Alegria v. One Lot Known as 592 Main

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 27, 2006
DocketNo. PB 05-0232
StatusPublished

This text of Alegria v. One Lot Known as 592 Main (Alegria v. One Lot Known as 592 Main) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alegria v. One Lot Known as 592 Main, (R.I. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

DECISION
Before this Court is a motion to approve the Receiver's Final Report and First and Final Application for Compensation. The Receiver was appointed in order to liquidate two parcels of land in Warren, Rhode Island and Hopkinton, Rhode Island, to ascertain the various claims and interests in the land, and to satisfy those claims and interests. (Ord. Appt'ing Permanent Receiver ¶¶ 1, 3, 4, 9.) This decision concerns only the Hopkinton parcel, which the Receiver sold at a Court-supervised sale for approximately $565,000. Following the payment of various liens and security interests in the property, there remained approximately $186,500 in the receivership estate. After accounting for the fees of the receivership, the Receiver held $139,000 for the receivership estate (surplus proceeds) and sought guidance from the Court as to its disposition. The Court approved the Receiver's Final Report, awarded him the fees and expenses of the receivership, and discharged the Receiver.

The surplus proceeds are now being held in escrow and the sole issue before the Court is to whom those funds should be distributed. Anthony Armao (Armao) has made a claim to the surplus proceeds on the basis of an agreement between him and Karen A. Alegria (Karen) to sell the Hopkinton parcel to Karen in October 2003. Karen objects to this claim and argues that she should receive the surplus proceeds on the basis of her ownership of the parcel when the receiver was appointed. The Court has jurisdiction pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 8-2-14.

Facts/Travel
Karen acquired the Hopkinton parcel in October 2003 from Armao. On October 8, 2003, the parties executed a document entitled "Agreement for the Sale of Property." (Pl's Ex. 7 at 3.) Under that agreement, Armao agreed to convey the property to Karen via warranty deed. Id. ¶ 1-2. In exchange for the property, Armao would receive $200,000 at closing and $30,000 for each buildable lot that was sold — presumably as a result of a contemplated subdivision of the property.1 Id. ¶ 1. In addition, as "additional terms," that agreement provided that Armao would have his choice of two buildable lots "when final approval and building permit can be issued." Id. ¶ 8. Further, the $30,000 payment term was to survive the execution of the warranty deed, was not to merge with the deed, and was to remain in effect until a future agreement superseded the October 8 agreement. Id.

The sale was scheduled to close on October 14 or 15, 2003.Id. ¶ 2. It appears that the sale closed on or near the scheduled closing date. Following the closing, the October 8 agreement was superseded by an agreement dated October 21, 2003. (Pl's Ex. 12 at 1.) That agreement reiterated that Armao would be entitled to select any two lots for himself following the subdivision, and that he was entitled to $30,000 per lot sold.Id. at 2. It also provided that "the within parties agree that" the Hopkinton parcel was "to be subsequently sub-divided into no less than four (4) and no more than twenty three (23) buildable lots." Id. at 1. The agreement memorialized by these two documents will be collectively referred to as the 2003 Agreement.

Although Karen Alegria was the transferee of the Hopkinton parcel, it appears that Richard M. Alegria (Richard), her father, had a significant level of involvement with the transaction before and after the closing. Armao testified in his deposition that he dealt primarily with Richard while negotiating the proposed sale, though it was understood by all involved that the property would be held in Karen's name. (Armao Deposition 9:23-15:5, 20:23-21:25, May 1, 2006). Further, according to the minutes of the November 5, 2003 meeting of the Hopkinton Planning Board, it was Richard who applied for an "informal advisory opinion" on a proposed 23 lot subdivision of the Hopkinton parcel. (Pl's Ex. 13, at 2.) Those minutes also note that the "applicant does not have the road frontage required by the Town and does not embrace conservation design philosophy." Id. The parcel was never subdivided during the time between the sale to Karen and the appointment of a receiver.

In early 2005, the mortgage(s) were in default, and foreclosure was threatened. Karen petitioned the Court to appoint a receiver to liquidate the property, and the Court appointed the permanent Receiver on February 18, 2005. (Ord. Appt'ing Permanent Receiver, Feb. 18, 2005). The Receiver sought permission from this Court to sell the property, and a hearing was held on August 31, 2005. (Ord. Grant. Receiver's Mot. to Sell, Sep. 8, 2005.) At the hearing, the Receiver stated that he expected the sale to result in substantial surplus proceeds after all secured claims were paid. Id. ¶ 6. At the hearing, Armao asserted that he had a secured claim on the basis of the 2003 Agreement with Karen, and objected to the sale of the property. Id. ¶ 4. He also argued that he was entitled to the surplus proceeds. Id. ¶ 6. However, the Court found that the documents were not security instruments, and therefore Armao had no secured claim on the property. Seeid. ¶¶ 4, 6. The Court entered an order granting permission to sell the property and shortly thereafter, the Receiver did sell the property.2 Id. ¶ 1. In that order, the Court also directed the Receiver to issue a notice to interested parties and creditors directing them to show cause why the surplus proceeds should not be paid to Armao. See id. ¶ 6, 7. Karen responded to the show cause order and argued that she was entitled to the surplus proceeds as the record owner of the Hopkinton parcel prior to the receivership.

Analysis
Armao has advanced various arguments as to why he is entitled to the surplus proceeds. The Court has already found that the 2003 Agreement with Karen does not evidence a security interest in the Hopkinton property, and will not revisit that ruling here.See id. ¶ 4. In addition, Armao argues that both Karen and he are unsecured creditors with claims on the receivership estate, that Karen is an "insider," and therefore her claim should be equitably subordinated to his claim. His second argument is that he has a claim against Karen for breach of contract arising from the 2003 Agreement. Finally, he argues that the arrangement among Karen, Richard, and Armao constituted a partnership, and that he is entitled to the surplus proceeds as a return of the capital he contributed to the purported partnership.

The Court will treat the first two arguments together. Armao asserts that Karen has breached the 2003 Agreement because she failed to subdivide the Hopkinton parcel into between four and twenty-three lots.3 As a result, Armao neither received the payment of $30,000 per lot, nor received his choice of two of lots, as provided by the Agreement. Therefore, he argues that he is entitled to damages, and that because his damages exceed the surplus proceeds, he is entitled to all of the surplus proceeds.

Armao's arguments must fail because they are based on the presumption that he has a claim against the receivership estate. Through her counsel, Karen properly points out that this proceeding is a receivership in land, not a receivership of Karen Alegria or her assets. See Ord. App'ting Permanent Receiver ¶¶ 1, 3. The estate consists only of the proceeds of the land sale.

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Bluebook (online)
Alegria v. One Lot Known as 592 Main, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alegria-v-one-lot-known-as-592-main-risuperct-2006.