Court Opinion

ID: 4694048
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-06-09 19:00:59.128649+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:05:26.965672
License: Public Domain

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
                               File Name: 21a0283n.06

                                       Case No. 20-6193

                         UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                              FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
                                                                               FILED
                                                                          Jun 09, 2021
MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL LIFE                            )                DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
INSURANCE COMPANY,                                   )
                                                     )
       Plaintiff-Appellee,                           )        ON APPEAL FROM THE
                                                     )        UNITED STATES DISTRICT
v.                                                   )        COURT FOR THE WESTERN
                                                     )        DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE
RCS – GERMANTOWN I, LLC, et al.,                     )
                                                     )
       Defendants-Appellants.
                                                                                  OPINION

BEFORE: SUTTON, Chief Judge; McKEAGUE and DONALD, Circuit Judges.

       McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge. Massachusetts Mutual Insurance Company (MassMutual)

leased RCS – Germantown I, LLC’s (RCS’s) office space until MassMutual purported to exercise

an option to terminate the lease when it didn’t need the office space anymore. RCS disagreed with

MassMutual’s understanding of the lease’s Termination Option, so MassMutual sued RCS. Both

parties moved for summary judgment and the district court granted judgment to MassMutual. The

court held that the Termination Option unambiguously allowed MassMutual to cut the lease short

because, due to a change in business conditions, MassMutual didn’t need the property anymore.

We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to MassMutual and denial of

summary judgment to RCS.
Case No. 20-6193, Ma. Mut. Ins. Co. v. RCS – Germantown I, LLC

                                                 I

        MassMutual acquired the Memphis, Tennessee-based First Mercantile Trust Company

(FMT) as a subsidiary. At the time of its acquisition, FMT had an existing lease at 57 Germantown

Court in the Kimbrough Building (the Property). The Property was owned by DRA CRT

Germantown Center, LP (Original Landlord), which was represented by Investec Realty Services.

Because FMT’s lease was soon to expire, MassMutual hired Cushman & Wakefield to explore

options for suitable office space to accommodate its acquisition of FMT and to add an FMT-related

call center.

        To that end, Cushman contacted Investec and asked if MassMutual could renew FMT’s

lease. After negotiations, including several revisions, Cushman and Investec executed a lease. As

relevant here, the executed lease included a Termination Option:

        TERMINATION OPTION: Provided Tenant is not in default at the time of
        exercise or during the time period from notice to the effective termination date and
        the Lease is then in full force and effect, Tenant shall have a one time right to
        terminate this Lease subject to the terms and conditions of this Section. Tenant’s
        termination right shall be limited only to the situation in which the business
        conditions in this particular office of Tenant drastically changes to the extent
        that Tenant no longer needs to lease office space in the Memphis, Tennessee
        area. In such an event, then Tenant shall have the right to terminate the Lease
        effective after the 120th month of rent paying occupancy (the “Termination Date”)
        by giving no less than twelve (12) months’ prior written notice and paying the
        unamortized Tenant Improvement Allowance and brokerage fees plus nine
        (9) months of the then current monthly Rent at the time of notice. Such costs shall
        be amortized over the Lease Term with an 8.00% interest rate. This option is not
        to be construed as a renegotiation of the existing Lease but is limited to the
        termination of a business unit or units.

        The Termination Option was revised during negotiations. The first draft of the lease had

no termination option. But MassMutual was hesitant to sign the 15-year lease without one, so

Cushman suggested the first Termination Option language:

        Termination Option: Tenant shall have the right to terminate the Lease on the tenth
        (10th) anniversary of the Lease Commencement Date by giving no less than twelve

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Case No. 20-6193, Ma. Mut. Ins. Co. v. RCS – Germantown I, LLC

          (12) months’ prior written notice and paying the unamortized Cash Allowance and
          brokerage fees. Such costs shall be amortized over the Lease Term without interest.

