     Case: 11-30294   Document: 00511632946   Page: 1   Date Filed: 10/14/2011




          IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                   FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
                                                   Fifth Circuit

                                                                  FILED
                                                                October 14, 2011

                                No. 11-30294                     Lyle W. Cayce
                              Summary Calendar                        Clerk



REGIONS FINANCIAL CORPORATION; REGIONS BANK,

                                          Plaintiffs-Appellees
v.


PARISH PARTNERS COMPANY, L.L.C.,

                                          Defendant-Appellant


PARISH PARTNERS COMPANY, L.L.C.,

                                          Plaintiff-Appellant
v.


REGIONS FINANCIAL CORPORATION,

                                          Defendant-Appellee



                 Appeal from the United States District Court
                     for the Eastern District of Louisiana
                                 (08-CV-4301)
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                                       No. 11-30294

Before KING, JOLLY, and GRAVES, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:*
       A dispute arose out of a commercial leasing contract between Parish
Partners Company, L.L.C. (Parish Partners), as the lessor, and Regions Bank or
Regions Financial Corporation (collectively, Regions), as the lessee, regarding
a building that was substantially damaged by Hurricane Katrina on August 29,
2005. On summary judgment, the district court found that Parish Partners
failed to rebuild and make repairs within a reasonable time under the
agreement and terminated the contract. Parish Partners challenges the district
court’s ruling that it failed to restore the leased premises to the condition it was
in before Hurricane Katrina. For the reasons discussed below, we AFFIRM.
                                         FACTS1
       Parish Partners was the successor-in-interest as the lessor under a written
lease agreement dated October 1, 1992. Regions Bank was the successor-in-
interest to Secor Bank and Federal Savings Bank, the original lessee. The
leased premises consists of a portion of the first floor of a building and drive-
through banking area located in New Orleans, Louisiana (Leased Premises).
The original term of the lease ended on August 31, 2002, but Parish Partners
and Regions signed a First Amendment to the lease, extending it through
August 31, 2012.


       *
         Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR.
R. 47.5.4.
       1
          Procedural posture: On August 15, 2008, Parish Partners filed a petition for
declaratory relief and damages against Regions Financial Corporation in the Civil District
Court for the Parish of New Orleans, State of Louisiana (Regions Bank was not a defendant
in this suit). Parish Partners sought unpaid rent and insurance proceeds. On August 28, 2008,
Regions filed a complaint against Parish Partners in the Eastern District of Louisiana for
declaratory judgment seeking the termination or dissolution of the lease effective August 29,
2005. On September 9, 2008, Regions filed a notice of removal from the Civil District Court
and the Eastern District of Louisiana ordered that the cases be consolidated.

                                              2
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                                       No. 11-30294

       Hurricane Katrina arrived on August 29, 2005, and caused severe
damages to the Leased Premises. Damages included flood water in the building,
roof damage, broken windows, and a variety of other damages caused by wind
and rain. Parish Partners attempted to communicate with Regions from
September, 2005, to discuss casualty loss, rent abatement, photographs, and
information related to repairs. Parish Partners also communicated to Regions
that it elected to make repairs under the lease agreement rather than cancelling
the lease.2 Parish Partners discovered that Regions had hired an architect for
design renovations and attempted communications to inquire about it. But
Regions was non-responsive when Parish Partners inquired about the hire.
Following Katrina, Parish Partners changed the locks to the Leased Premises
to gain access in accordance with Section 18 of the lease agreement.3 Parish
Partners gained access to the Leased Premises and made an assessment of the
damages; it chose to rebuild, thus its obligations to make repairs came into
existence on approximately October 30, 2005. Parish Partners’s obligation for
repairs were subject to delays such as unavailability of materials or government
regulation; however, these were non-factors for this construction project. Both
parties agree that the Katrina-caused damages were extensive but repairs could
be completed within 120 days because the required construction work was very
typical of a branch bank. It is not clear, however, whether Parish Partners could
have repaired the Leased Premises to pre-Katrina conditions within 120 days
immediately after the Hurricane because New Orleans was shut down for at
least thirty days after the storm. On the other hand, expert testimony provides



       2
       Under the lease agreement, it was required within sixty-days to exercise its option of
terminating the lease agreement or making repairs to the property.
       3
        This Section discusses access to the Leased Premises by the lessor or lessor’s agents;
the provision gives the lessor the right at all times to enter and examine the Leased Premises
or make repairs to the property.

