Shirokiya, the department store turned food court, may never reopen at Ala Moana Center after its leases were revoked in January and it became embroiled in a legal feud with the mall over unpaid rent, unfulfilled investment promises and locked-up wine.
Publicly, Shirokiya has said that the closure of the Japanese Village Walk and adjacent Vintage Cave restaurant is due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The company previously gave a tentative reopening date in April, saying on its that the closure was temporary until it could change its business concept or the pandemic ends.
But court records tell a different story.
, the company that runs Ala Moana and is owned by Chicago-based , sued in January for $8 million in overdue rent. Shirokiya countersued Ala Moana for $110 million. Shirokiya says it invested $50 million to move from its old location across from Macy鈥檚 to the Japan Village Walk and is also seeking $60 million in lost future profits.
Ala Moana locked Shirokiya out of its Japan Village Walk and Vintage Cave locations in late 2020.
The office supplies, dining room tables, chairs, fine china, chandeliers and statues of the Greek goddess Demeter that once filled the Vintage Cave Cafe. Ala Moana also removed Shirokiya from its website.
The decision to end Shirokiya鈥檚 lease was difficult, Ala Moana鈥檚 legal team writes in court documents. But it was necessary because of 鈥淪hirokiya鈥檚 unwillingness to meaningfully communicate, enter into a plan, return to the premises or even pay partial rent.鈥
Shirokiya’s legal team argues that Ala Moana wrongfully terminated its lease.
Rika Jones, the chief financial officer for Shirokiya Holdings Inc., declined to discuss the company鈥檚 future, citing the ongoing lawsuit.
Representatives for Ala Moana didn’t respond to messages seeking comment. Attorneys for Ala Moana and Shirokiya didn’t return calls Friday.
Lawyers for Ala Moana and Shirokiya are scheduled to appear in court Monday to sort out ownership of more than $200,000 worth of wine on the premises of Vintage Cave.
Unpaid Rent During The Pandemic
In May 2020, Derek Kobayashi wrote to Shirokiya on behalf of Ala Moana Center asking that the company pay about $900,000 in pre-COVID-19 rent for its three leases, the Japan Village Walk, Vintage Cave Cafe and the Vintage Cave Honolulu restaurant.
Ala Moana was willing to 鈥減ursue a resolution鈥 that would allow Shirokiya to continue operating and keep its leases as long as the company paid the rent by June 12, Kobayashi wrote in a letter submitted as part of the court record.
A day before the rent was due, Shirokiya鈥檚 attorney Shaun Mukai wrote back, saying business was hampered by the pandemic. He noted that Shirokiya had invested a significant amount to move.
鈥淯nfortunately, Shirokiya has not been able to reap the benefits of its sizable investments,鈥 Mukai wrote.
He said Shirokiya had no immediate plans to reopen, that it already had begun exploring other options, and that it would appreciate 鈥渢he opportunity and courtesy to work out a graceful exit with Ala Moana鈥 if it were unable to reopen at all.
By July, Ala Moana was getting impatient. Kobayashi sent another letter informing Shirokiya that the unpaid rent had ballooned to more than $3 million for the three leases. Ala Moana demanded payment in 10 days.
Ten days later, Mukai said that the company considered reopening options but decided it wasn’t feasible given the rising number of COVID-19 cases. Mukai said the company was in the early stages of negotiating with new investors in Japan, and asked for Ala Moana to wait until September for updates.
In November, Ala Moana changed the locks on the Vintage Cave and Japan Village Walk and told Shirokiya that it was taking control of the premises.
In correspondence with the mall, Shirokiya鈥檚 lawyers denied that the company was in default of its leases and said it was still pursuing new financing in Japan and that it had begun talks with at least one unnamed company.
Shirokiya promised to outline a plan for Ala Moana in December, but no plan materialized, according to Kobayashi鈥檚 letters.
鈥淭enant was still unable to provide (Ala Moana) with any clear intention as to the premises or as to addressing the amounts due and owing to the landlord,鈥 Kobayashi wrote in a letter in December.
The mall ended Shirokiya鈥檚 lease Jan. 15 and filed a lawsuit to reclaim unpaid rent the same day.
‘Empty Promises’
Shirokiya claims in court filings that it鈥檚 being treated unfairly.
It first opened in Ala Moana in 1959 and moved to its previous location as part of a mall expansion in 1966, the Honolulu Advertiser reported at the time.
For 50 years, Shirokiya operated as a department store, selling jewelry, clothes, kimonos, dishware and electronic equipment. A food court on the second floor offered groceries and bentos.
The company says it took a 鈥渓eap of faith鈥 in 2016 when it left its previous location to become an anchor tenant in the mall鈥檚 new Ewa Wing near the former site of the ground floor of Sears.
Shirokiya says Japan Village Walk started leaking during heavy rains in 2018 and that Ala Moana never made repairs. The company also claims that the mall hurried to end its lease earlier this year to make way for a new tenant.
Lawyers for the company wrote that Ala Moana鈥檚 鈥渕ismanagement and empty promises threatened Shirokiya鈥檚 new business model as the anchor tenant for Japan Village Walk with its shops and food court.鈥
Ala Moana denied Shirokiya鈥檚 allegations.
In exchanges between the lawyers, Shirokiya maintained that it could not open because of government restrictions during the pandemic.
The mall鈥檚 lawyers contend in court filings that eateries could open under Honolulu鈥檚 guidelines.
鈥淪hirokiya could have but did not conduct business on a carry out basis and did not resume dine-in services as permitted,鈥 Kobayashi wrote.
The mall鈥檚 attorneys also claim that Shirokiya acted in bad faith when it asked for more time to put together a payment plan while also exploring new Vintage Cave locations in New York and Tokyo.
Ala Moana鈥檚 legal team has further argued that if Shirokiya believed it could not reopen, then it should have surrendered its lease.
‘Personal Property’
Now, Ala Moana and Shirokiya are arguing about wine.
When the mall locked Shirokiya out of its restaurants, lawyers for the company raised concerns over wine stored in the Vintage Cave.
Ala Moana asked the court in June for permission to take possession of the wine. It wants to sell the wine to recoup some of Shirokiya鈥檚 rent.
Shirokiya says that the wine doesn鈥檛 belong to the company but to members in the Vintage Cave Club.
Club members would deposit $5,000 that could be used to pay for food and beverages at the Vintage Cave. In exchange, the members would get benefits, including the use of lockers to store bottles of wine they purchased from the restaurant.
Shirokiya says it should be allowed to hold the wine for its members, and produced receipts showing renewed liquor permits from the Honolulu Liquor Commission.
But Ala Moana countered, saying taking the wine is legal because it amounts to a lien.
A judge is being asked to sort out the dispute at a hearing scheduled for Monday morning.
Kazuyo Souza, a Honolulu tax preparer, is one of Vintage Cave Club鈥檚 members. She said that she is unable to get into the restaurant to take back her wine. She鈥檚 confused over how Ala Moana can claim it belongs to them now.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 our personal property,鈥 Souza said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not Vintage Cave鈥檚. I don鈥檛 know why they aren鈥檛 letting us take our own personal stuff.鈥
Souza said she owns several thousand dollars worth of wine in a locker at the restaurant. She says other members have a lot more.
Court records show that 130 of the club鈥檚 members have a combined total of $200,437 worth of wine stored in the Vintage Cave. The most expensive bottle on the list is a 2010 Screaming Eagle valued at $11,000.
鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be a huge loss to everybody,鈥 Souza said.
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About the Author
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Blaze Lovell is a reporter for Civil Beat. Born and raised on Oahu, Lovell is a graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. You can reach him at blovell@civilbeat.org.