Full opinion text
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW BROTMAN, District Judge. This action arises out of conflicts between the principals in a three-year-old partnership venture to build and operate the tenth casino hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey. On June 30, 1982, plaintiff Harrah’s Atlantic City, Inc. (“HAC”), a subsidiary of plaintiff Holiday Inns, Inc. (“HI”), entered into a partnership with Trump Plaza Corporation, whose sole shareholder is defendant Donald J. Trump. The agreement created “Harrah’s Associates” (“the Partnership”). Through Harrah’s Associates, plaintiffs and Trump (“the Partners”) own and operate the “Trump Casino Hotel” on the Boardwalk in Atlantic City. The Partners’ casino hotel, built by Trump and now managed by HAC, opened in May, 1984. Each of the Partners is the sole owner of another casino hotel in Atlantic City. These two other facilities, “Harrah’s Marina” and “Trump’s Castle Casino Hotel,” are situated across the street from one another in the section of the city known as the Marina. “Harrah’s Marina” has been in operation for several years. Defendant began operations of his new casino hotel in June, 1985, shortly after he purchased the facility from Hilton Hotel Corporation, which failed to receive an operating license from the New Jersey Casino Control Commission. The present litigation stems from two sets of events which have caused a serious deterioration in relations between the Partners. HAC and Trump originally planned to develop a multi-level parking complex (“the Parking Facility”) on land adjacent to their Boardwalk casino hotel. While the Partners have obtained the necessary properties, they have failed to agree upon terms for construction and operation of a garage. Plaintiffs fear defendant wishes to obstruct development of new parking accommodations. Plaintiffs also object to defendant’s use of his last name in the promotion of his new casino hotel. According to plaintiffs, defendant’s actions have caused public confusion between the two facilities whose titles contain the name “Trump.” Such confusion has allegedly resulted in irreparable harm to the Partnership’s casino hotel. Plaintiffs filed suit on June 17, 1985. The Complaint asserts that defendant’s refusal to recognize plaintiffs’ ownership interest in land designated for a new parking facility and his use of his name in connection with his new casino hotel both violate plaintiffs’ rights under the Partnership Agreement. With respect to the issue of parking accommodations (Count 1), plaintiffs seek relief under New Jersey property and partnership law. As to defendant’s use of his name, plaintiffs state claims based on the common law of service mark and trade name infringement, the common law of unfair competition and the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1051 et seq., which imposes federal statutory sanctions against unfair competition. (Count 2). In addition, plaintiffs make various other allegations ás to defendant’s acts in violation of his fiduciary duties as a partner. (Counts 3-5). The court’s jurisdiction is invoked pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1332, 1337, 2201, and principles of pendent jurisdiction. Defendant has counterclaimed with numerous contentions as to plaintiffs’ breaches of their reciprocal fiduciary duty to him. In doing so, defendant has added Harrah’s Inc., Hi’s Nevada casino gaming subsidiary, as an additional counterclaim defendant. This action is presently before the court on an application by plaintiffs for an order, .inter alia, preliminarily enjoining defendant from (a) using the word “Trump” in any form, alone or in combination with other words, whether on signs, slot machines or other fixtures or articles, or in advertisements, telephone directories, brochures, press releases or otherwise, in connection with his new Atlantic City casino hotel; or (b) conveying, encumbering or otherwise taking steps adverse to plaintiffs’ interests in connection with any real property acquired by him, as nominee for himself and one or both of them, without their consent. In their reply papers, plaintiffs requested that the court consolidate the preliminary injunction hearing on the land issue with a final hearing on their application for (a) a declaratory judgment that defendant acquired and holds title to the parcels of real property forming the site for the Partnership’s adjacent parking accommodations as nominee for plaintiffs and/or the Partnership, and (b) an order directing defendant to convey title to the parcels to the Partnership, or, alternatively, to some other partnership composed 50% of plaintiffs and 50% of defendant. On June 28, 1985, the court conducted a hearing on plaintiffs’ application based on pleadings, affidavits, exhibits, written briefs and oral arguments of the counsel. The court subsequently determined that discovery and live testimony would not materially improve the state of the record as to the merits of plaintiffs’ claims for injunctive relief with respect to ownership of the parking facility properties as well as use of the name “Trump.” Consequently, on July 11, 1985, the court advanced and consolidated a trial on the merits with the hearing on plaintiffs’ application for a preliminary injunction, pursuant to Fed.R. Civ.P. 65(a)(2). Based on all the submissions of the parties and the remainder of the record in this matter, the court makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. FINDINGS OF FACT I. INTRODUCTION A. Parties and Witnesses 1. Plaintiff HI is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Tennessee and has its principal place of business in Memphis, Tennessee. Complaint II3; Answer 113. 2. Plaintiff HAC is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New Jersey and has its principal place of business in Atlantic City, New Jersey. HAC is a wholly owned subsidiary of HI. Complaint 114; Answer 114. 3. Defendant Donald J. Trump is a citizen of the State of New York, residing in and having a principal place of business in New York City. Complaint 115; Answer 115. 4. Philip G. Satre is President and Chief Executive Officer of Harrah’s, a subsidiary of HI, President of HAC, and President of the Gaming Group of HI. Affidavit of Philip G. Satre, June 13, 1985 (“Satre Aff.”). Satre’s supplemental affidavit of June 25, 1985 is referred to herein as “Satre Supp. Aff.” 5. Richard J. Goeglein is President and Chief Operating Officer of Holiday Corporation, the parent corporation of HI, a position he has held since September, 1984. Prior to assuming that position, he was President and Chief Executive Officer of Harrah’s and Chairman of HAC. Goeglein was succeeded as President and Chief Executive Officer of Harrah’s by Satre in October, 1984. Affidavit of Richard J. Goeglein, June 25, 1985 (“Goeglein Aff.”) ¶ 1. Goeglein’s supplemental affidavit of June 27, 1985 is referred to herein as “Goeglein Supp.Aff.” 6. James L. Schorr is Executive Vice President and a member of the Board of Directors of Holiday Corporation, with primary responsibility for corporate strategy and new business development. Schorr is also a director of Harrah’s and has been involved in marketing decisions relating to the Partnership’s casino hotel. 7. Gary Selesner is Manager of Advertising for the Partnership’s casino hotel. Selesner has been employed in advertising and related fields since 1976. Affidavit of Gary Selesner, June 13, 1985 (“Selesner Aff.”) ¶ 1. 