BBG Holding Corp. v. K Capital, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedJuly 29, 2022
Docket1:20-cv-03268
StatusUnknown

This text of BBG Holding Corp. v. K Capital, LLC (BBG Holding Corp. v. K Capital, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BBG Holding Corp. v. K Capital, LLC, (D. Colo. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO

Civil Action No. 20-cv-03268-MEH

BBG HOLDING CORP.,

Plaintiff,

v.

K CAPITAL, LLC, and MIKHAIL G. KAMINISKI,

Defendants. _____________________________________________________________________________

ORDER _____________________________________________________________________________

This lawsuit concerns a failed real estate transaction. At issue are Plaintiff’s claims that K Capital, LLC (through its principal, Mikhail Kaminski,) breached the contract to buy its property or alternatively induced Plaintiff’s reliance on false promises that it would buy the property. The parties tried this action to the Court on May 17 and 18, 2022. Based on the evidence admitted at the bench trial, the legal briefing, and pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 52, the Court issues this Order containing its Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law. The Court rules in Plaintiff’s favor on its breach of contract claim and in Defendants’ favor on Plaintiff’s promissory estoppel claim. FINDINGS OF FACT 1. Plaintiff BBG Holding Corp. is a Colorado corporation that does business in the State of Colorado as a real estate holding company. Michele Evans is one its three owners. She also is the corporation’s president and day-to-day operations manager. ECF 72 at 40. Ms. Evans testified at the bench trial in the role of Plaintiff’s representative and the one who on its behalf participated in the attempted property sale transaction at issue in this lawsuit. ECF 72 at 40-41. 2. Plaintiff owns a commercial building located in Avon, Colorado. At the time of the bench trial, four tenants were renting space in that building. Plaintiff also has its own office there. ECF 72 at 40-42. 3. Plaintiff decided to sell the building in September 2019. ECF 72 at 42. Plaintiff

hired Jules Sherwood of Kenai Capital Advisors to sell the property. ECF 72 at 42-43, 189. Mr. Sherwood advised a sale price of $3,400,000.00, although the record is unclear whether a specific offer price was included in the listing. ECF 72 at 50, 191. Mr. Sherwood has professional experience handling multi-million-dollar commercial property sales. ECF 72 at 197, 221-222. 4. Defendant Mikhail Kaminski describes himself as a real estate professional. ECF 70 at 97, 116. The Court found him to be a very bright witness (ECF 70 at 110) and someone who speaks plainly and intentionally (ECF 70 at 112-113). In addition, he proceeded with this transaction with the benefit of his own retained transactional attorney, Dan Wolf. ECF 70 at 20, 104-105; ECF 72 at 72, 137-138, 269. Mr. Kaminski incurred legal costs related to this transaction. ECF 70 at 98.

5. The evidence suggests that Mr. Kaminski is familiar with the area where the property is located. Before 2020, a business partner of Steve Sendor (who would serve as K Capital, LLC’s broker for the transaction at issue in this lawsuit) helped Mr. Kaminski with an attempted purchase of another local property. ECF 72 at 266. Mr. Dunn of Kresher Capital (who would serve as K Capital, LLC’s lender for this transaction) provided Mr. Kaminski financing for an earlier attempted property purchase. ECF 70 at 34. At trial Mr. Kaminski denied that either he or K Capital, LLC ever had purchased any property before attempting this transaction (ECF 70 at 91), but the overall evidence suggests to the contrary. Moreover, later in his trial testimony, Mr. Kaminski expressly described himself as “a real estate professional,” in the same vein as the two brokers and Plaintiff. ECF 70 at 97, 116. 6. Mr. Kaminski is the sole member and manager of Defendant K Capital, LLC, a business entity located in Minnesota. It is a real estate purchasing company that Mr. Kaminski uses to enter into contracts for the purchase and sale of real estate. ECF 70 at 75-77.

