omitted). But the Court need not âsift through the record in search of evidence to support a partyâs opposition to summary judgment.â Ragas v. Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co., 136 F.3d 455, 458 (5th Cir. 1998) (citation and quotation marks omitted). If the non-movant is unable to make the required showing, the Court must grant summary judgment. Little, 37 F.3d at 1076. III. ANALYSIS Below, the Court first grants summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff on its breach-of-guaranty claim. The Court then turns to the issue of damages. Although the Court grants Plaintiffâs motion for leave to file a supplemental affidavit, this affidavit creates inconsistency regarding the amount Defendants owe. Thus, the Court denies summary judgment on Plaintiffâs request for damages. - 6 - Finally, because Plaintiff failed to meet its burden of showing the reasonableness of its claimed attorneysâ fees, the Court denies summary judgment as to attorneysâ fees as well. A. The Court Grants Summary Judgment in Favor of Plaintiff on its Breach-of-Guaranty Claim. Ohio law treats a breach-of-guaranty claim like a breach-of-contract claim and requires the plaintiff to show: (1) âthe existence of a contractâ; (2) âperformance by plaintiffâ; (3) âbreach by defendantâ; and (4) âdamages.â Fifth Third Bank v. Gentile, 2008 WL 11380021, at *2 & n.1 (N.D. Ohio Dec. 8, 2008) (citations omitted) (applying Ohio law).4 Here, Defendants do not dispute the existence of a contractâthey acknowledge they executed the Guaranty with Plaintiffâs predecessor-in-interest. Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 3. Further, they agree that Plaintiffâs predecessor-in-interest performed under the Guaranty by loaning $5,500,000 to Borrower. Id. at 2. Finally, Plaintiff has presented uncontested evidence that Defendants have not paid Plaintiff any amount allegedly due under the Guaranty. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 11. Accordingly, Defendants concede that if they are liable under the Guaranty, Plaintiff has suffered damages. See, e.g., Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 15 (arguing that if Defendants are liable under the Guaranty, the amountânot the existence ofâdamages is disputed).5 Thus, the only disputed issueâaside from the amount of damagesâis whether Defendants have raised a genuine issue of material fact regarding their liability under the Guaranty. Pursuant to the Guaranty, Defendants âunconditionally guarantee[d] to Lender the full, 4 As noted above, the Loan Agreement contains a choice-of-law clause stating that it is governed by and construed in accordance with Ohio law to the extent it is not preempted by federal law. See Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 25, 92â93. Likewise, the Guaranty is governed by and construed in accordance with Ohio law. See id. at 25, 149. 5 Defendants dispute whether Plaintiff sustained damages as a result of the Ascentium Financing, but the Court rejects this argument below. See infra Section III.A.1. - 7 - prompt and complete payment when due of the Guaranteed Obligations.â Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 144. The âGuaranteed Obligationsâ include, âfrom and after the date that any Springing Recourse Event occurs, payment of all the Debt[.]â Id. at 143. A âSpringing Recourse Eventâ occurs where âan Event of Default described in Section 8.1(d)â of the Loan Agreement has occurred. Id. at 91. Under Section 8.1(d), an âEvent of Defaultâ exists when âa Transfer other than a Permitted Transfer occurs[.]â Id. at 81. A âTransferâ is: any sale, conveyance, transfer, lease or assignment, Lien, or the entry into any agreement to sell, convey, transfer, lease or assign, whether by law or otherwise, including forfeiture, of, on, in or affecting (i) all or part of the Property (including any legal or beneficial direct or indirect interest therein), (ii) any direct or indirect interest in Borrower (including any profit interest), or (iii) the direct or indirect right or power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of Borrower, through the ownership of voting securities, by contract or otherwise. Id. at 35. Permitted Transfers, on the other hand, are limited to specific types of transfers enumerated in the Loan Agreement. See id. at 32â33. Another âSpringing Recourse Eventâ is âa breach of the covenant set forth in Section 5.12â of the Loan Agreement. Id. at 91. Section 5.12 states, âBorrower shall at all times be a Special Purpose Entity.â Id. at 63. Under the Loan Agreement, a âSpecial Purpose Entityâ that owns the Hotel must have no other âindebtedness other than the Permitted Indebtedness or any prior financing that has been fully paid and discharged in full on or prior to the dateâ of the Loan Agreement. Id. at 107. Further, a âSpecial Purpose Entityâ may not âpledge[] . . . its assets for the benefit of any other Person[.]