8. Arturo Camacho is Manager of Bus Operations for the Partnership’s casino hotel. Affidavit of Arturo Camacho, June 13, 1985 (“Camacho Aff.”) It 1. 9. Jack Trout is a partner in Trout & Ries Advertising, Inc., in New York City, an agency specializing in strategic marketing and promotions. From late 1983 until late 1984, Trout and the firm of Trout & Ries were actively engaged in promoting the Partnership’s casino hotel. Affidavit of Jack Trout, June 13, 1985 (“Trout Aff.”) ¶1¶ 1-2. Trout’s supplemental affidavit of June 25, 1985 is referred to herein as “Trout Supp.Aff.” 10. The defendant, Donald J. Trump, testified on his behalf. Affidavit of Donald J. Trump, June 25, 1985 (“Trump Aff.”). 11. For a number of years, HI, including its wholly owned subsidiary Harrah’s, has had the largest gaming operations of any company in the world. Harrah’s has been involved in the gaming industry for over forty years. HI now owns casino hotels in Las Vegas, Reno and Lake Tahoe, Nevada. Since 1980, HI has also operated “Harrah’s Marina Hotel Casino” in the Marina section of Atlantic City. The Harrah’s name and service mark have been well known among casino hotel patrons and the general public for many years in the Western United States, and since at least the early 1980s in the Eastern markets served by Atlantic City. As a result of Harrah’s large expenditures on advertising and its successful operations, the Harrah’s name and service mark constituted a valuable asset in connection with gaming at the time of the formation of the Partnership, and continues to do so. Satre Aff. ¶ 6; Trump Aff., Exhibit C at 105, 114,145, 159, 163, 164. 12. Defendant Donald J. Trump has acquired a national reputation as a leading real estate developer and entrepreneur. During the last ten years, he has successfully promoted, developed and constructed numerous commercial and residential properties throughout New York City and in New Jersey. Many of the enterprises are valued in the hundreds of millions of dollars and have attracted substantial publicity. In early 1982, at the time the parties began discussing a partnership venture, defendant had underway three developments in New York City which gained much public attention: the Grand Hyatt Hotel, the largest hotel built in New York in twenty years; the Trump Tower, a 68-story residential and commercial building on Fifth Avenue; and Trump Plaza, a 40-story residential building in midtown Manhattan. With the completion of these projects and because of other ventures, defendant’s status as a public figure has grown steadily since then. In September, 1983, defendant received particularly wide media exposure for his acquisition of the New Jersey Generals of the United States Football League. Trump Aff. Ml 4-6; Goeglein Aff. ¶ 6. 13. Defendant began investing in Atlantic City real estate in July, 1980 when he assembled the present site of the Partners’ casino hotel. The same year, defendant reserved a gaming license with the Casino Control Commission. Defendant purchased additional land across from the Boardwalk site, the so-called “Hertz” parcel, in April, 1982. On May 18, 1982, defendant began construction of the “Trump Plaza Hotel & Casino.” Trump Aff. H 9, Exhibit C at 36, 51, 163. B. Formation of the Partnership 14. The parties began negotiating a joint venture in May, 1982. Satre Aff. 11 6. The parties were apparently attracted to one another for their respective areas of expertise: Harrah’s in gaming operations; Trump in real estate development. See, e.g., Trump Aff., Exhibit C at 163; Satre Aff. 1135. 15. The parties eventually agreed to form a general partnership pursuant to a written agreement, dated June 30, 1982, between HAC and Trump Plaza Corporation. The Partnership, “Harrah’s Associates,” was formed to develop, own and operate a casino hotel in Atlantic City. Trump Plaza Corporation assigned all of its rights in the Partnership to defendant, its sole shareholder, by an assignment dated June 30, 1982. The Partnership Agreement, Satre Aff., Exhibit 1, provides that New Jersey law governs the construction of the agreement and the partners’ obligations thereunder. Complaint 116; Answer 116; Satre 112; Partnership Agreement § 4.1. 16. Under the Partnership Agreement, responsibility for construction was delegated, to Trump Partnership Agreement § 5.9, and responsibility for operating and managing the Partnership facilities was delegated to HAC. Partnership Agreement § 5.10. 17. The Partners’ Boardwalk casino hotel opened on May 14, 1984, under the name “Harrah’s at Trump Plaza.” Trump Aff. 111120-21. 18. In April, 1985, Trump concluded an agreement with the Hilton Hotels Corporation (“Hilton”) to acquire from Hilton a newly constructed casino hotel located in the Marina section of Atlantic City. Negotiations between Trump and Hilton were first announced by Hilton on April 18,1985, and an agreement was announced April 20, 1985. Satre Aff. 11 23. 19. Hilton had built the casino hotel and staffed it but had been denied a gaming license by a deadlocked vote of the New Jersey Casino Control Commission on February 28, 1985. The Hilton property has a 3,000-car garage. Satre Aff. U 24 & Exhibit 6. 20. On June 17,1985, Trump opened the new facility under the name “Trump’s Castle Hotel & Casino.” Trump Aff. 111135 & 37. II. PARKING FACILITIES 21. During the negotiations leading up to the creation of the Partnership Agreement, the Partners discussed the need for an adjacent parking garage (“the Parking Facility”), to enable the casino hotel to achieve its full revenue and profit. Complaint ¶ 17; Answer 1117. 22. The Partnership Agreement provides that the purposes of the Partnership include: “To own, develop and operate the Property, including without limitation, the right to demolish existing structures and to construct thereon a 32-story first-class hotel with approximately six hundred twelve (612) guest rooms with a casino of approximately sixty thousand (60,000) square feet and parking accommodations.” Partnership Agreement § 4.1(b) (emphasis added). 23. The Partnership Agreement also provides that, subject to certain conditions, “all expenses of acquiring, owning, developing, financing or otherwise incurred in' connection with the Property and the Parking Facility shall be borne and paid for by the Partnership, and all income from the Property and the Parking Facility shall belong to the Partnership.” Partnership Agreement § 5.4. 24. Trump had already begun to assemble the land on which the Parking Facility would be built at the time the Partnership Agreement was executed. Defendant purchased lots 20, 21, 28 and 59 on the block across from the hotel site, together known as the “Hertz” or “Rothenberg” parcel, in April, 1982. Defendant contributed this property to the Partnership as part of the June 30, 1982, agreement. Partnership Agreement § 6.1(a)(ii), Schedule A (“Basic Documents,” “Hertz Parcel,” and “Parking Facility”). Schedule B, “Tract IV”; Schedule C, Note 4; Schedule F at c. 25. The Partners entered into two letter agreements (“the Letter Agreements”) dated November 2, 1982 and February 2, 1983, which contemplated the formation of a new partnership between Trump and Holiday Inns to develop and manage a parking facility for the casino hotel. The Letter Agreements authorized Trump to acquire title to various identified parcels which the Partners deemed suitable as a site for parking facilities. Trump was to hold title to the properties in his own name as nominee for the new partnership, pending the formation of the same. Each of the Partners was to advance 50% of the cash necessary to purchase such properties. Trump Aff. ¶ 48, Exhibits T, U; Satre Aff. ¶¶ 40, 41, Exhibit 15. A bank account was established to receive the partners’ contributions to the new partnership, denominated the “Donald J. Trump — Parking Account No. 134-0-57256.” Satre Aff., Exhibits 15 & 18. 