Atlanta Development, Inc. v. Emerald Capital Investment, LLC

574 S.E.2d 585, 258 Ga. App. 472, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 3436, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 1489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 19, 2002
DocketA02A1567
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 574 S.E.2d 585 (Atlanta Development, Inc. v. Emerald Capital Investment, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlanta Development, Inc. v. Emerald Capital Investment, LLC, 574 S.E.2d 585, 258 Ga. App. 472, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 3436, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 1489 (Ga. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Smith, Presiding Judge.

Atlanta Development, Inc. (AD) and Emerald Capital Investments, LLC (Emerald), two real estate developers, executed a purchase and sale agreement for certain real property. Each claims the other breached that agreement. According to AD, the closing was to occur on or before July 19, 2001, while Emerald says the closing date was July 19, 2001, or within 14 days of final approval of the exemption plat. Both companies sought summary judgment. Upon finding the date of closing was not ambiguous, the trial court granted partial summary judgment to Emerald. AD appeals. Because we find the contractual terms in dispute have ambiguity that cannot be resolved by applying the statutory rules for contract construction, we reverse.

On April 11, 2001, AD contracted with Emerald to purchase the real property located at 116 and 120 Mt. Paran Road, Atlanta, Georgia, for $1,364,000. AD planned to build four single-family homes at that location with each priced to sell in the range of $850,000. The contract required Emerald to install a private road and all utilities. It specified a closing date of June 15, 2001, and stated that “[t]ime is of *473 the essence of this Agreement.” The contract contained five special stipulations and provided that these five special stipulations, “if conflicting with any other paragraph, shall control.” Special stipulation 1 provided:

Purchaser will close on all (4) four lots two weeks after final approval of the Exemption Plat by Fulton County, providing that all development improvements are installed per the “Permitted” plans stamped and approved from Fulton County on January 22, 2001 and named Emerald Walk at Mt. Paran. This developed land to include all utilities: electric, phone, cable, gas, water, sewer and private road. Also, Purchaser may choose to close on any and all lots prior to any of the above-completed conditions at purchaser’s discretion.

In lieu of a down payment, the contract obligated AD to provide Emerald with a $60,000 letter of credit which AD obtained from Wachovia Bank. Under special stipulation 3, the letter of credit would be payable to Emerald “in the event of. an uncured breach” by AD or would be refunded to AD “in the event of an uncured breach” by Emerald.

The transaction did not close on June 15. As of that date, Emerald had not completed the improvements or recorded the exemption plat. Emerald sought an extension of time. On June 18, Emerald prepared an amendment and presented it to AD. On June 19, AD and Emerald executed a written amendment entitled: “AMENDMENT TO CHANGE CLOSING/POSSESSION DATE, AMENDMENT #1.” Amendment No. 1 provided: “The closing date specified in the aforementioned Agreement is hereby amended as follows: This transaction shall be closed on July 19, 2001, or on such other date as may be agreed to by the parties in writing, or within 14 days from completion of the property as described in Special Stipulation #1.” (Italics denote handwritten portion.) It is undisputed that it was AD who added the italicized phrase.

The transaction, however, did not close on July 19, and the parties never agreed in writing to a different date. The crux of this litigation is the meaning of “or within 14 days from completion of the property as described in Special Stipulation #1.” Evidence shows that as of July 19, Emerald had not obtained final approval by Fulton County of the exemption plat. On July 24, the president and owner of AD, Cheryl Simoni, and Charles L. McClain, the managing partner of Emerald, met. Simoni testified that she called the meeting, “[b]ecause our contract was up and we were trying to see if we had any interest in the property at that point.” Simoni explained, “if we *474 were going to buy the property, we wanted to have a different contract with different terms.” Simoni testified that “Charles [McClain] brought another contract extension and . . . kind of turned white when we said we weren’t going to sign it.” Simoni testified, “Charles knew the contract expired. That’s why he brought the extension.” She explained that after April the real estate market had softened and so AD wanted, better contract terms. Simoni testified that when their July 24 meeting ended, McClain had told her, “let me go talk to my partner. We’ll see what we can do.” She understood “that Charles was going to see what his partner said about if they wanted to sell the property to somebody else or if they wanted to renegotiate with us.”

It is undisputed that before the meeting on July 24, Roger Crys-ler, acting as an agent for Emerald, had prepared a second amendment to extend the closing date. Amendment No. 2 dated July 24 proposed a new closing date of August 15. McClain admitted having , presented Amendment No. 2 to Simoni at the July 24 meeting. When asked, “But Ms. Simoni did tell you that it was Atlanta Development’s position that the closing date had come and gone?” McClain responded, “I guess you could say that. You could state it that way.”

On July 30, AD notified Wachovia, the issuer of the letter of credit, that the contract between AD and Emerald had expired. AD directed Wachovia to extinguish the letter because “the seller has failed to fulfill the terms of the agreement, to wit: Fulton County has not approved the Plat nor have the improvements been installed.”

On August 1, Fulton County’s approval of the exemption plat was recorded. The next day, Emerald’s agent, Crysler, hand-delivered notice of the recordation to AD. At that time, the utility work was not complete, and the development improvements were not finished. Crysler testified that on August 2, he told AD that Emerald “was ready to close on the property and asked Atlanta Development to select a closing date.”

Simoni advised Emerald in writing on August 8 that AD would not agree to amending the contract again. On behalf of AD, Simoni wrote,

Regretfully, I am unable to agree to your request to extend the closing date to August 15, 2001, as written. As I am sure you are aware, the climate in the banking industry is changing rapidly. Unfortunately, without subordination of the loan and a reduction in the purchase price we will not be able to proceed. I am sending a letter to you requesting the return of our Letter of Credit in the event we cannot move forward from here. I had hoped that we could come to some kind of agreement and I am still open to any suggestions that you might have.

*475 In a second more detailed letter also dated August 8, AD informed McClain that Emerald had failed prior to the closing date of July 19 to “(1) obtain final approval of the Exemption Plat of Fulton County and (2) complete and install all development approvals per the ‘permitted’ plans stamped and approved by Fulton County on January 22, 2001.’” The August 8 letter noted, “The Closing Date has not been extended beyond July 19, 2001, and Buyer rejected Seller’s written proposal dated July 24, 2001 to extend the Closing Date to August 15, 2001.” AD claimed that due to the “Seller’s inability to close on or before July 19, 2001,” it was entitled to the return of the letter of credit. AD declared, “[u]pon return of the letter pf credit, Seller and Buyer shall have no further obligations under the Agreement.”

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Bluebook (online)
574 S.E.2d 585, 258 Ga. App. 472, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 3436, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 1489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlanta-development-inc-v-emerald-capital-investment-llc-gactapp-2002.