Internally, an Investec broker suggested they add that the Termination Option was “not to be

construed as a renegotiation of the existing Lease but is limited to termination of business unit or

units.”    According to Investec, the addition’s purpose was to “prohibit MassMutual from

terminating the Lease and moving the existing business at the Property to other leased office space”

in Memphis.1

          The Original Landlord added to what Investec would counter-propose by suggesting that

Investec draw from language in another lease of theirs. The Original Landlord’s other lease had a

termination option providing that “Tenant’s termination right shall be limited only to the situation

in which the business conditions in this particular office of Tenant drastically change to the extent

that Tenant no longer needs to lease office space in the Nashville Tennessee area” and that “Tenant

agrees that the foregoing termination right shall not permit Tenant to terminate the Lease and move

its existing business to other leased office space in the Nashville area.” Investec first adopted that

proposed language (replacing “Nashville” with “Memphis”), and then reverted the final sentence

back to the original: the Termination Option was “not to be construed as a renegotiation of the

existing Lease but is limited to termination of business unit or units.” According to Investec, this

round of revisions “was to reflect the only circumstances the parties envisioned as grounds for

terminating the Lease: a ‘termination of business unit or units;’ i.e., if the business operations

conducted by MassMutual at the leased premises ended.”

1
  MassMutual already had operations in Memphis (for its retail insurance agency); FMT’s
provision of trust-related financial services was dissimilar to any existing MassMutual business
activities in Memphis.
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Case No. 20-6193, Ma. Mut. Ins. Co. v. RCS – Germantown I, LLC

           That’s (as relevant here) the termination clause that made it into the lease. The two critical

sentences stated that

           [(1)] Tenant’s termination right shall be limited only to the situation in which the
           business conditions in this particular office of Tenant drastically changes to the
           extent that Tenant no longer needs to lease office space in the Memphis, Tennessee
           area. . . . [And (2)] [t]his option is not to be construed as a renegotiation of the
           existing Lease but is limited to the termination of a business unit or units.

           RCS acquired the Property from the Original Landlord years later. After RCS acquired the

Property, the call center failed and MassMutual sold FMT to a third party—MassMutual didn’t

need office space to support either anymore. MassMutual tried to exercise the Termination

Option,2 but RCS rejected the termination.

           MassMutual sought a declaratory judgment that it could terminate the lease. RCS sought

the opposite. The central issue was whether the clause requiring that MassMutual “no longer needs

to lease office space” in Memphis meant for use by FMT and the call center (MassMutual’s

position), or if it meant the need for any office space in Memphis (RCS’s position). RCS moved

for a judgment on the pleadings and the district court denied the motion because the court was not

yet convinced whether the Termination Option was ambiguous. Both parties moved for summary

judgment.

           After hearing arguments for summary judgment, the court became convinced of the

Termination Option’s unambiguity. The district court reasoned that, when read as a whole, rather

than in isolation, the Termination Option was limited only to MassMutual’s use of that office space

for FMT and its call center—that MassMutual had other Memphis office space was not relevant.

While the district court did not consider parol evidence of the lease negotiations, it noted that if it

had considered the evidence, the result would not change. The negotiations made clear that each

2
    MassMutual paid RCS a termination fee of $1,300,554.

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Case No. 20-6193, Ma. Mut. Ins. Co. v. RCS – Germantown I, LLC

party intended that the Termination Option relate only to the business units and office space at the

Property.

       RCS appeals the grant of summary judgment for MassMutual and the denial of its own

motion.

                                                II

       We review a grant of summary judgment and a district court’s contract interpretation de

novo. Spec’s Fam. Partners, Ltd. v. First Data Merch. Servs. LLC, 777 F. App’x 785, 787 (6th

Cir. 2019); West v. Shelby Cnty. Healthcare Corp., 459 S.W.3d 33, 42 (Tenn. 2014) (“The

interpretation of a written contract is . . . a question of law.”). “The court shall grant summary

judgment if 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.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). There is no dispute that

Tennessee contract law governs our interpretation of the Termination Option. Cf. Spec’s Fam.

Partners, 777 F. App’x at 787.