26. The Partnership Agreement provides for such an arrangement: A nominee or agent may be utilized by the Partnership in the conduct of its business. The use or designation of such nominee or agent shall in no way affect or diminish the obligations, undertakings or liabilities of the Partners hereto to one another. Partnership Agreement § 4.5(a). 27. Plaintiffs and defendant jointly authorized the purchase of the land on which the Parking Facility was to be built. For example, at the Partnership Executive Committee meeting of December 6, 1982, defendant described the parcels he had recently acquired and “the Committee unanimously authorized Mr. Donald Trump to acquire two out parcels on Mississippi Avenue.” Satre Aff. II41 & Exhibit 16; see also Exhibits 17-19. As of May, 1985, HI and Trump had each contributed approximately $5,000,000 to the purchase and maintenance of properties designated as the site for the Parking Facility. Complaint 1119; Answer 1119; Satre Aff. 1142; Trump Aff. H1149 & 58. 28. Both Partners have fully performed their promises contained in the Letter Agreements in that Trump has acquired the properties identified therein, and the Partners have each contributed fifty percent of the funds necessary to purchase and maintain the properties. Trump Aff. ¶ 49; Satre Aff. 1142; Tr. at 54-55. 29. The partnership “to be formed” in accordance with the Letter Agreements has not yet been created, as the Partners have been unable to agree on the terms according to which the new partnership entity will operate. There exists substantial disagreement between the Partners regarding the proper cost and design of a parking facility, the appropriate method for financing such a project and other issues. Tr. at 54-55. 30. The undeveloped property purchased and contributed by the Partners and designated for construction of a parking facility (“the Parking Facility Properties”) currently constitutes the only lot adjacent to the casino hotel which is available for that purpose. The lot now contains approximately 40 percent of the casino hotel’s parking spaces and is used to load and unload buses which transport customers and employees to the casino hotel. Satre Aff. 11 43; Complaint 11 20; Answer 1120. Since its opening, the casino hotel has turned away many customers due to a shortage of adequate parking facilities. Satre Aff. 1137. 31. Between July, 1984 and June, 1985 more than 900,000 customers arrived at the Hotel on more than 28,000 buses. It is projected that during 1985 more than 1,100,000 customers will arrive by bus. Camacho Aff. ¶ 4. The Atlantic City Transit Authority has given the Hotel permission to handle only six buses per day at the Hotel itself, and only in the nonpeak period between 2:00 a.m. and 10:00 a.m. Camacho Aff. 11 6 and Exhibit. 32. Continued access to the Parking Facility Properties is crucial to the Partnership’s casino hotel operations. Without them, the Partnership would lose a major portion of its present facilities for customer parking and a crucial link in its system of transporting customers and employees to its casino hotel by bus. The Parking Facility Properties also constitute the best site for future construction of a multi-level parking complex. Consequently, the parties acknowledge that if the properties were transferred or encumbered, the Partnership’s facility would suffer a serious blow. Tr. at 53; Satre Aff. 111137, 38. 33. Public officials agree that the Parking Facility Properties are an important component of the Partnership’s operation. In an April 9,1984 letter to the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, the State of New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement made the following findings: “... [I]it is quite evident that the premises in question are vital to the proposed casino hotel project. Parking facilities are scarce in the city, and the premises are important to the accommodation of hotel guests and bus patrons.” Satre Aff. Exhibit 13 at 4 & 6. 34. Despite their differences concerning formation of a partnership to build and run a parking garage, the parties agree that development of new parking accommodations is vital to the prospects of the Partnership’s facility. a. On September 21, 1984, Michael Rose, then Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of HI, wrote defendant to memorialize a conversation in which the Partners agreed that the parking garage is an essential element to this project and has been recognized from the beginning as giving a true competitive advantage in Atlantic City. We recognized the need to get underway as soon as possible with the construction. Satre Supp.Aff., Exhibit 4. b. The Partnership included a proposal for a parking garage in its casino facilities proposal to the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, part of its application for a casino license. Satre Aff., Exhibit 13. e. Philip Satre has stated that ample parking facilities ... are of critical importance in the congested Boardwalk area of Atlantic City ... At present, unlike its competitors that have built parking garages on adjacent land, the [Partnership’s] Hotel is forced to operate with ... parking spaces spread out over approximately ten different surface lots, some of which are 15 to 30 minutes from the Hotel in normal traffic ... Since its opening, the Hotel has been forced to turn away thousands of gaming customers because it lacks adequate parking spaces. Satre Aff. U 37. d. Defendant has indicated his awareness of the importance of ample parking accommodations in marketing his new facility. Recently, defendant’s ads for “Trump’s Castle ...” have stressed the presence there of an adjacent “3,000-car indoor garage.” See, e.g., The Atlantic City Press, August 30, 1985, “Venture” Section at 7, 8, 9, 10. 35. The problems caused by the inadequate parking facilities at the Partnership’s casino hotel adversely affect the surrounding community. The Atlantic City Planning Board, in a Decision and Resolution dated September 7, 1983, has found a “community need” for multi-level parking facilities in the area of the Partnership’s casino hotel, and it has reaffirmed that need as recently as May, 1985. Satre Aff. ¶ 39 & Exhibit 14. The community’s interest in the development of new parking facilities adjacent to the Partnership’s facility is reflected in the strict limits placed on use of the Parking Facility Properties as surface parking lots. It is undisputed that The most recent extension of the Hotel’s right to use the land for surface parking, granted in early May 1985, was conditioned on submission within 30 days of an acceptable plan for, and posting a bond to cover the cost of, required permanent improvements to the land if construction of a parking facility is not begun by October 15, 1985. Satre Aff. ¶ 46 & note 11. 