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                                  No. 11-30294

that contractors were on the ground within two weeks after Katrina’s landfall
and were capable of completing construction work as necessary materials and
manpower were available. As of August 12, 2006, the Leased Premises was in
a shell condition, consisting of bare slab and Sheetrock walls. By this time,
Parish Partners had replaced rusted studs and installed new ceiling tiles among
other repairs. During the course of repairs, Parish Partners received some of the
insurance proceeds to which it was entitled and was able to complete the
restoration to a “rentable shell condition” by August 28, 2006.
                          STANDARD OF REVIEW
      This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and reviews the district
court's grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as the
district court. Golden Bridge Tech., Inc., v. Motorola, Inc. 547 F.3d 266, 270 (5th
Cir. 2008). The granting of summary judgment is appropriate if there is no
genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as
a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S.
242, 247 (1986). When the moving party has carried its burden, the non-moving
party must demonstrate specific facts showing a genuine factual issue for trial.
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986).
                                 DISCUSSION
      The crux of this dispute is the extent and timeliness of Parish Partners’s
restoration of the damaged Leased Premises following Hurricane Katrina.
Parish Partners contends that it has sufficiently performed under the lease
agreement. Various repairs were made to the air-conditioning and heating
system, all metal rusted studs were replaced, and the storefront was restored.
Furthermore, Parish Partners argues that the district court erred in dissolving
the contract because, at the very least, Parish Partners substantially performed
under the lease agreement, and the remaining work could have been quickly
completed.

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                                  No. 11-30294

      Regions contends that Parish Partners decided to repair and rebuild the
damaged property instead of terminating the lease agreement. And because
Parish Partners did not exercise its right to terminate the lease within sixty
days of Hurricane Katrina, it had an obligation to repair and restore the
damaged premises with reasonable promptness. Reasonable promptness under
the instant agreement is 120 days, or approximately four months after damages
occurred.
1) Timing of the Repairs
      Section 7 of the lease agreement discusses the parties’ rights and duties
related to casualty and damages; this Section states in relevant part:
      “CASUALTY PROVISIONS: Lessee shall give lessor immediate
      notice of any damage to the Leased Premises caused by fire or other
      casualty. If the Leased Premises or Building is damaged by fire or
      other casualty to such an extent that same can be repaired within
      a period of one hundred twenty (120) days, Lessor may, at its option,
      rebuild or repair, as the case may be, or cancel and terminate this
      Lease. Unless Lessor notifies Lessee in writing within a period of
      sixty (60) days after the occurrence of the fire or other casualty that
      it does not intend to rebuild or repair, it shall then be obligated to
      rebuild or repair...All work of repairing or rebuilding shall be
      performed with reasonable promptness, due allowance being made
      for reasonable delay which may arise by reason of adjustment or
      loss under insurance policies on the part of Lessor or Lessee and for
      reasonable delay on account of strike, lockout, governmental
      regulation, or other cause beyond Lessor’s control...If Lessor elects
      to cancel by giving notice to Lessee within the 60-day period herein
      above provided, this Lease shall thereupon terminate and expire as
      of the date of the occurrence of the fire and other casualty...”

      The parties do not dispute that the Katrina-caused damages were within
the extent that could be repaired in 120 days; an expert report on record
provides that sufficient materials were available so that a reasonably competent
general contractor could have restored the premises to pre-Katrina conditions.
The construction work would be typical of a branch bank and there were no


                                        5
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                                      No. 11-30294

logistical challenges that would have affected construction time. Moreover, the
trial court accepted as true Parish Partners’s evidence that repairs could have
been completed within 120-days. And because Parish Partners elected to make
repairs rather than cancel the contract, it was obliged to complete the
restoration within the contracted time frame.4
       Section 7 of the lease agreement requires Parish Partners to complete
restoration of the Leased Premises within approximately four months after
Hurricane Katrina struck. According to Parish Partners’s brief and sworn
affidavit of Mokhtar Abelmalek, an employee of the construction company who
oversaw the repairs to the Leased Premises, the property was ready to receive
Regions on August 28, 2006. Basic repairs for things such as the cooling and
heating unit and electricity were made by June-July, 2006. According to Parish
Partners, the condition of the Leased Premises as of August 28, 2006 was a
“shell condition,” which is all the lease requires of it.
       But the lease requires repair work to be completed approximately at the
end of December, 2005. Even if the 120-days count down did not begin until
after the sixty-day evaluation period discussed in Section 7 (the clock then would
have begun on approximately October 30, 2005), the repairs should have been
completed no later than February 28, 2006. Either application produces the
same result: Parish Partners failed to complete its repair obligations with
reasonable promptness under the leasing agreement. The parties agree that the
property could have been repaired within 120-days. But as of January 27, 2010,
Parish Partners had failed to repair the Leased Premises to a suitable condition
for a branch bank. The record shows that Parish Partners had the ability