       In Tennessee, the “cardinal rule” of contract interpretation “is that courts must interpret

contracts so as to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the contracting parties.” Individual

Healthcare Specialists, Inc. v. BlueCross BlueShield of Tenn., Inc. (IHS), 566 S.W.3d 671, 688

(Tenn. 2019). To effectuate that cardinal rule, “Tennessee caselaw demonstrates resolve to keep

the written words as the lodestar of contract interpretation.” Id. at 694. Absent ambiguity,

contractual language “is interpreted according to its plain terms as written, and the language used

is taken in its plain, ordinary, and popular sense.” Maggart v. Almany Realtors, Inc., 259 S.W.3d

700, 704 (Tenn. 2008) (quotation omitted).

       In challenging the district court’s decision, RCS urges us to focus on one phrase of the

Termination Option: The “Tenant no longer needs to lease office space in the Memphis, Tennessee

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Case No. 20-6193, Ma. Mut. Ins. Co. v. RCS – Germantown I, LLC

area.” RCS’s unrelenting focus on this phrase is understandable. For when read in isolation, the

phrase indeed suggests that MassMutual’s maintenance of unrelated corporate offices in the

Memphis area deprives the insurance company of its right to exercise the Termination Option.

       But a venerable tenet of contract law, and of communication in general, reminds us that we

do not read words in isolation. We read them in context. Words are indeed “known by the

company they keep,” or, for those who prefer Latin, noscitur a sociis. “Contractual terms should

be . . . construed harmoniously to give effect to all provisions and to avoid creating internal

conflicts.” D & E Const. Co. v. Robert J. Denley Co., 38 S.W.3d 513, 518–19 (Tenn. 2001)

(quotation omitted). Any “contract must be viewed from beginning to end and all its terms must

pass in review, for one clause may modify, limit or illuminate another.” Cocke County Bd. of

Highway Comm’rs v. Newport Utils. Bd., 690 S.W.2d 231, 237 (Tenn. 1985).

       The question at hand is what “office space” means. Does it refer to any office space used

by any unit of MassMutual in the Memphis area, as RCS argues? Or does it refer only to office

space used by this unit of MassMutual, as the district court determined? Language before RCS’s

chosen phrase and language after it confirm that the district court was right.

       Here, to repeat, is the provision in context:

       [(1)] Tenant’s termination right shall be limited only to the situation in which the
       business conditions in this particular office of Tenant drastically changes to the
       extent that Tenant no longer needs to lease office space in the Memphis, Tennessee
       area. . . . [And (2)] [t]his option is not to be construed as a renegotiation of the
       existing Lease but is limited to the termination of a business unit or units.

       The language that precedes RCS’s isolated phrase provides that MassMutual may terminate

the lease if “the situation in which the business conditions in this particular office of Tenant

drastically changes to the extent that Tenant no longer needs to lease office space in the Memphis,

Tennessee area.” In context, this early language shows that “office space” refers to “this particular

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Case No. 20-6193, Ma. Mut. Ins. Co. v. RCS – Germantown I, LLC

office of Tenant,” namely the office space used for FMT and the call center. Read together, “office

space” and “business conditions in this particular office of Tenant” show that MassMutual may

terminate the lease if the insurance company doesn’t need to lease office space related to the

business located at the leased Property.

        A similar conclusion follows from the clause that appears later. The last sentence of the

Termination Option likewise demonstrates that the option is limited in scope to the instant lease

and the Property. It says that this “option” is “limited to the termination of business unit or units,”

showing that the drafters knew how to refer to business conditions of a particular unit or particular

office of MassMutual—namely, office space used for FMT and the call center. Put another way,

MassMutual can exercise the Option if they terminate business units at the Property (like FMT and

the call center), but can’t if the exercise is just a renegotiating tactic. The last sentence has nothing

to do with MassMutual operations outside of the Property. Reading the limitation that MassMutual

must not “need[] to lease office space in Memphis” along with the need for a “drastic[] change”

“in this particular office,” the limitation to the “terminati[on] of a business unit” related to the

“existing Lease,” and the caveat that MassMutual not use the Option as a renegotiation tactic, we

interpret the Option to be limited to MassMutual’s lease of the Property.

        Like the district court, then, we conclude that the Option unambiguously allowed

MassMutual to terminate the lease as long as business conditions changed for its businesses at the

Property (FMT and the call center) such that MassMutual no longer needed office space for those

business units in Memphis.