36. During the course of intense and often hostile negotiations between the Partners as to development of the Parking Facility, defendant’s agents have asserted that defendant is the sole owner of the Parking Facility Properties: (a) In a letter dated October 31, 1984, from Harvey Freeman, Senior Vice President of the Trump Organization, to Christopher Whitney, HAC Senior Vice President, Law and Government, Freeman asserted that the land for the planned Parking Facility was in fact “owned by Donald Trump totally,” that the Partnership’s casino hotel was a “tenant at will and may be terminated at any time,” and that rent was due Trump by the Partnership for its use of the land. The letter further stated “based on our mutual inability to form a Partnership with respect to said parking site, we would like you to inform us as to which account to return the monies advanced by you____” Satre Aff. ¶ 44(a) & Exhibit 21. (b) In a letter dated January 10, 1985, Robert Trump, defendant’s brother and Executive Vice President of the Trump Organization, “firmly endorse[d] the position stated by Harvey I. Freeman in his letter of October 31, 1984 to Chris Whitney regarding the entire parking and Transportation Center issue.” He described the Parking Facility land as “Donald J. Trump’s property” and “the site owned by Donald J. Trump,” and he wrote that “the owner of the parking land (Donald J. Trump) has never had any obligation under law or otherwise ... to continue to provide the existing surface parking for the casino hotel.” He advised plaintiffs “to make alternate arrangements for [the Partnership’s] parking and bus loading and unloading requirements.” Satre Aff. 1Í 44(b) & Exhibit 22. 37. Defendant received copies of both letters by his agents which assert his sole ownership in the Parking Facility Properties. With respect to the letters, defendant has stated that “I do not intend to imply that they were unauthorized or that I disagree with the substance of the statements contained therein.” Trump Aff. 11 56. At no time, however, has defendant actually taken affirmative steps to convey or encumber the Parking Facility Properties; nor has he himself threatened to do so. 38. In his Answer, defendant denied plaintiffs’ allegation that he had acquired the “Hertz” parcel “for transfer to the Partnership at the time of the Partnership’s original formation.” Complaint 1118; Answer 1118. There is no merit to plaintiffs’ claim that this too constitutes an unwarranted assertion of sole ownership. Defendant’s denial was proper as he purchased the “Hertz” parcel in April, 1982, prior to the start of serious partnership negotiations between the parties, which occurred, by plaintiffs’ own testimony, in May, 1982. See supra, Findings of Fact P 24; Satre Aff. ¶ 6. 39. In May, 1985, plaintiffs asked defendant to sign deeds reflecting their ownership in the Parking Facility Properties. Plaintiffs initially made their request in connection with a proposal that they assume full responsibility for construction of a parking facility. Plaintiffs allegedly hoped to speed development of a new garage thereby. Satre Aff. ¶ 45. In this action, plaintiffs urge the court to order such a transfer. 40. Defendant has consistently refused plaintiffs’ requests to execute documents recognizing their interests in the Parking Facility Properties. He has also rejected the proposal to transfer responsibility for development of a new garage. Defendant originally characterized formal recognition of plaintiffs’ interests as unnecessary and undeserved. In a May 13, 1985 letter to Harrah’s President Philip G. Satre, defendant sáid: [effectively, you are stating our position that you do not own the land ... I was nevertheless willing, based on our prior agreement [to build a parking facility] (which you now dishonorably dismiss), to complete said documentation, so that a garage can be built, ... [even though] your inept management of the casino hotel facility causes me great doubt as to whether or not spending additional funds on a parking facility is justifiable. Satre Aff., Exhibit 23 at 2. Defendant has since demanded that plaintiffs compensate him for acknowledging their interests. Satre Aff. 1145; Trump Aff. HU 58, 59. 41. Defendant bases his actions on the contention that until a new Parking Facility partnership is formed, plaintiffs have only an unequal, equitable claim in the Parking Facility Properties. Trump Aff. II 58. Defendant claims a greater interest due to his efforts in assembling the Parking Facility site. Id. 11 60. Defendant maintains that if the Partners succeed in setting up a separate partnership to construct and manage a new parking facility, the present Partnership should pay the new partnership rent for use of the property dedicated to the facility. If the new partnership is not formed, plaintiffs are only entitled to reimbursement for monies paid toward the purchase of the land. Id. ¶¶ 58, 59. 42. At oral argument, counsel for defendant stated that defendant acknowledges that since execution of the Partnership Agreement, he had purchased several parcels of land with partnership funds “merely as a titleholder ... for [a] new entity ... to be formed to construct and operate a parking garage.” Tr. at 54. Counsel for defendant also stated that defendant acknowledges and agrees to abide by all agreements he has entered into in connection with the Partnership’s casino hotel. Tr. at 55. This statement implies that defendant recognizes his contribution of the “Hertz” parcel to the Partnership as part of the Partnership Agreement. See supra, 114. Finally, counsel for defendant stated that defendant does not intend to convey or encumber any of the Parking Facility Properties. Tr. at 55. 43. The court finds these statements by defendant’s counsel, who is fully authorized to speak for his client, to be credible. Having been made in open court, they carry considerably more weight than the remarks of defendant or defendant’s agents in the course of heated negotiations with plaintiffs. Furthermore, the record shows no significant evidence to support plaintiffs’ claims that defendant intends to convey or encumber the “Hertz” parcel or the other parcels composing the Parking Facility Properties. In particular, defendant’s acknowledgement of his role as title holder for a new partnership to be formed by the parties indicates his lack of an intention to interfere with the Partnership’s use of such properties. III. USE OF THE NAME “TRUMP” A. The Partnership Agreement 44. Section 15.10 of the Partnership Agreement provides that the Hotel shall be named “ ‘Harrah’s Boardwalk at Trump Plaza’ or such other name as shall be selected by the Partners.” 