Tagged: Landlord

Rite Aid Bankruptcy Judge Issues Opinion on Important Post-Petition Landlord Lease Issues

Overview In a significant ruling for commercial landlords, dated November 3, 2025, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey denied three motions filed by HVP2 LLC, the landlord of a rejected Rite Aid lease in Troy, New York (New Rite Aid, LLC, Case No. 25-14861 (MBK)). The motions sought administrative rent, adequate protection payments, late fees, attorney fees, and conversion of the case to Chapter 7. Judge Michael B. Kaplan found that the debtor had satisfied its obligations and properly surrendered the premises, denying all of the landlord’s motions. Key Takeaways for Landlords Stub Rent Paid, But Timing Not Grounds for Late Fees: The court confirmed that “stub rent” (rent due between the petition date and first post-petition payment) qualifies as an administrative expense but emphasized that the Bankruptcy Code does not require payment by a specific date; however, it must be addressed prior to plan confirmation. Relatedly, late fees for May 2025 “stub rent” were denied since the Code imposes no deadline and plan confirmation had not occurred. Common Area Maintenance (CAM) Charges Dismissed as Untimely: HVP2 raised CAM charges only in a supplemental filing, which the court refused to consider. Even if timely, the pleadings lacked sufficient support to justify payment. Lease Surrender Deemed Proper: Despite HVP2’s claim that...

Expansion of Philadelphia Minimum Wage and Benefit Standards Could Impact Retail and Restaurant Tenants

Under a newly enacted City of Philadelphia Ordinance, some tenants in properties developed with financial assistance by the City of Philadelphia may now be required to comply with a minimum wage requirement that is 150% of the federal minimum wage. Benefits provided to full-time employees of tenants may also be impacted.