â Id. at 108. Here, Plaintiff claims multiple Springing Recourse Events triggered Defendantsâ liability under the Guaranty: the Sterling Lien, the Ascentium Financing, the SBA Lien, and the LLC Transfer. Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 23. - 8 - As explained below, the Court holds that Defendants have not created a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the Ascentium Financing, the SBA Lien, and the LLC Transfer are Springing Recourse Events under the Loan Agreement.6 Further, Defendantsâ claimed affirmative defenses do not create a genuine issue of material fact with respect to Defendantsâ liability under the Guaranty. Accordingly, the Court concludes Defendants are liable under the Guaranty and grants summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff on the breach-of-guaranty claim. 1. The Ascentium Financing Plaintiff contends that the Ascentium Financing, by which Borrower obtained a lien without the consent of Plaintiff or its predecessor, is a Springing Recourse Event. Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 8, 23. Defendants do not dispute whether the Ascentium Financing involved an unauthorized lien on property subject to the Loan Agreement. See Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 10â11. Rather, Defendants challenge Plaintiffâs ability to rely upon the Ascentium Financing as a Springing Recourse Event by arguing that: (1) treating the Ascentium Financing as a Springing Recourse Event violates public policy; and (2) the line of credit associated with the Ascentium Financing was paid in full, and its accompanying lien was released, on September 18, 2020. Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 10. As explained below, the Court rejects both arguments and concludes Defendants failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether a Springing Recourse Event occurred and triggered Defendantsâ obligation under the Guaranty. First, Defendants contend that the Ascentium Financing was an attempt to keep the Hotel afloat amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, and that the federal government has evinced a policy to help 6 The Court thus need not address the Sterling Lien. - 9 - small businesses reopen through the passage of legislation. Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 8â9. Consequently, Defendants argue, enforcing the Guaranty based on the Ascentium Financing âis against the dominant public policy of the United States . . . .â Id. at 9â10 (citing Muschany v. United States, 324 U.S. 49, 66 (1945)). But the only case Defendants cite in support of this argument is Muschany, where the Supreme Court declined to invalidate a contract entered by the United States War Department on public policy grounds. 324 U.S. at 64â67. The Supreme Court reasoned that without âa plain indicationâ of the policy at issue âthrough long governmental practice or statutory enactments,â courts âmust be content to await legislative actionâânot invalidate contracts on their own accord. See id. at 66â67. Following this guidance from Muschany, this Court will not refrain from enforcing the Guaranty based on public policy considerations. Notably, Defendants have cited no caselaw suggesting that enforcement of a guaranty agreement contravenes public policy in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. See generally Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp. Though the Court recognizes the economic hardship created by the pandemic, it must nonetheless enforce the Guaranty as written. Accordingly, Defendantsâ public policy argument does not create a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether Defendants have breached the Guaranty. Second, Defendants contend that because the lien associated with the Ascentium Financing was released on September 18, 2020, due to full payment, âthere is a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether Plaintiff has suffered any hardship or is entitled to any damages as result of the lien.â Id. at 10â11. But Defendants have not explained why Plaintiff would need to demonstrate hardship or damages resulting from the lien associated with the Ascentium Financing. Under the Guaranty, Defendants are liable for the debt incurred under the Loan Agreement upon occurrence - 10 - of any Springing Recourse Event. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 143. And as Plaintiff points out and Defendants fail to contest, the Ascentium Financing constitutes a Springing Recourse Event under the plain terms of the Guaranty and the Loan Agreement because it was a non-permitted transfer and violated Section 5.12. See Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 14â15; Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 10â11; supra Section III.A (explaining what constitutes a Springing Recourse Event). Because Defendants have not shown how the subsequent payment of the lien is material to whether Defendants are liable under the Guaranty, the Court rejects their argument and concludes the Ascentium Financing triggered Defendantsâ obligations under the Guaranty. The Court thus GRANTS summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff on the breach-of-guaranty claim. 2. The SBA Lien Plaintiff also alleges that the SBA Lien is a Springing Recourse Event that triggers Defendantsâ liability under the Guaranty. Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 14â15. Defendants present two arguments in response: (1) again, they argue that the Court should not enforce the Guaranty based on a lien incurred to keep the Hotel in business amidst the COVID-19 pandemic; and (2) they contend that the SBA Lien is a Permitted Transfer. See Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 11â12. For the reasons explained above, the Court rejects the first argument, and for the reasons explained below, the Court rejects the second argument. Defendants argue that the SBA Lien is not a Springing Recourse Event because it qualifies as a â[l]ien . . . for Taxes or other charges not yet due and payable and not delinquent,â which is a Permitted Encumbranceâand thus a Permitted Transferâunder the Loan Agreement. See Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 11 (quoting Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 32). Specifically, Defendants explain that no amount is due on the SBA Lien until July 10, 2021, and the full amount of principal and interest on the SBA - 11 - Lien is not due until 2050. Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 11. Defendants contend that because the SBA Lien is ânot yet due and payable and not delinquent,â it qualifies as a Permitted Transfer. See id. (quoting Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 32). The Court rejects this argument because Defendants have not created a genuine fact issue as to whether the SBA Lien is one âfor Taxes or other charges . . . .â Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 32. To qualify as a Permitted Encumbrance under the definition relied upon by Defendants, the lien must meet multiple criteria: it cannot be âdue and payableâ or âdelinquent,â and it must be âone for Taxes or other charges . . . .â Id. Defendants state that Borrower obtained the SBA Loan to use it âas working capital to alleviate economic injury cause[d] byâ the COVID-19 pandemic. Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 11. As Plaintiff points out, see Doc. 32, Pl.âs Reply, 4â5, the plain meaning of âother chargesâ is not so broad as to âencompass a general loan and associated lien . . . .â Id. at 4. Indeed, Defendants wholly fail to explain how the SBA Lien could be one for âother charges.â See Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 11â12. Defendants have thus failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the SBA Lien constitutes a Permitted Transfer rather than a Springing Recourse Event. Accordingly, the SBA Lien is another event triggering Defendantsâ obligations under the Guaranty and provides an additional basis for the Courtâs grant of summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff on the breach-of-guaranty claim. 3. The LLC Transfer Plaintiff contends that the LLC Transfer is another Springing Recourse Event under the Loan Agreement. Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 12. The Loan Agreement permits âa Transfer of an interest in Borrower to any Person,â as long as âno Event of Defaultâ exists at the time of the transfer and, among other requirements, the âKey Principal(s)â of Borrower continue âto own at least 51% of all - 12 - equity interests (direct or indirect) in Borrowerâ following the transfer. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 32. But outside of these parameters, the Loan Agreement does not permit a transfer of interests in Borrower. See id. at 32â33 (defining âPermitted Transfersâ); id. at 63 (âBorrower shall not directly or indirectly make, suffer or permit the occurrence of any Transfer other than a Permitted Transfer.â). Plaintiff provides evidence of the agreement memorializing the LLC Transfer, and it is signed by all owners of Borrower (Defendants and another individual), as well as DATD. See id. at 234â41. Indeed, Defendants admit that they âsigned an agreement with DATD toâ transfer âall membership interest[s]â to DATD on September 22, 2020. Doc. 31, Defs.