By
Jim
Butler
of the Global Hospitality
Group® Author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
January 16, 2012
Hotel
Lawyer: Hotel Management Agreement litigation and controversies are on
the
rise.
I was
recently interviewed by Jason Freed of HotelNewsNow (a division of
Smith Travel
Research) for his article, Economic
woes drive owner-operator disputes and it got me thinking.
Hotel
lawyers will tell you that there are always disputes going on between
hotel
owners and operators, and that most of them are resolved at the
bargaining
table without any legal action.
Some disputes
advance into litigation with the filing of a complaint, and others go
to
arbitration. The choice between litigation and arbitration is normally
determined by the terms of the management agreement. Operators seem to
prefer
arbitration and they have pushed to create a trend to arbitrate. The
arbitrations are "private" and tend to be missed by the press and are
conducted in secrecy.
But
the number of owner-operator battles has really escalated over the past
few
years. This is not just a matter of these disputes getting more media
attention. There are a lot more disputes. What you see in the press is
just the
tip of the iceberg.
The
root cause of owner-operator disputes
While
each dispute has a specific cause or issue, at the heart of the matter
you will
find the belief that the operator is not operating the hotel in a
satisfactory
manner and is treating the owner unfairly.
Operators
don't want to give up their lucrative management agreements and many of
them
can't or won't change their actions to satisfy owners who bear all the
financial risk of the hotel investment. In times like these, owners may
find
themselves dipping heavily into other funds to meet negative operating
cash
flows or mortgage payments. Many face foreclosure -- and loss of their
entire
investment -- with the operator's sub-par performance. They feel
cheated when
operators continue to take all their money "off the top" (from gross
revenues) and the operators won't cooperate to improve the situation.
The
role of the economy
Clearly,
bad economic times create a lot more friction between hotel owners and
operators. When everyone is making lots of money, most people don't
feel
desperate to correct every wrong. When hotel operations hit the skids,
and
owners have to write checks to keep the doors open, they want fast and
responsive cooperation on critical issues.
Our
current economic "recovery" is one of the slowest in history.
Recovery in the hotel industry has been very uneven depending on the
hotel's
location, property type, market and other factors. Where hotels are
performing
better, friction between hotel owners and operators tends to ease. But
for
many, the improvement is neither big enough nor fast enough to quell
the
owner's dissatisfaction over operator shortcomings. As a result, we see
the
trend of hotel management agreement disputes continuing and increasing
for
quite a while.
Operator
as fiduciary
Some
owner-operator lawsuits pivot on the fiduciary responsibility of the
operator.
This is an important legal concept for hotel owners to grasp. Jason
Freed's
article included a sidebar I wrote on this very topic and I will share
it with
you in my next blog post.
You
will find a lot more valuable information related to this topic on the
Hotel
Law Blog under the topic "Hotel
Management and Franchise agreements", including a classic article
on
the 5 biggest mistakes a hotel owner can make.
Also
see The HMA Handbook:
Hotel
Management Agreements for Owners, Developers, Investors and Lenders.
Articles
on Hotel Law Blog about terminating hotel management agreements
Terminating
hotel operators: M Edition lawsuit against Marriott has a new twist --
Marriott
is replaced overnight
More
on
M Waikiki Edition lawsuit against Marriott - What Marriott's General
Counsel
says
M
Waikiki's Edition lawsuit against Marriott and Ian Schrager - an
owner's HMA
dispute with Marriott
Terminating
hotel operators: Turnberry Resort drops Fairmont flag
Hotel
management agreement terminations -- Is there a better way?
Terminating
hotel management agreements when things don't work? Not easy, but not
impossible either.
Hotel
bankruptcy trump card. Terminating hotel management agreements without
liability -- the alchemy of lead to gold for troubled hotels and hotel
loans?
Ritz-Carlton
Bali hotel management agreement termination further court order
Ritz-Carlton
breached contractual and fiduciary duties under hotel management
agreement giving
rise to free termination, $10.3 million in damages plus attorneys fees.
When
will hotel operators "get it"?
How
to terminate a hotel management agreement when an operator really
deserves it!
________________________
This is Jim
Butler,
author of www.HotelLawBlog.com
and hotel lawyer,
signing off. We've done more than $60 billion of hotel transactions and
have
developed innovative solutions to help investors be successful in
bidding for
hotel acquisitions, and helping investors and lenders to unlock value
from
troubled hotel transactions. Who's your hotel lawyer?
________________________
Our
Perspective. We
represent hotel lenders,
owners and investors. We have helped our clients find business and
legal
solutions for more than $60 billion of hotel transactions, involving
more than
1,300 properties all over the world. For more information, please
contact Jim
Butler at jbutler@jmbm.com
or +1
(310) 201-3526.
Jim
Butler is a founding partner of JMBM, and Chairman of its Global
Hospitality
Group® and Chinese Investment Group™. Jim is one of the top
hospitality
attorneys in the world. GOOGLE "hotel lawyer" and you will see why.
Jim
and his team are more than "just" great hotel lawyers. They are also
hospitality consultants and business advisors. They are deal makers.
They can
help find the right operator or capital provider. They know who to call
and how
to reach them.
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Global Hospitality Group®
The
hotel lawyers in the Global Hospitality Group® of
Jeffer Mangels Butler & Mitchell (JMBM) comprise the premier
hospitality
practice in a full-service law firm and are the authors of the Hotel Law Blog. We
represent hotel owners, developers, investors and lenders and have
helped our
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