Are Extensive Repairs Necessarily ‘Capital Repairs’?
Common area maintenance (CAM) charges can be a source of strife between commercial property owners and
tenants. One common problem arises when a tenant thinks it has been incorrectly charged for CAM, and the
owner believes that the charges are accurate. So-called “capital improvements” are especially controversial
because tenants typically don’t want to pay for them since the improvements will benefit the property long after
the tenant has moved out. A recent Delaware case highlights the importance of nailing down what types of
repairs count as capital improvements, and what types routine maintenance, even if that routine maintenance
ends up being somewhat substantial.
Are Extensive Repairs Necessarily ‘Capital Repairs’?
1. Are Extensive Repairs Necessarily ‘Capital Repairs’?
Common area maintenance (CAM) charges can be a source of strife between commercial property owners and
tenants. One common problem arises when a tenant thinks it has been incorrectly charged for CAM, and the
owner believes that the charges are accurate. So-called “capital improvements” are especially controversial
because tenants typically don’t want to pay for them since the improvements will benefit the property long after
the tenant has moved out. A recent Delaware case highlights the importance of nailing down what types of
repairs count as capital improvements, and what types routine maintenance, even if that routine maintenance
ends up being somewhat substantial.
There, the owner of a shopping center sued a tenant for breach of its lease. The owner had charged as part of
common area maintenance (CAM) a prorated amount that it had to spend on fixing potholes in the parking lot
and installing signs limiting the parking lot to customers. The owner classified these repairs as maintenance.
Under its lease, the tenant was responsible for its share of maintenance at the center. The tenant argued that
these were “capital improvements,” not maintenance, and didn’t fall under CAM. But a Delaware district court
ruled in favor of the owner.
The court found that the charges for pothole repairs and installing parking signs were properly classified as
CAM charges. The court said that the charges for the pothole repairs fall within the plain meaning of
“maintenance,” which “logically includes the act of restoring the common parking lot, after parts of it decayed or
were otherwise destroyed.” The court said that it appreciated the tenant’s concern that an excessive amount of
pothole repairs in a given period of time may be beyond the scope of what would be considered general repairs
or maintenance, but that there was no evidence supporting this contention. The repairs at issue concerned
approximately three or four potholes located in different areas of the parking lot, and were not so extensive that
they could be thought of as a total restoration of the parking lot—that is, a capital improvement.
Some tenants had complained that individuals were parking their cars in the lot for protracted periods of time
without patronizing any of the shopping center’s businesses, which limited the amount of spaces available to
actual customers, and rendered the parking lot “less productive and operational” than expected. Installing the
30-minute-limit signs, however, ensured that the parking lot is functioning properly and is being utilized for the
shopping center’s businesses only, said the court. It concluded that installing the signs was a means of
2. generally maintaining the parking lot so that it remained productive and operational. Thus, the charge for
installing the 30-minute-limit parking signs was properly classified as a CAM charge.
[McGinnis Commercial Real Estate Co. v. Jankes, March 2016]