â App., 9. Further, they provide evidence that DATD acknowledged the agreement, but then declared it ânull and void at the outset and/or rescindedâ as of November 30, 2020. Id. at 121. Defendants do not contest whether a transfer of 100% of Borrowerâs membership interests in September 2020 constitutes a Springing Recourse Event under the Guaranty. See Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 14â15. Rather, Defendants assert that because DATD disputes whether the LLC Transfer was valid, there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether Borrower did indeed transfer its interests. Id. at 14. The Court disagrees. The Loan Agreement defines âTransferâ to include: any . . . transfer . . . or the entry into any agreement to sell, convey, transfer, lease or assign, whether by law or otherwise . . . (i) all or part of the Property (including any legal or beneficial direct or indirect interest therein), (ii) any direct or indirect interest in Borrower (including any profit interest), or (iii) the direct or indirect right or power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of Borrower . . . . Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 35 (emphasis added). Because Defendants entered an agreement to assign all ownership interests in Borrower to DATDâas evidenced by their signatures on the - 13 - agreementâtheir conduct is a Transfer under the Loan Agreement. Defendants do not point to any language in the Loan Agreement or the Guaranty suggesting that their entry into an agreement that is later contested as void or rescinded is exempt from the definition of âTransfer.â See Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 14â15. Thus, Defendants do not create a genuine fact issue on whether the LLC Transfer was a Transfer under the Loan Agreement. Further, this Transfer is a Springing Recourse Event triggering liability under the Guaranty. A âSpringing Recourse Eventâ includes âan Event of Default described in Section 8.1(d),â and under Section 8.1(d), an âEvent of Defaultâ exists when âa Transfer other than a Permitted Transfer occurs[.]â Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 81, 91. Defendants do not argue that the LLC Transfer is a Permitted Transfer under the Loan Agreement. Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 14â15. Accordingly, Defendants fail to create a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the LLC Transfer constitutes a Springing Recourse Event. The LLC Transfer is thus a third basis for the Courtâs grant of summary judgment on the breach-of-guaranty claim. 4. Defendantsâ âAffirmative Defensesâ Defendants assert five âaffirmative defensesâ in their answer: (1) âBorrower did not breach the Loan Documents in any way leading to liability under the Guarantyâ; (2) âDefendants have not breached the Guarantyâ; (3) âAny lien, loan, or other encumbrance on the Property was not a default as it was permitted under the terms of the Loan Documents and/or public policy, was under genuine dispute or was otherwise timely curedâ; (4) the LLC Transfer âwas rescinded, ineffective, and as such no transfer occurredâ; and (5) âAny liability found against Defendants under the Guaranty is subject to indemnity byâ DATD due to the LLC Transfer. Doc. 8, Answer, ¶¶ 101â05. As a preliminary matter, Defendants have not explained how these assertions constitute - 14 - affirmative defenses rather than simple contentions against liability. In any event, the Court found no genuine issue of material fact regarding whether Defendants are liable under the Guaranty due to the Ascentium Financing, the SBA Lien, and the LLC Transfer. See supra Sections III.A.1â3. And Plaintiff provides undisputed evidence that Defendants have not paid any amount owed under the Guaranty. Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 11. Thus, even if the Court treats Defendantsâ first four points as affirmative defenses, Defendants fail to raise a genuine issue of material fact on any of these defenses. Finally, the last âaffirmative defenseâ is Defendantsâ claim to indemnity by DATD. Doc. 8, Answer, ¶ 104. But Defendants fail to cite any authority suggesting that Defendantsâ right to indemnity from a third party negates Defendantsâ liability to Plaintiff. Indeed, Ohio law recognizes claims for indemnification after the party claiming indemnity has incurred damages. See, e.g., CSX Transp., Inc. v. Columbus Downtown Dev. Corp., 307 F. Supp. 3d 719, 728 (S.D. Ohio 2018).7 In fact, the Court previously recognized Defendantsâ claim to indemnity as a claim for affirmative relief by permitting Defendants to file a third-party complaint against DATD. See Doc. 25, Mem. Op. & Order, 9. Accordingly, Defendants have not shown that there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding any claimed affirmative defense. See, e.g., Fed. Debt Mgmt., Inc. v. Herbst Res., Inc., 15 F.3d 179, 1994 WL 24890, at *2 (5th Cir. 1994) (per curiam) (â[W]here the non-movant bears the burden of proof at trial on a dispositive issue, the non-movant must demonstrate by competent summary judgment proof that there is a genuine issue of material fact warranting trial.