45. The Partnership Agreement contains two provisions which address the Partners’ rights to use the name “Harrah’s.” (a) Section 5.1(c) states: It is hereby acknowledged that Harrah’s owns and controls the name and service mark ‘Harrah’s and said service mark is properly registered in the United States. HAC, on behalf of Harrah’s, hereby grants to the Partnership during the term of this Agreement the right to use the name ‘Harrah’s’ solely in connection with the name and operation of the Hotel. In that connection, so long as HAC or any affiliate thereof is the manager of the Partnership pursuant to Section 5.10, the Hotel shall be operated as a ‘Harrah’s’ Hotel and HAC or such affiliate shall cause the name ‘Harrah’s’ or any variant thereof, to be available for use by the Partnership. [Trump] and the Partnership acknowledge that they have no ownership or other right, title or interest in the name ‘Harrah’s’ or any variant thereof and agree that upon any termination of the Partnership, termination of any Partner’s interest in the Partnership, or termination of HAC as manager and operator pursuant to Section 5.10, as the case may be, they will not thereafter use the name ‘Harrah’s’ in any way. (b) Section 5.13(b) states: HAC and [Trump] acknowledge that affiliated companies of HAC own and operate Harrah’s Marina Hotel Casino in the ‘Marina Area’ of Atlantic City, New Jersey (the ‘Marina Area’). Recognizing that the operation of the Marina Hotel will result in competition with the Hotel and that there may hereafter be construed to be a conflict of interest as a consequence of HAC’s position with respect to both hotel/casinos, the Partners for themselves and the Partnership hereby expressly waive any claim or cause of action which they may have against each other or against Holiday Inns, Inc. or Harrah’s, a Nevada corporation (‘Harrah’s’) arising solely from the fact of their ownership, development or operation of the Marina Hotel, competitive though it may be. Nothing contained in this Section 5.13(b) shall be construed to diminish the fiduciary obligations of HAC as a Partner to perform its duties hereunder in good faith and in the best interests of the Partners and the Partnership in accordance with the terms of this Agreement. 46. The Partnership Agreement contains no provisions comparable to Section 5.1(c) with respect to the name “Trump.” The Partnership Agreement contains no express limitations on either Partner’s right, title or interest in the use of the name “Trump” nor on either Partner’s ability to create and protect a service mark that included the name “Trump.” None were proposed by either party during any negotiations between the Partners. Satre Aff. ¶ 10; Goeglein Aff. 113. 47. The parties’ agreement contains a broad provision permitting competition between the Partners: The individual shareholders of each Partner, consistent with their fiduciary obligations as Partners, but without accountability to the Partnership or to the other Partner, and without any consent whatsoever, may engage independently or with others in other business ventures of every kind and nature, including, but not limited to, the ownership, financing, leasing, operation, management, brokerage, sale and development of real property, whether or not competitive with the business of the Partnership or any of its assets, and neither the Partnership nor the Partners, as such, have any rights by virtue of this Agreement in and to said independent ventures or to the income or profits derived therefrom. Partnership Agreement § 5.6. 48. There is a serious dispute between the parties as to the intended effect of the Partnership Agreement with respect to defendant’s right to use his name in connection with a subsequent independent casino venture. Plaintiffs believed that by reserving rights to the Harrah’s name, they communicated to defendant their “position, that [a party] didn’t have [such a] right unless [the party] expressly reserved it.” Tr. at 28. Plaintiffs allegedly assumed that defendant failed to reserve rights in his name, and thus bargained away such rights, because he knew plaintiffs would not agree to acknowledge them. Id. at 25, 28-29. Defendant, however, expected that “if Harrah’s wished to restrict his (Trump’s) right to use his own name, there would have been such a restriction in the contract.” Id. at 48. 49. Plaintiffs’ representatives stated that if they had known of defendant’s expectations, they would have acted differently. (a) Richard Goeglein testified: HAC would not have agreed to include ‘Trump’ in the name of the Partnership’s hotel casino had Mr. Trump asked to include a provision or otherwise indicated that he reserved a right at some future date to use that name to promote another hotel casino in Atlantic City. Goeglein Aff. ¶ 4. (b) Philip Satre testified: [Trump] did not then indicate any desire, plan or purported right to use the name Trump in association with any other Atlantic City casino hotel. Had he done so, we would never have agreed to use the work Trump in the casino hotel’s name. The notion that HAC would expend money and resources to publicize the name ‘Trump’ — a name that had no secondary meaning in connection with casino gaming at that time and which we did not want to include in the facility’s name at all — only to have defendant use that name in connection with a competing Atlantic City casino hotel — would have been completely repugnant to us. Satre Supp.Aff. 114. 50. Defendant has said that he would have made different demands of plaintiffs during the partnership negotiations if he had known of their expectations. Defendant has stated that HAC never declared its belief that it had greater rights in the name “Harrah’s” than defendant did in his name. Trump Aff. ¶ 15. Defendant also said: [T]here was never any doubt that the Partnership Agreement I have with plaintiffs specifically authorizes me to open another ‘Trump’ Hotel and Casino, just as it authorizes plaintiffs to open another ‘Harrah’s’ hotel and casino. If it did not, I would not have gone into the Partnership. Trump Aff. II12. See also id. 1111. Defendant testified further that he understood the freedom of competition clause to guarantee both parties the right to open new competing facilities, id. ¶ 13, and that he assumed HAC demanded a reservation of rights clause for the Harrah’s name because it already had another “Harrah’s” facility in operation. Id. ¶ 11. Defendant allegedly assumed he was granting the Partnership no more than a nonexclusive license to use his name for Partnership purposes. Id. II14. 51. At the time the parties negotiated their Partnership Agreement, plaintiffs understood that defendant was prepared to construct, own and operate a casino hotel in Atlantic City on his own. See Trump Aff. 117. Plaintiffs further understood that defendant, as a holder of a casino hotel owner-operator license, is eligible to receive permission to own and operate up to two additional such facilities in Atlantic City. N.J.S.A. 5:12-82(e). In addition, plaintiffs knew of defendant’s practice of naming his major projects after himself. See supra, Findings of Fact H 12; infra, 1172. Consequently, plaintiffs had no rational basis for a belief that defendant would not at some future time seek to own or operate another casino hotel in Atlantic City, or that defendant would not expect to use his name in connection with such a facility. B. The Name of the Partners’ Facility 52. The parties dispute the nature and relative importance of their respective roles in changing the name of their casino hotel from “Harrah’s Boardwalk at Trump Plaza” to “Trump Casino Hotel.” Nevertheless, it is plain that both Partners considered such changes beneficial to the economic prospects of their casino hotel. 53. The Partnership Agreement tentatively specified the name of the Partners’ future facility as “Harrah’s Boardwalk at Trump Plaza.” See supra, Findings of Fact II44. Philip Satre testified that this preliminary choice was made jointly by the Partners. It was designed (i) to use the goodwill and name recognition associated with the Harrah’s name and service mark while at the same time distinguishing it from Harrah’s Marina Hotel Casino through the geographical designation ‘Boardwalk’ and the descriptive noun ‘Plaza,’ and (ii) to allow the Hotel to build its own goodwill and to develop a separate customer base associated with the Trump name and the Boardwalk location. Satre Aff. If 8. In light of this admission, the court need not address plaintiffs’ contentions that the name was chosen largely because of defendant’s “entreaties.” See Goeglein Aff. 113; Trout Aff. 115; Satre Supp.Aff. 114. 