        RCS’s contrary interpretation of the Option contradicts common sense. They see the

requirement of a drastic change of business conditions at the Property as a cause and MassMutual’s

lack of need for any Memphis office space as an effect. Under that interpretation, whatever

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Case No. 20-6193, Ma. Mut. Ins. Co. v. RCS – Germantown I, LLC

happens at the Property must cause MassMutual to vacate Memphis. But the cause-and-effect

argument doesn’t make sense because MassMutual’s new venture was never related to

MassMutual’s other Memphis-based business. In other words, FMT’s and the call center’s failure

was never going to cause MassMutual to leave Memphis. Neither clause of that sentence (or any

part of the lease) contemplates MassMutual’s operations outside of the Property, so it doesn’t make

sense to read into the Option that MassMutual predicated their unrelated Memphis operations on

how this new venture fared. See Trice v. Com. Union Assurance Co., 397 F.2d 889, 892–93 (6th

Cir. 1968) (“Where an agreement is susceptible of two different interpretations, of which one is

reasonable and the other is unreasonable, the reasonable one will be adopted.” (applying Tennessee

law)); Trailmobile, Inc. v. Chazen, 370 S.W.2d 840, 844 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1963); Barnes v. Black

Diamond Coal Co., 47 S.W. 498, 499 (Tenn. 1898) (“Common sense must be applied to each case,

rather than any technical rules of construction.”) (quoting Leonard v. Dyer, 26 Conn. 172, 172

(1857)). Such a strong reading would render the Termination Option meaningless.

       Parole evidence also plays no role in this case because the Option is unambiguous. But

even if we considered evidence from the lease negotiations, we would come to the same

conclusion.

       Tennessee law allows the use of negotiations as contextual evidence to interpret a

contract’s terms. If a court uses parol evidence to interpret a contract, it can use context to

“elucidate[,]” but not “vary, contradict, or supplement[,] the contractual terms of a fully integrated

agreement.” IHS, 566 S.W.3d at 697–98 (first quoting URI, Inc. v. Kleberg County, 543 S.W.3d

755, 765 (Tex. 2018)).

       Here, the negotiations conclusively elucidate what the parties meant when they limited the

Option “to the extent that Tenant no longer needs to lease office space in the Memphis, Tennessee

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Case No. 20-6193, Ma. Mut. Ins. Co. v. RCS – Germantown I, LLC

area.” The negotiators for the Original Landlord stated that they meant for the limitation only to

apply to “the existing business at the Property,” not to all of MassMutual’s operations in Memphis.

In other words, the Original Landlord’s brokers believed that MassMutual could exercise the

Option “if the business operations conducted by MassMutual at the leased premises ended.”

MassMutual and its brokers had the same understanding. RCS’s argument to the contrary, that the

negotiators did not directly discuss the meaning of “needs to lease office space” in Memphis is

unconvincing because the negotiation evidence nevertheless demonstrates “the sense in which they

mutually understood [‘office space’] at the time.” IHS, 566 S.W.3d at 688 (quoting McNairy v.

Thompson, 33 Tenn. (1 Sneed) 141, 149 (1853)).

                                                        III

        Because we affirm the district court by holding the Termination Option to be unambiguous,

we need not address arguments about latent defect or mutual mistake. Likewise, RCS fails to point

to any disputed material fact that should have precluded summary judgment.3 The judgment of

the district court is AFFIRMED.

3
  We decide today that MassMutual could exercise the Termination Option if business conditions drastically changed
(like if MassMutual terminated the business units at the Property), resulting in MassMutual not needing the Property
for those business units. It’s undisputed that FMT and the call center were new business units. We agree with RCS’s
corporate representative that good examples of drastic changes to business conditions can include “[g]oing out of
business,” “[g]oing bankrupt,” and “[s]elling the business.” It’s undisputed that the call center “failed” and that
MassMutual sold FMT to a third party. We don’t see any genuine, material dispute that the business conditions
changed or that MassMutual resultingly didn’t need the Property for those units anymore; the district court correctly
held summary judgment to be proper.

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