â (citation 7 Likewise, Florida law, which governs Borrowerâs agreement with DATD, see Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 236, recognizes a claim for breach of an indemnity provision. Sutherlin v. Wells Fargo & Co., 297 F. Supp. 3d 1271, 1278 (M.D. Fla. 2018). - 15 - omitted)). B. The Court Grants Plaintiff Leave to File a Supplemental Affidavit but Denies Summary Judgment on the Issue of Actual Damages. In its motion for summary judgment, Plaintiff seeks $7,696,511.92 in actual damages as of April 5, 2021. Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 18â19. However, after its motion was fully briefed, Plaintiff filed an opposed motion for leave to file a supplemental affidavit correcting this amount to $7,502,300.62 based on an error in the initial affidavit submitted in support of its motion (âthe Levin Affidavitâ). Doc. 33, Mot. for Leave, 1â2. Specifically, the proposed supplemental affidavit (âthe Supplemental Levin Affidavitâ) states that the Levin Affidavit miscalculated the amount due for âproperty protection advances[.]â Doc. 33-1, Suppl. Aff., 2. The Court GRANTS Plaintiffâs motion for leave to file the Supplemental Levin Affidavit, as this affidavit attempts to correct an error in a manner that benefits Defendants. Considering all of the summary-judgment evidence, along with the Supplemental Levin Affidavit, the Court now turns to Defendantsâ arguments as to why Plaintiff is not entitled to summary judgment on the issue of damages. Ultimately, the Court concludes that due to inconsistency between the Levin Affidavit and the Supplemental Levin Affidavit, it must deny summary judgment on the issue of damages. Defendants first assert that Plaintiffâs calculation of the principal and interest due under the Loan Agreement is âinflated since Borrower has been under cash management since June 2020, and Plaintiff has not applied the reserves under its control to the principal amount.â Doc. 30, Defs.â Br., 16. In response, Plaintiff points out that the Levin Affidavit, which is an affidavit from a custodian of records for the servicer of the Loan, indicates âthat only $0.28 remains in the Loan reservesâ and - 16 - that this $0.28 was credited to the balance on the Loan. Doc. 32, Pl.âs Reply, 10â11; see Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 2, 9. The Levin Affidavit also states that âPlaintiff has used some of the funds . . . to pay a portion of the accelerated Loan balance.â Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 12.8 Defendantsâ argument regarding the loan reserves fails to create a genuine issue of material fact regarding the amount due. As Plaintiff points out, because Borrower was in default when the Cash Management period began, âPlaintiff had complete discretion under Section 3.10 of the Loan Agreement as to how to applyâ the funds at issue. See Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 6â7, 17. Specifically, Section 3.10 states that âafter the occurrence of an Event of Default, [Plaintiff] may apply all Rents deposited into the Deposit Account and other proceeds of repayment in such order and in such manner as [Plaintiff] shall elect.â Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 48. Defendants do not dispute this interpretation of the Loan Agreementârather, they argue only that âPlaintiff should not be rewarded for its gamesmanship by forcing Defendants to be liable for an artificially increased principal and interest amount[.]â Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 16. Thus, Defendants have not shown how any purported factual dispute regarding application of the loan reserves is material. Next, Defendants contend that under the âone satisfaction rule,â âany monetary damages to be recovered against Defendants in this lawsuit must be reduced by the value of any proceeds Plaintiff receives from the hotel following its foreclosure.â Id. at 18â19. But the one-satisfaction rule bars Plaintiff from recovering the amount owed from both the foreclosure sale and Defendantsâit has no bearing on whether Plaintiff may obtain a judgment against Defendants. See, e.g., Huntington 8 Plaintiff further asserts that its evidence of âthe Loan History shows all payments and credits made and how they were applied to the Loan balance, including Plaintiffâs application of substantially all of the loan reserves.