54. During the spring and summer of 1984, the Partners engaged in extensive discussions concerning the name of their facility. Defendant believed that “a more prominent use of [his] name ... would benefit the Partnership”; consequently, he pressed plaintiffs to adopt the name “Harrah’s at Trump Plaza.” Trump Aff. 1119; Goeglein Aff. 11 5. Defendant also thought the word “Boardwalk” “cheapened” the facility’s name. Goeglein Supp.Aff., Exhibit 1. Plaintiffs’ proposed “Harrah’s Atlantic Palace at Trump Plaza.” Defendant rejected this option as verbose. By May, 1983, the Partners could not agree on a new name. Id., Exhibits 1-3. 55. In September, 1983, shortly after defendant’s acquisition of the New Jersey Generals, plaintiffs agreed to the change proposed by Trump. Plaintiffs had come to accept defendant’s view that his personal prominence would help publicize the new casino hotel. Goeglein Aff. II 6; Satre Aff. 1111. The parties amended the Partnership Agreement accordingly, in an agreement dated September 27,1983. The agreement, which consists of a letter from Richard Goeglein to defendant and is signed by both, states in pertinent part: (a) “I have pursued our name discussion and suggest the ‘Harrah’s at Trump Plaza’ name and logo enclosed. It gives us the opportunity to take full advantage of your personal prominence, reputation and recognition.” (b) “As I have thought about your corn-men ts/thoughts, it seems to me that with your unique public status and access to the media, you have the opportunity to give our project a great deal of publicity, especially in the Northeastern United States.” Trump Aff., Exhibit A. 56. Plaintiffs argue that they never would have approved of (a) the Letter Agreement, or (b) the decision to adopt and promote the name “Trump Plaza,” or (c) the decision to adopt and promote the name “Trump Casino Hotel,” if they thought defendant reserved a right to use his name in a subsequent casino hotel venture. Goeglein Aff. 11117, 8, 10. Accordingly, plaintiffs contend that by the terms of the Letter Agreement, defendant granted the Partnership exclusive rights to the use of his name “[i]n consideration for [Harrah’s Associates] giving the name ‘Trump’ more emphasis.” Tr. at 27. This interpretation is not supported by the language of the Letter Agreement or the other evidence in the record. Just as it is implausible that Trump implicitly forfeited rights to his name in the Partnership Agreement, it is unreasonable to conclude that he did so in the parties’ amendment thereto. It is more reasonable to conclude that plaintiffs simply assumed defendant had no right to use his name in a subsequent venture. 57. Defendant subsequently pressed plaintiffs to feature his name and to abandon any reference to “Harrah’s.” Plaintiffs resisted. Consequently, the Partners hired Jack Trout’s advertising firm to study alternatives. The firm proposed “Atlantic Palace.” Plaintiffs like the idea; defendant did not. Trout Aff. HIT 6, 7. Trout also testified that he tried to sell the idea to defendant on the grounds that if he ever wished to build or buy another casino hotel “he would be free to use the name ‘Trump’ ... because the partnership’s casino would not have used and promoted that name.” Id. ¶ 7. Trout does not explain the basis for the opinions he expressed as to defendant’s rights. 58. In the fall of 1984, the Partners decided to stop featuring the name “Harrah’s” in most advertising for their casino hotel. They announced their adoption of the name “Trump Plaza” on October 2, 1984. Satre Aff., Exhibit 2. 59. The decision to drop the name “Harrah’s” derived from the parties’ desire to reduce confusion between their establishment and “Harrah’s Marina Hotel Casino.” Satre Aff. 1113; Trout Aff. II 5. 60. The Partners chose the name “Trump Plaza” at least partly because defendant favored it. Satre Aff. ¶ 13; Trout Aff. ¶¶ 4, 8. It also appears that the Partners acted as they did because the term “Trump Plaza” had come to be associated with their casino hotel. See Trump Aff., Exhibit C at 25, 39, 41, 46, 50, 55, 83, 111, 115, 125. 61. In January, 1985, the Partners consulted a new advertising agency, which recommended further simplification of the name of the Boardwalk facility to “Trump Casino Hotel.” Defendant does not deny that he initiated these efforts. See Satre Supp.Aff. ¶ 5; Goeglein Aff. 11 9. The Partners expressly agreed to the change in February, 1985. Satre Aff. ¶ 19. Over defendant’s objections, plaintiffs registered “Trump Casino Hotel” as a service mark of the Partnership in May, 1985. Satre Supp. Aff. 11 5, Exhibit 5; Trump Aff. 111125-29. 62. Between June, 1982 and February, 1985, the Partners agreed to decrease emphasis of the name “Harrah’s” and to increase emphasis of the name “Trump.” Plaintiffs went along with this pattern because their self-interest coincided with the preferences of defendant. The name changes reduced confusion with plaintiffs’ other casino hotel and took advantage of the increasing prominence of defendant’s name. Because the words “Trump Plaza” were included in the facility’s original title, the name Trump gradually became associated with the Partnership’s casino hotel. To drop both “Harrah’s” and “Trump” would have sacrificed all the publicity benefits of previous names. Plaintiffs’ insistence that they were willing to do so is implausible; if true, it was reasonable for defendant to object to such a course. It is essential to view the record with these facts in mind in order to properly understand plaintiffs’ claims that defendant forced them to accept name changes with his relentless entreaties. Plaintiffs, as equal partners, could not have been forced to go along with defendant’s proposals. It is more difficult to comprehend plaintiffs’ failure to demand express restrictions on use of defendant’s name. Nevertheless, plaintiffs have failed to present any substantial evidence to support their arguments that such restrictions were implicit in the parties’ dealings and agreements. C. Efforts to Promote the Trump Name 63. The Partnership engaged in extensive efforts to promote the “Trump Plaza” name between October and December, 1984. Such activities included: (a) television ads, at a cost of $1.3 million, on all three network affiliates in New York and Philadelphia, and on local Atlantic City cable television; (b) radio ads, one minute in length, on eleven stations on the Atlantic seaboard; (c) print ads, in over 38 newspapers and magazines; and (d) billboard ads, on taxis, buses and subways and on signboards on roads approaching Atlantic City. Satre Aff. 111116-18, Exhibit 3. 64. Since late March, 1985, the Partners have also maintained a large campaign to promote the “Trump Casino Hotel” name. Through June, 1985, the Partnership had expended over nine million dollars on the “Trump Plaza” and “Trump Casino Hotel” campaigns. By then, the Partnership’s ads had appeared in over 50 newspapers, and over 12 magazines. The Partnership spent $1.2 million on directional signs reading “Trump” located throughout Atlantic City. Over one million items have been distributed by the Partnership bearing the Trump name and various logos associated with the Partnership’s hotel. Satre Aff. 1121; Satre Supp.Aff. 117, n. 3. 