Downtown’s Sugarfire restaurant sues landlord in rent dispute

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Sugarfire’s downtown space has been vacated. (IBJ photo)

Sugarfire Smoke House at 24 W. Washington St. downtown has closed—apparently permanently—and the restaurant has filed a lawsuit against its landlord in a dispute over rent payments.

Sugarfire is part of a fast-casual St. Louis-style barbecue chain based in St. Louis and founded by chef Mike Johnson. The first restaurant opened in 2012, and its website currently lists 15 locations in Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky and Colorado, with another three listed as coming soon in Florida, Iowa and Texas.

The Indianapolis location opened in April 2018 in a high-profile site across from Circle Centre Mall and next to the Conrad Indianapolis Hotel. The space has been cleared out and a phone number to the restaurant is no longer in service. The chain’s website lists the location as closed. It had been listed as “temporarily closed” until recent days.

E-mails sent to Johnson, as well as Sugarfire CFO Ismail Ghodbane, were not returned. A phone call to Sugarfire’s attorney also was not returned.

The business entity that runs the Indianapolis location, BBQ Indy 1, LLC, filed suit May 26 in Marion Superior Court against landlord John J. Goodman and related business entities he owns that do business as Two North Meridian Co., Goodman Jewelers Inc., Goodman Court Street Inc. and Goodman Quad Limited.

According to the lease agreement filed as part of the suit, Sugarfire signed a five-year lease for the space in June 2017. The restaurant was to pay $13,101 per month in rent for the space, which included 2,859 square feet on the first floor, 1,104 square feet in the basement and a 305-square-foot mezzanine area. The lease also included an optional five-year extension, with monthly rent to increase to $14,412 per month during that period.

In its complaint, Sugarfire says Goodman had agreed to reinforce a portion of the first floor so that it would be strong enough to support the weight of the smokers and walk-in coolers that Sugarfire would be using.

After it signed the lease in June 2017, Sugarfire said, it discovered that the floor’s concrete substrate was crumbling. The restaurant said it had the entire first floor rebuilt at its own expense, delaying the opening by two months.

Goodman refused to pay any portion of the $40,000 expense, Sugarfire said, and denied the restaurant’s request to delay the start of rent payments by two months to account for the delay in opening.

Sugarfire says it also spent more than $200,000 on improvements to the space, including installing a new heating, ventilation and air conditioning system; insulation; lighting; smokers; and walk-in coolers, among other things. Goodman, the owners said, also refused to help cover those expenses.

Sugarfire says that it requested relief from Goodman repeatedly.

“However, after the coronavirus pandemic hit Indianapolis and the landlord still refused to offer lenant unconditional rent relief for the delayed opening of the restaurant or any compensation for plaintiffs improvements to defendants’ building, plaintiff finally realized that landlord would never provide any fair and equitable relief or compensation for landlord delivering the leased premises in a deficient, defective, unsafe and unfit condition for use by plaintiff, and that therefore, litigation was necessary,” the suit says.

Reached by phone Thursday morning, Goodman declined to comment.

Sugarfire is asking the court to declare its lease null and void and to award it an amount equaling all rent paid plus other expenses. It also seeks damages in an unspecified amount.

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6 thoughts on “Downtown’s Sugarfire restaurant sues landlord in rent dispute

  1. What exactly did the landlord do wrong? …Sounds like a business owner who didn’t know what they were doing and now crying because the LL will not bail him out.

    1. If the landlord said that the building would be structurally strong enough to handle the equipment and it wasn’t, …

    1. Having discussed the needs of the business beforehand, and you as the landlord say, Yes, this space will meet your needs, and specifically pointing out the floor loading requirements, then failing to meet that need, that seems like a pretty clear breech of contract.

  2. Tom, I don’t know the LL but if it wasn’t in the lease that he would do work then he doesn’t have to. The article is a little vague on whether it’s “in the lease” or not but the article implies it isn’t by saying “Sugarfire says Goodman had agreed to reinforce a portion of the first floor so that it would be strong enough to support the weight of the smokers and walk-in coolers that Sugarfire would be using” otherwise, it would say according to the lease… The fact that they also paid $40K to do work themselves also tells me it wasn’t in the lease. If all of this is in the signed lease, then it’s open and shut for the tenant. If it’s not in there, then yes, Tom, it’s a business owner who didn’t do their due diligence and wants to LL to bail them out. It also states Sugarfire paid $200,000 in tenant improvements that Goodman wouldn’t cover, again, unless it’s in the lease which is ALWAYS part of lease negotiations then why would/should he?

    1. Agree with Joe A. What tenant would invest $250K of their own money in some sort of vague “agreement” with the LL? I also have questions about the business plan in 2017 that was going to cover that staggering amount of rent and expenses. That is a lot of BBQ. My guess is they were already under water and C19 was the final nail and a convenient excuse. Now they want to sue the LL for the tenant’s last 3 years of bad business decisions.

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