7. K Capital, LLC retained NAI Mountain Commercial to represent it in negotiations to buy the property at issue in this lawsuit. The two signed no formal brokerage contract, although that is consistent with general practice. The letter of intent (which all parties signed) identified NAI Mountain Commercial as K Capital, LLC’s broker, thereby signaling the brokerage relationship. ECF 70 at 7, 10; ECF 72 at 238. NAI Mountain Commercial regarded K Capital, LLC as its client, and it acted in the fiduciary role of K Capital, LLC’s broker for purposes of this real estate transaction (ECF 72 at 239-241) for which it communicated with Mr. Kaminski as K Capital, LLC’s representative (ECF 72 at 242; Plaintiff’s Exhibit 41). Mr. Kaminski authorized NAI Mountain Commercial to act as the broker for this property purchase. ECF 70 at 78-79. Steve Sendor was the individual from NAI Mountain Commercial who helped Mr. Kaminski. Mr.

Sendor’s business partner at NAI Mountain Commercial was Erich Schmidt who also had interactions with Ms. Evans and Mr. Kaminski. ECF 72 at 249. 8. Generally speaking, NAI Mountain Commercial provided both brokerage and property management services at the time of this attempted property transaction. It provided property management services for Plaintiff’s building. ECF 72 at 46. Indeed, Mr. Kaminski contacted NAI Mountain Commercial through the contact information from its leasing sign at the property. ECF 72 at 238. NAI Mountain Commercial obtained Plaintiff’s permission to represent K Capital, LLC as its broker to buy the property. ECF 70 at 5, 8-9; ECF 72 at 238. Neither did K Capital, LLC object to NAI Mountain Commercial contemporaneously serving both it (as broker) and Plaintiff (as property manager). ECF 70 at 79. Section 3.1.2 of the sales contract identified NAI Mountain Commercial as the building’s property manager. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 12. 9. Mr. Kaminski expressed his interest in buying the property. That prompted NAI Mountain Commercial to contact Mr. Sherwood to begin negotiations. ECF 72 at 232.

10. Plaintiff and K Capital, LLC expressed their initial agreed-upon terms in a letter of intent. Those terms included K Capital, LLC’s offer of $3,300,000.00. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 11; ECF 72 at 44-45. This was the first inquiry by a potential buyer that resulted in the drafting of a letter of intent. ECF 72 at 106, 220. 11. From there the parties proceeded to draft the actual Purchase and Sale Agreement (“PSA). Plaintiff’s attorney negotiated with Mr. Kaminski’s attorney and drafted the PSA. ECF 72 at 45. The PSA is found in the record as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 12. There is no dispute that (1) both parties entered the PSA; (2) its effective date was February 6, 2020; (3) it accurately reflects the parties’ intent; and (4) it created a binding agreement between them. Upon entering the PSA, Mr. Sherwood removed the property from the market and listed it as “under contract.” ECF 72 at 60,

195-196. 12. Title Company of the Rockies served as the escrow agent for the transaction. Plaintiff’ Exhibit 12 at § 2.1.1. The PSA set March 24, 2020 as the closing date, and it created a series of preliminary deadlines and steps in advance of closing and transferring ownership. 13. The first step was for K Capital, LLC to deposit $25,000.00 in earnest money with the escrow agent. Plaintiff’ Exhibit 12 at § 2.1.1. However, should “Purchaser does not deposit the Earnest Money with Escrow Agent by such date,” then “[t]his Agreement shall automatically terminate.” Id. 14. Both parties agree that the deadline for making the initial deposit was Thursday, February 13, 2020. ECF 69 at ¶ 20(i); ECF 71 at ¶ 46. On the morning of February 11, 2020, Mr. Schmidt at NAI Mountain Commercial forwarded an email from the escrow agent to Mr. Kaminski containing instructions on how to pay the deposit by wire transfer. ECF 72 at 254; Plaintiff’s Exhibit 40. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
BBG Holding Corp. v. K Capital, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bbg-holding-corp-v-k-capital-llc-cod-2022.