As a California-based court-appointed receiver continues working to get MedMen creditors paid and debts settled, one of the company’s former landlords in a suburb of Buffalo has filed suit against the defunct multistate operator for almost $70,000 in unpaid rent and related bills.
MedMen went belly-up earlier this year, and receiver Richard Ormond has been working since April to wrap up the company’s operations. But as of August, Ormond reported being unable to find any buyers for MedMen’s New York assets, which include four retail dispensaries and a cannabis cultivation facility.
“While I engaged in numerous sales discussions and had two serious buyers considering the acquisition of these assets, no buyer materialized,” Ormond wrote in a report filed with the Los Angeles Superior Court in August, summarizing his progress for the month of July. “As such, on July 15 I started the process to shut down all retail locations and the grow facility. By month’s end, all employees in New York were terminated and all locations were closed.”
Ormond also noted that he was “in communication” with all of MedMen’s New York landlords “to try and return the various premises to them,” but that strategy appears to have only been successful in Utica, where the cultivation facility is located.
That apparently didn’t satisfy ALS Main and Transit LLC, the owner of the Buffalo dispensary on which MedMen still owes rent going back to February.
The company filed suit against MM Enterprises and its state subsidiary, MedMen NY, in New York Supreme Court in Erie County on Sept. 12, seeking $69,717 in unpaid rent and other charges, asserting that a 10-year lease signed in May 2018 is still in effect.
The suit notes that the lease calls for monthly rent payments of $7,279, and states, “Defendants have breached their agreement with Plaintiff by failing to pay as agreed.”
Spokespeople for MedMen did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Friday. The suit has yet to be scheduled for any hearings, according to court records.
MedMen vs ALS Main in NY
It’s not clear, however, if ALS Main and Transit will ever get paid, since they’re one in a long line of MedMen creditors, to whom the company still owes more than $500 million in total.
The total value of MedMen assets is between $30 million and $40 million, but the company still owes $262.3 million to Superhero Acquisition L.P. and another $59.9 million to Hankey Capital LLC.
ALS Main and Transit’s claims likely fall into a third bucket summarized by Ormond, where he notes that MedMen also owes $164.5 million in unsecured debts to various landlords and other vendors.
To help settle some of those debts, Ormond has tried to find buyers for many of the MedMen facilities. According to his monthly report, which was filed in California on Aug. 15, Ormond found buyers for MedMen’s two dispensaries in Chicago and two in Las Vegas, with purchases proceeding, though they had not formally closed yet as of mid-August.
In Massachusetts, however, Ormond hasn’t been able to find any interested buyers for the company’s Boston dispensary. “This asset will likely be abandoned next month if a serious buyer does not materialize quickly,” he wrote.
In California, MedMen still has several dispensaries open and serving customers under Ormond’s management, including stores in downtown Los Angeles, West Hollywood and San Diego. According to the MedMen website, customers can still place orders at a total of six dispensaries, including four in California and two in Nevada.
Other MedMen dispensaries – including MedMen’s Beverly Hills, Venice, LAX, Santa Ana and Abbott Kinney locations – have been returned to landlords, closed up entirely or transferred back to their original owners and aren’t part of the receivership estate. The San Diego shop, in the Torrey Pines neighborhood, is on the auction block while its landlord pursues an eviction notice, and a second San Diego location is already closed.
MedMen receiver report July