â Doc. 32, Pl.âs Reply, 10. But Plaintiff fails to explain how the Loan History, see Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 264â71, supports this proposition. - 17 - Natâl Bank v. G.J.P. Props., L.L.C, 2014 WL 200920, at *1, *5 (Ohio Ct. App. Jan. 16, 2014) (rejecting argument that trial court erred in entering judgment against both a guarantor and debtor for the same amount but acknowledging that the plaintiff âcan collect only one amountâ). Here, Defendants produced no evidence that Plaintiff has recovered any proceeds from the foreclosure. Accordingly, Defendantsâ argument fails to create a genuine issue of material fact on damages. Finally, Defendants contend that Plaintiff does not âprovide any receipts, accounting, documentation, or calculationâ to support the claimed amounts for ââlate fees,â ânon-legal fees,â âproperty protection advances,â âtax advances,â âyield maintenance,â and a âliquidation fee[.]ââ Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 16 (quoting Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 265). Defendants state that though the Levin Affidavit details these amounts based on the Loan History, the Loan History âdoes not account forâ these sums. Id. Consequently, Defendants argue that under the best-evidence rule, Plaintiff may not rely solely on the Levin Affidavit and accompanying Loan History to prove its damages. Id. at 17. Plaintiff, on the other hand, states it has provided a business-records affidavitâthe Levin Affidavitâto support its damages calculation. Doc. 32, Pl.âs Reply, 8â9. Further, Plaintiff asserts Defendants have not challenged âthe factual accuracy of [the] calculationsâ presented in the affidavit or the affiantâs âadequacy as a business records custodian[.]â Id. at 10. Finally, according to Plaintiff, to the extent that Defendants believe they need more information to calculate damages, âthey had the burden of submitting an affidavit . . . demonstrating that they cannot present facts essential to justify their opposition to Plaintiffâs damages calculation.â Id. As an initial matter, under Ohio law, an affidavit can provide sufficient evidence of the amount due under a loan agreement. See, e.g., Fifth Third Mortg. Co. v. Fantine, 2015 WL 5968101, at *4 (Ohio Ct. App. Oct. 9, 2015) (âOhio courts have held an averment of outstanding - 18 - indebtedness made in the affidavit of a bank loan officer with personal knowledge of the debtorâs account is sufficient to establish the amount due and owing on the note, unless the debtor refutes the averred indebtedness with evidence that a different amount is owed.â (citation and quotation marks omitted)). Nevertheless, in light of the inconsistency created by the Supplemental Levin Affidavit, there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding the amount owed by Defendants. See RBC Real Est. Fin., Inc., v. Partners Land Dev., Ltd., 543 F. Appâx 477, 479â80 (5th Cir. 2013) (per curiam) (distinguishing between reliance on an affidavit when the plaintiffâs summary-judgment evidence contained âinconsistenciesâ regarding the amount due under a note as opposed to reliance on an affidavit when the plaintiffâs evidence created no such inconsistencies).9 Namely, the Levin Affidavit and the Supplemental Levin Affidavit are inconsistent with respect to the âproperty protection advancesâ category, even though both affidavits purport to be â[b]ased on the data in the Servicing System,â which, in turn, is memorialized in the Loan History. Doc. 33-1, Suppl. Aff., 3; Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 9â10. Further, upon an independent review of the Loan History, the Court is unable to discern whether Plaintiffâs calculations for the remaining fees owed, which are also purportedly based on the Loan History, are accurate. Given the inconsistency in the evidence and the Courtâs inability to verify the amounts due under the Guaranty based on Plaintiffâs evidence, Plaintiff has not established its claimed actual damages âbeyond peradventure[.]â See Altec, 2013 WL 866193, at *2. The Court thus DENIES summary judgment on the issue of damages. 9 In RBC, the Fifth Circuit applied Texas law. Id. at 479. But Texas law, like Ohio law, permits a lender to prove damages by submitting a bank employeeâs affidavit, so the reasoning of RBC remains relevant. See id. at 479 (citations omitted). - 19 - C. The Court Denies Summary Judgment on the Issue of Attorneysâ Fees.10 To determine attorneysâ fees, Ohio courts employ the âlodestar method.â Western-Southern Life Assurance Co. v. Kaleh, 879 F.3d 653, 665 (5th Cir. 2018) (citation omitted) (applying Ohio law). Accordingly, under Ohio law, the Court must âdetermine[] the amount of a reasonable fee by examining the number of hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate, subject to a host of modifying factors.