       4
        Parish Partners alleges that Regions failed to turnover insurance proceeds under the
lease agreement, presumably to argue that Regions’s actions hindered Parish Partners from
completing repairs on time. But full receipt of insurance proceeds did not financially hinder
it from completing repairs as it was able to eventually complete the restoration work to a
rentable shell condition.

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                                     No. 11-30294

(available general contractors and funding) to complete repairs but it did not.
It points to Regions’s uncooperative behavior as a reason for its inability to
complete the restoration project.5 But nothing in the record supports the notion
that Regions caused Parish Partners’s inability to restore the Leased Premises
to a condition similar to its pre-Katrina condition, which was suitable for an
operational branch bank. General contractors with adequate manpower and
materials were available for work, therefore Parish Partners had the necessary
resources to complete the restoration project.
2. The Leased Premises in a Shell Condition
       Parish Partners contends that it was obligated to restore the Leased
Premises to a shell condition and it did so by August 28, 2006. It also holds that
the lease agreement does not explicitly say that the 120-days time frame begins
immediately after the damages are caused. But testimony by Ms. Denise
Gaines6 established that the obligation to make repairs began on October 30,
2005, allowing for the sixty-day evaluation period.
       Regions argues that by August, 2006, the Leased Premises lacked finished
floors and interior doors. The district court found that, as of the day of summary
judgment arguments, the Leased Premises still had not been restored to pre-
Katrina conditions or similar to those conditions. The essence of Regions’s
argument is that the Leased Premises in a “shell condition,” which lacks doors
and door frames among other things, is not in a condition suitable to operate a
branch bank. Therefore, dissolution of the lease is appropriate.


      5
         Parish Partners argues that Regions ignored essentially all communication from it.
Many of Parish Partners’s communications related to requests for drawings, photographs, and
other information regarding repair work. Regions hired architects to design renovations but
ignored Parish Partners’s request for input.
      6
        Ms. Gaines is the Managing Director at Kailas Companies, which is a company that
manages real estate property owned by Parish Partners. She has been employed there for
fourteen years.

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                                   No. 11-30294

      The lease does not discuss Regions’s remedies if Parish Partners defaults.
Thus, its remedies are determined by the Louisiana Civil Code. Tetra Techs.,
Inc., v. La. Fruit Co., 252 F. App’x 639, 644 (5th Cir.2007)(citing Tassin v. Slidell
Mini-Storage, Inc., 396 So.2d 1261, 1264 (La. 1981)). Parish Partners evaluated
the damages caused by Katrina and decided to make repairs. Therefore, it was
obliged to restore the Leased Premises to a condition adequate for operating a
bank. La. Civ. Code 2682 (“The lessor is bound: (2) To maintain the thing in a
condition suitable for the purpose of which it was leased...”). A failure to perform
under the agreement may cause the lease to be cancelled. See Reed v. Classified
Parking Sys., 232 So. 2d 103, 107 (La. App. Ct. 1970)(citations omitted); La. Civ.
Code 2719 (stating that “[w]hen a party to the lease fails to perform his
obligations under the lease or under this Title, the other party may obtain
dissolution of the lease...”). The Louisiana Civil Code also states that “[w]hen
the obligor fails to perform, the obligee has a right to the judicial dissolution of
the contract or, according to the circumstances, to regard the contract as
dissolved...” La. Civ. Code 2013. The record shows that as of August 28, 2006,
one year after Katrina caused the damages, the Leased Premises was not
restored to a condition similar to a pre-Katrina operational branch bank; in
other words, it was not fit for occupancy for the intended use of a bank. And
August 28, 2006, is clearly beyond the 120-days time frame (or 180-days if the
sixty-day evaluation period is included) contemplated by the lease.
      Because Section 7 of the contract provides a time frame for casualty-
related repairs and those repairs were not completed within the contemplated
time (nor did Parish Partners substantially perform within the contemplated
period), other arguments need not be addressed. The contractual duties were
clear and Parish Partners failed to restore the Leased Premises within the
contract period, therefore we AFFIRM the district court.



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