65. Despite the Partners’ efforts to feature the Trump name, numerous features of their casino hotel and associated services continue to display prominently the “Harrah’s at Trump Plaza” slogan, including, (a) the huge signs on the exterior of the facility, Trump Aff. Exhibit F; (b) signs on the outdoor front entrance and imprinted on the adjacent sidewalk, id. Exhibits G, H, L; (c) signs adorning all slot machines, id. ¶ 31; (d) planters on the sidewalk adjacent to the casino hotel, id. Exhibit K; (e) some parking facility signs, id. Exhibit I; (f) some directional signs within Atlantic City, id. Exhibit J; and (g) some hotel room accessories, id. Exhibit M. As a result, the Partnership’s facility continues to be associated with Harrah’s. While the Partners have plans to eliminate some of the most significant items still bearing the Harrah’s name, they have made an economic decision to phase out all such items gradually. Satre Supp.Aff. ¶ 7, Exhibit 6. 66. Plaintiffs have submitted the results of a public opinion survey conducted in December, 1984, which purports to quantify recognition of the Partnership’s facility. The survey measured awareness of the casino hotel among persons within 250 miles of Atlantic City. Plaintiffs have failed to submit any details concerning design and implementation of the survey, such as the research method, sample size, author of the survey, or the questions asked. Assuming the results to be valid, however, the survey’s most important findings are that the Partnership’s facility was (a) well-recognized among gamblers (81%) and nongamblers (third ranking among all casino hotels); (b) becoming more reknowned faster than any other casino hotel; and (c) well known for its ads among gamblers (ranked third). Satre Aff. ¶ 22. The firm which conducted the survey concluded that the Partnership’s advertising campaigns had been very successful. Id. Nevertheless, the court is unable to tell what, if anything, the survey says about the public views as to the source of the services available at the Partnership’s facility. 67. It is undisputed that the Partnership’s facility is presently associated with the name “Trump,” and the terms “Trump Plaza” and “Trump Casino Hotel,” as well as the name “Harrah’s.” The relative strength of these associations is contested, however. D. Defendant’s New Casino Hotel 68. There is a dispute among the parties as to whether defendant (a) concealed from plaintiffs his decision to use his name in connection with his new casino hotel, and (b) chose to use his name for his new facility in order to benefit from the Partnership’s promotion of the Trump name. 69. With respect to concealment, plaintiffs allege that defendant initially told Philip Satre that he did not intend to use his name in connection with his new' casino hotel. Satre Aff. 111125, 27. Defendant later wrote a letter denying that he had misled Satre and stating that he had warned Satre he might use his own name. Id. ¶ 23. Thereafter, on May 14, 1985, the parties met and defendant refused to reveal whether he would do so. Id. 11 30. On May 20, 1985, one of defendant’s agents wrote a letter to the New Jersey Department of State indicating defendant had previously registered the name “Trump Castle and Casino” and wished to apply it to his new facility. Trump Aff., Exhibit E. Plaintiffs finally learned of defendant’s decision to use his own name by seeing ads in the newspaper for the “Trump Castle----” Satre Aff. If 30, Exhibit 10. 70. For a short time during April and May, 1985, defendant may have concealed from plaintiffs his decision to use his own name in connection with his new casino hotel. There is insufficient evidence, however, to show that defendant misled his partners as to his intentions in this regard. 71. With respect to defendant’s reasons for choosing to use his own name, plaintiffs point out that defendant’s spokesman stated in May, 1985 that the name “Trump’s Castle Casino Hotel” would reap benefits “from the strength of the success of Trump’s name on the Boardwalk.” Satre Aff. II 28, Exhibit 8. Defendant allegedly assured Philip Satre, soon after acquiring the former Hilton property, that he would not use his own name in its title as that might be detrimental to the Partnership. Satre Aff. 11 27. 72. Defendant denies that he assured Philip Satre he would not use his own name for his new facility. Trump Aff. Ml 24-26. Defendant states that he chose the name “Trump’s Castle Casino Hotel” due to his “detailed ... personal involvement” in the project, and the “considerable publicity” attending his acquisition of the property. Id. ¶ 38. Trump also testified: it is now my experience that, with each new real estate project I develop, the use of my name in connection with the project is an invaluable asset. As business commentators have noted, my use of my name signifies both a high quality, successful project, and also a facility in which I am involved in depth. Trump Aff. 1140. 73. The record supports defendant’s account of the facts. Defendant has advanced several plausible reasons for his actions, consistent with his past practices, other than the venal motives suggested by plaintiffs. 74. There has been a significant amount of confusion among members of the public between the Partnership’s and defendant’s casino hotels, including the following: (a) mistaken phone calls; (b) customer’s going to one of the two facilities, when they have reservations at the other; (c) taxi drivers delivering customers to one facility, when they wished to go to the other; (d) baggage delivered from the airport to the wrong “Trump” facility; (e) potential employees applying to work at the “Castle” making inquiries to the Partners’ facility; and (f) newspaper stories misidentifying events at the Partners’ facility as occurring at the “Castle.” Satre Aff. 1111 32(a), (b); Satre Supp.Aff. ¶ 8. 75. It is undisputed that all casino hotels in Atlantic City appeal to substantially similar customer populations and employ substantially similar channels of advertising. See Trout Supp.Aff. ¶ 6. All gaming facilities are also required by law to provide substantially similar services. Id.; see also N.J.S.A. 5:12-5, 6, 27, 83, 97, 98, 100, 102, 103. 76. It is undisputed that strict regulation of the casino industry renders competition difficult and makes it highly desirable for casinos to have unique identities. See Trout Aff. II 3; Trout Supp.Aff. 11 6; Selsner Aff. 11 5; Schorr Aff. MI 4-5. 77. There is no substantial evidence in the record as to the impact, if any, of defendant’s use of his own name in connection with his new casino hotel on revenues or profits at the Partnership’s facility. The following Conclusions of Law, insofar as they may be considered Findings of Fact, are so found by this court to be true in all respects. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW I. PARKING FACILITIES 1. Plaintiffs have presented evidence which shows that defendant and his agents have (a) made claims to sole ownership of the Parking Facility Properties, (b) refused to sign deeds formally recognizing plaintiffs’ interests in these parcels, and (c) demanded payments from plaintiffs in return for execution of such documents. Findings of Fact Ml 36-40. On this basis, plaintiffs seek an order (a) declaring that the Partners have an equal, 50% ownership interest in the properties in question, (b) requiring defendant to execute deeds formally recognizing plaintiffs’ interest in the properties, and (c) enjoining defendant from taking any action to convey or encumber the properties. 