â Id. (citation and quotation marks omitted). âCourts calculate the reasonable hourly rate based on the prevailing market rate in the relevant community for lawyers of comparable skill and experience; out-of-town lawyers thus may only recover the rate they would command in the local market.â Yellowbook Inc. v. Brandeberry, 708 F.3d 837, 849 (6th Cir. 2013) (citation and quotation marks omitted). âThe party seeking attorneyâs fees bears the burden of establishing entitlement to an award . . . .â Id. at 848 (citations and quotation marks omitted). Plaintiff seeks $62,964.78 in attorneysâ fees and costs. Doc. 23, Pl.âs Br., 32. In support of its request, Plaintiff submitted an affidavit (âthe Gold Affidavitâ) from David Gold, one of Plaintiffâs attorneys, and a time sheet from Plaintiffâs attorneys. See Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 273â74 (listing attachments to the Gold Affidavit). In the Gold Affidavit, Gold sets forth the billing rate for each attorney on Plaintiffâs case, as well as where each attorney is licensed. Gold explains that â[b]ased on [his] experience,â each rate is reasonable based on the attorneyâs seniority and experience. See id. at 274â75. The time sheet details the 98.30 hours spent on the case, as well as the $1,235.28 of 10 The Court must analyze Plaintiffâs request for attorneysâ fees under Ohio law. See Exxon Corp. v. Burglin, 4 F.3d 1294, 1302 (5th Cir. 1993) (â[I]n litigation construing a contract that contains a valid choice of law clause, the partiesâ choice of law governs both the interpretation of the contract and the award of attorneysâ fees.â (citation omitted)). - 20 - costs incurred in prosecuting this action. Id. at 315â16. Defendants contend that Plaintiff has not provided competent summary-judgment evidence demonstrating that Plaintiffâs attorneysâ fees request was reasonable. Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 17.11 In support, Defendants point out that Plaintiff has not designated its attorney, âor anyone else, as a witness or an expert witness to testify regarding attorneyâs fees.â Id. Consequently, Defendants ask the Court to strike the Gold Affidavit. Id. at 18. The Court denies Defendantsâ request, as Plaintiffâs failure to designate an expert on the issue of attorneysâ fees is not necessarily fatal to its claim for attorneysâ fees. The Court is unaware of any authority prohibiting a party from offering an affidavit in support of the reasonableness of a request for attorneysâ fees. âIn fact, in Ohio there is no steadfast rule that the âreasonablenessâ of attorney fees must be proved by expert testimony.â Cleveland v. Capitalsource Bank, 2016 WL 3018565, at *2 (Ohio Ct. App. May 26, 2016) (citation omitted). Nonetheless, upon review of Plaintiffâs attorneysâ fees request, the Court concludes Plaintiff has not met its burden of proving the reasonableness of its request. Specifically, though Plaintiff has detailed the time spent on this case, it has not convinced the Court that the attorneysâ hourly rates are reasonable for the Dallas market. For example, three of the most experienced attorneys charge $650-to-$800 per hour. See Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 274. Goldâs conclusory assertions in his affidavit fail to convince the Court that these steep billing rates are reasonable. Cf. Sw. Reinsure, Inc. v. Comfort 11 Defendants do not contest that the Guaranty permits Plaintiff to recover attorneysâ fees. See generally Doc. 30, Defs.â Resp., 17â18; see Doc. 24, Pl.âs App., 151 (âGuarantor hereby agrees to pay all actual, out-of-pocket costs, charges and expenses, including reasonable attorneysâ fees and disbursements, which may be incurred by Lender in enforcing the covenants, agreements, obligations and liabilities of Guarantor under this Guaranty.â). - 21 - Auto Grp. USA, LLC, 2021 WL 2414847, at *4 &n.4 (N.D. Tex. June 4, 2021) (finding billing rates reasonable in a guaranty enforcement case where the partner with the highest billing rate billed $450 per hour). Accordingly, the Court DENIES Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment to the extent Plaintiff seeks summary judgment on the issue of attorneysâ fees. IV. CONCLUSION For the reasons explained above, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Plaintiff's motion for summary judgment (Doc. 22). Moreover, the Court GRANTS Plaintiff's motion for leave to file a supplemental affidavit (Doc. 33). SO ORDERED. SIGNED: August 11, 2021. S y. ot / = UPITED ST S DISTRICT JUDGE -22-
Case Information
- Court
- N.D. Tex.
- Decision Date
- August 11, 2021
- Status
- Precedential