8011, Llc, Walter Moss & Kari Graves v. Mr.99 & Associates & Martin S. Rood

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 27, 2016
Docket73737-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of 8011, Llc, Walter Moss & Kari Graves v. Mr.99 & Associates & Martin S. Rood (8011, Llc, Walter Moss & Kari Graves v. Mr.99 & Associates & Martin S. Rood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
8011, Llc, Walter Moss & Kari Graves v. Mr.99 & Associates & Martin S. Rood, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

1 I... I -

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

MR. 99 & ASSOCIATES, INC.; MARTIN S. ROOD, DIVISION ONE Respondents, No. 73737-6-I

UNPUBLISHED OPINION 8011, LLC, a Washington limited liability company; WALTER MOSS and JANE DOE MOSS, husband and wife, and their marital community; KARI GRAVES and JOHN DOE GRAVES, husband and wife, and their marital community; FIRST AMERICAN TITLE COMPANY,

Appellants. FILED: December 27, 2016

Dwyer, J. — 8011 LLC appeals from the judgment entered against it in

contract and tort actions brought by Martin Rood based upon 8011's refusal to

pay Rood a commission on the sale of 8011's property. 8011 asserts that Rood is not entitled to a commission payment because he failed to procure a buyer

under the conditions set forth in their brokerage agreement, including those

conditions entitling Rood to a commission payment if a sale occurred within six months after the agreement's expiration. 8011 further asserts that Rood is not entitled to a commission payment because the final sale agreement between the No. 73737-6-1/2

parties to the sale transaction did not provide for payment of a commission to

Rood.

We conclude that Rood did not satisfy the pertinent conditions in the

brokerage agreement so as to qualify for a commission payment, that the specificity of the language in the agreement's tail provision precludes resort to

the procuring cause rule, and that the final sale agreement did not provide for a commission payment to Rood. We also conclude that, under the circumstances

herein, Rood has not established that he was deprived of something of value that he possessed or of something in which he had a property interest. Thus, Rood is not entitled to a commission payment based on his tort or equitable theories of

liability. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment ofthe trial court. I

8011 LLC1 entered into a brokerage contract with Martin Rood2 to lease or sell commercial property on Highway 99 in Everett. The duration of the brokerage agreement was for six months, from July 21, 2011 to January 21, 2012. The agreement contained provisions entitling Rood to a 5 percent commission payment if he brokered a sale either during the duration of the agreement or, subject to certain conditions, within six months of the agreement's expiration (the tail provision).

Prior to contracting with 8011 as a sale-side brokerage agent, Rood was retained by Mazda of Everett (Mazda) as a buyer-side brokerage agent. As

1For ease of reference, we refer to the appellants in this case as 8011. 2For ease of reference, we refer to the respondents in this caseas Rood, the principal agent for Mr. 99 &Associates.

-2- No. 73737-6-1/3

such, he sought to purchase real estate on Mazda's behalf. While working with

Mazda but prior to his brokerage agreement with 8011, Rood discussed with

Mazda the notion of acquiring 8011 's property. Mazda declined to pursue

purchase of 8011's property at that time due to a statutory restriction precluding

Mazda from purchasing the property, absent a waiver of the restriction.3

Thereafter, during the term of Rood's brokerage agreement with 8011, Rood took

no further action with regard to Mazda as a prospective purchaser of 8011's

property.

On January 21, 2012, pursuant to its duration provision, the brokerage

agreement between 8011 and Rood expired. The property remained unsold. During the six-month time period ofthe agreement, Rood did not procure a buyer for the property. Neither did he satisfy the requisite conditions affording him a commission payment if the property was sold within six months ofthe expiration of the agreement. Moreover, although repeatedly sought by Rood, he and 8011 did not agree to extend the length ofthe brokerage agreement or enter into a new contractual relationship either prior to the agreement's expiration or

thereafter.

Three months after the brokerage agreement expired, Rood contacted

8011, inquiring as to whether it would be interested in selling the property to Mazda.4 8011 indicated that it would consider an offer to purchase.

38011's property was located 7.5 miles away from an existing Mazda dealership and, pursuant to RCW 46.96.140, Mazda was precluded from establishing a new Mazda dealership within 8 miles ofan existing Mazda dealership, unless it obtained a determination ofgood cause from an administrative law judge orqualified for an exception to the restriction. RCW 46.96.160, .180. 4 Mazda indicated that it had obtained a waiver of the statutory restriction. No. 73737-6-1/4

Beginning in May and overthe following four months, a series of proposed "Purchase & Sale Agreements" (PSAs) between 8011 and Mazda were

exchanged, with the parties negotiating the price per square foot for the property

and, later, negotiating a commission payment for Rood.

Mazda's initial offer, drafted by Rood, described Rood's firm both as the

selling firm and as the listing firm. The offer also included a provision detailing a 5 percent commission payment to the selling firm to result from the sale of the property, with or without a written listing or commission agreement in place. The offer was not accepted. Instead, negotiations continued. From June until mid-July, 8011 and Mazda each signed and submitted two counteroffers with the same commission payment terms as above, but offering varying prices per square foot. The negotiations stalled, however, when, upon receipt of Mazda's second counteroffer (its third offer overall), 8011, which by now had seen two of its own counteroffers rejected, did not respond. On July 31, 2012, Mazda, through Rood, signed and submitted a new PSA to 8011 with a higher price per square foot. The new offer (Mazda's fourth overall) provided the same commission provisions for Rood. Again, 8011 did not respond.

In late August, Rood prepared two additional PSAs, one of which provided for him to receive a reduced commission payment and the other ofwhich contained the same commission terms as in previous offers. Neither Mazda nor 8011 agreed to sign either of the documents. Afew days later, a brokerage agent hired by 8011 drafted two counteroffers, both of which provided for a No. 73737-6-1/5

smaller (2.5 percent) commission payment to Rood, identified Rood as the selling

firm, and left blank the listing firm provision. Again, neither 8011 nor Mazda

signed either of the documents.

In mid-September, Mazda drafted and signed two PSAs, both of which

provided for a 2.5 percent commission payment to Rood, identifying him as the

selling firm and no one as the listing firm. Neither offer was accepted. Two

weeks later, 8011 notified Mazda that it would no longer consider selling the

property to Mazda and discontinued negotiations.

Nevertheless, on October 8, 2012, Mazda submitted an offer to 8011 with

different commission terms (the final PSA). The offer identified Rood as the

"selling firm," but the commission provision was crossed out and, later in the agreement, a handwritten provision, added by Mazda, stated that, "seller will pay no real estate commissions at closing. Buyer does not warrant as to seller's

liability for commission."

By October 12, Mazda and 8011 had signed the PSA, closing the sale a few months later. No commission was paid to Rood.

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