2. With respect to plaintiffs’ claims that defendant intends to transfer or encumber the Parking Facility Properties, the record indicates that (a) defendant has taken no such action, Findings of Fact ¶ 37, (b) defendant has never actually threatened to do so himself, id,., and (c) defendant has affirmatively indicated, through his counsel, that he has no intention of doing so. Id. ¶ 42. The principal evidence supporting the claim that defendant intends to prevent the Partnership from using the Parking Facility Properties is several statements by defendant’s agents to the effect that the Partnership’s operations there are subject to eviction. Id. ¶ 36. Defendant has also claimed entitlement to compensation for the Partnership’s use of the Parking Facility Properties and has refused to sign deeds acknowledging plaintiffs’ interest in the properties unless plaintiffs provide such compensation. Id. 111139, 40. 3. The statements by defendant’s agents constitute exaggerated versions of defendant’s view that he is sole titleholder of certain properties pending creation of a new partnership entity to construct and operate a parking facility. These declarations were made in the course of heated negotiations between the Partners. Until they filed this action, plaintiffs gave no indication that they believed these threats to be anything other than mere bluster. Although defendant has not disavowed such statements, he himself has never endorsed the threat of eviction or made such threats himself. Furthermore, defendant now denies that these remarks reflected any intent on his part to encumber or convey the properties. These facts therefore do not constitute a valid basis for an injunction barring defendant from transferring or encumbering the properties in question. Defendant’s efforts to extract financial concessions from plaintiffs also do not justify injunctive relief. Such actions do not demonstrate defendant’s desire to prevent the Partnership from using the land in question. Rather, they indicate defendant’s interest in reaping greater returns from such use. 4. Under the New Jersey Uniform Partnership Act, N.J.S.A. 42:1-1, et seq., “[a]ll property originally brought into the partnership” is partnership property. N.J.S.A. 42:1-8(1). Property “subsequently acquired by purchase ... on account of the partnership is partnership property.” Id. Furthermore, “[ujnless the contrary intention appears, property acquired with partnership funds is partnership property.” N.J.S.A. 42:1-8(2). See Fortugno v. Hudson Manure Co., 51 N.J.Super. 482, 497, 144 A.2d 207 (App.Div.1958). “[WJhether real estate constitutes an asset of the partnership must be determined by weighing all of the pertinent facts and circumstances.” Kook v. American Surety Co. of New York, 88 N.J.Super. 43, 56, 210 A.2d 633 (App.Div.1965). 5. Based on the prevailing standards for determining whether property is owned by a partnership, and undisputed facts presented in this case, it is apparent that all of the Parking Facility Properties are property of the Harrah’s Associates Partnership. (a) It is plain that defendant contributed the “Hertz” parcel to the Partnership at the time of its formation. Findings of Fact ¶¶ 24, 42, 43. Accordingly, this portion of the Parking Facility Properties is partnership property. N.J.S.A. 42:1-8(1). (b) Defendant purchased the other two parcels in question with partnership funds, pursuant to approval from the Partnership Executive Committee, and with the intent to accomplish an objective of the Partnership. Findings of Fact 111121-23, 25-28, 42-43. Consequently, these two parcels of land are also property of the Partnership even though the deeds to the properties name defendant as sole titleholder, in his capacity as nominee for the new partnership the Partners have attempted to form. N.J.S.A. 42:1-8(1), (2); Stark v. Reingold, 18 N.J. 251, 267, 113 A.2d 679 (1955). In light of the foregoing, plaintiffs are entitled to a declaration of their partnership interest in the properties in question. 6. Plaintiffs ask the court to order defendant to execute deeds recognizing their interests in the Parking Facility Properties on two grounds. First, plaintiffs contend defendant has a contractual duty to acknowledge their ownership role. In some circumstances, where a partner has refused to fulfill a contractual obligation to convey an interest in a unique asset to a partnership, a court may require specific performance of the agreement even though the partnership has not yet been formed and may never be formed. Rabinowitz v. Borish, 43 F.Supp. 413, 415 (D.N.J.1942). Plaintiffs also urge the court to find that defendant holds the Parking Facility Properties in a constructive trust for the Partnership. A constructive trust may be impressed in appropriate circumstances “[wjhenever title to property is acquired by fraud ... or retained in violation of a fiduciary duty.” Hyland v. Simmons, 152 N.J.Super. 569, 575, 378 A.2d 260 (Ch.Div. 1977). Accord D’Ippolito v. Castoro, 51 N.J. 584, 588, 242 A.2d 617 (1968). 7. At this time, there is no merit to plaintiffs’ demand for an order altering the deeds to the Parking Facility Properties to acknowledge both Partners’ ownership interests therein. With respect to plaintiffs’ contract claim, there is nothing in the record indicating defendant’s refusal to transfer the properties in question to a new, yet-to-be-formed Parking Facility partnership; nor has he prevented plaintiffs from using the properties or “retained them in violation of a fiduciary duty.” On the contrary, the record shows that defendant recognizes that the properties must be transferred to the new partnership entity if the Partners succeed in reaching agreement. Findings of Fact 1142. Furthermore, defendant has represented to the court that he will take no steps inconsistent with the Partners’ agreements pending the outcome of negotiations regarding the new partnership. Findings of Fact 1142. Unless and until the Partners’ negotiations collapse, the court need not consider requiring the conveyance of the properties in order to reflect plaintiffs’ interests. 8. Plaintiffs’ remaining request is for the court to declare that each of the Partners’ own equal shares in the Parking Facility Properties. The court is unable to discern any basis for granting such equitable relief at this stage. If the Partners are able to reach agreement on terms for formation of a new Parking Facility Partnership, the dispute plaintiffs wish the court to resolve will be moot. Any action the court takes prior to that time might upset the negotiations now underway between the Partners. 9. The court is mindful of the importance of the Parking Facility Properties, both now, and in the foreseeable future, to the Partnership’s casino hotel and to the successful continuation of the Partnership. Findings of Fact 111130-34. The court is also aware of the importance of adequate parking facilities at the Partnership’s casino hotel to the residents of and visitors to Atlantic City. Findings of Fact K 35. Accordingly, should the Partners fail to reach agreement, within a reasonable time, as to the terms for establishment of an entity to construct and operate a Parking Facility, the Partnership and the Atlantic City Community will be faced with serious and irreparable harm. 10. Should the negotiations regarding a Parking Facility Partnership fall apart, plaintiffs ask that the court direct a conveyance of the Parking Facility Properties to the Partnership, and then preside