Birmingham Retail Center Associates Ltd. v. Eastwood Festival Associates

608 So. 2d 340, 1992 Ala. LEXIS 778, 1992 WL 164959
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 17, 1992
Docket1901636, 1901806
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 608 So. 2d 340 (Birmingham Retail Center Associates Ltd. v. Eastwood Festival Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birmingham Retail Center Associates Ltd. v. Eastwood Festival Associates, 608 So. 2d 340, 1992 Ala. LEXIS 778, 1992 WL 164959 (Ala. 1992).

Opinions

MADDOX, Justice.1

The primary issue presented on these appeals is whether a successor judge, who is the successor judge by reason of his defeating the predecessor judge in an election, should have granted a motion for a new trial where all of the evidence had been presented ore tenus to the predecessor judge and the predecessor judge had made findings of fact.

The subject matter of the underlying action was damage caused by a landslide that occurred while a shopping center was being built on an undeveloped piece of property located in the Eastwood section of Birmingham. The landslide caused substantial damage to adjacent property and also increased substantially the cost of developing the site.

Many of the basic facts are not disputed. Plaintiff Halstead Developers, Inc. (“Hal-stead”), an Alabama corporation with its principal place of business in Montgomery, operated a real estate development business. Eastwood Festival Associates (“EFA”) was an Alabama general partnership formed by Halstead officers James Tatum, James Cofer, Jim Miller, Nicholas Robbins, and William Fuller, solely for the purposes of acquiring options to, and developing, a tract of commercial real estate located on the side of a mountain in the Eastwood area of Birmingham; that tract is now known as the Eastwood Festival Center. Halstead never owned the site, but had acquired options to purchase the property in 1985, which, with renewals, were scheduled to expire in August 1987.

During the period from 1985 to 1987, Halstead, or EFA, owned the options to purchase the site. In an effort to determine the economic feasibility of developing a strip shopping center on the site, they gathered information from a variety of sources, including professional architects, contractors, and engineers. From the outset, it was apparent that development of the site would require deep cuts into the side of a mountain and the construction of deep fill.

In March 1987, Halstead began meeting with representatives of a real estate development corporation in an attempt to negotiate a joint venture, but these negotiations did not lead to an agreement, and two weeks before Halstead’s options to purchase the property expired, the development corporation withdrew from joint venture negotiations and made an offer to Halstead to purchase the entire project.

Halstead and EFA later sold all of their rights to Richard Beard. These rights included the options to purchase the site, the leases then in existence, and all other reports, documents, and information concerning the project. It was known that Beard would assign the rights he acquired individually to Birmingham Retail Center Associates, Ltd. (BRCA), an Alabama limited partnership to be formed by Beard, William R. Cooper, and others for the purpose of developing the Eastwood Festival Center. It appears to have been understood that at the time of the execution of the sale and purchase agreement, Beard or the limited partnership would enter into separate agreements (1) for Halstead to serve as construction manager for development of the project and (2) for C.F.H. Investments, Inc., an Alabama corporation wholly owned by Halstead, to act as leasing agent for the project.

As part payment of the purchase price, Beard executed a promissory note in favor of EFA, which contained certain conditions precedent. BRCA claims that two of these conditions precedent had not been fully satisfied when this action was commenced.

[342]*342■ The sale and purchase agreement between Halstead and EFA and Beard contained the following provision regarding the furnishing of adverse information, which BRCA claims was breached by Hal-stead.

“3.03 Adverse Information:

“Sellers have acquired the Options, rezoned the Property, conceived all of the Development Plans, and are generally knowledgeable about the various aspects of the proposed Shopping Center. Sellers have no information or knowledge of any applicable laws, ordinances, or restrictions or change contemplated in any applicable laws, ordinances or restrictions, or any judicial or administrative action pending or threatened, or any action by adjacent landowners, or natural or artificial conditions upon the Property, which would prevent, limit, impede, or render materially more costly the development of the Proposed Shopping Center.”

The initial action was filed by the Hal-stead plaintiffs, who sued Beard and BRCA, alleging fraud in the inducement to contract, breach of the sale and purchase agreement, breach of the promissory note, breach of the leasing agreement, and breach of the construction management agreement. BRCA timely answered the complaint, and filed a counterclaim against all of the plaintiffs, alleging fraud in the inducement to contract, concealment of material facts, negligent performance of the construction management agreement, breach of the construction management agreement, and breach of the leasing agreement.

The predecessor trial judge conducted a lengthy bench trial, during which many exhibits were admitted into evidence. He ultimately entered a judgment in favor of BRCA in the amount of $6,600,000.

Halstead filed a motion for new trial with the successor trial judge, setting forth almost 200 grounds of alleged error.2 The successor trial judge heard oral arguments and later granted Halstead a new trial. BRCA appealed.

The first question we must answer in this case is: What is our standard of review? BRCA contends that “[t]he presumption of correctness on appeal attaches to the findings of the judge who heard the evidence ore tenus, not to the successor judge's order granting a new trial.” BRCA cites to us this Court’s case of National Sec. Ins. Co. v. Elliott, 276 Ala. 353, 162 So.2d 449 (1964), in support of its argument.

In National Security, the judge heard the ore tenus evidence and found in favor of the defendant, just as was true here. That trial judge resigned, however, and the successor judge granted a new trial, just as the successor trial judge did here. In National Security, this Court stated the following:

“It is to be remembered that this case was tried by the court without a jury. In such a trial, it seems axiomatic that the decision of the court has the effect of the verdict of a jury. Beasley v. Beasley, 256 Ala. 647, 649, 57 So.2d 69.
“In the case at bar, the new trial was not granted by the judge who tried the case and heard and saw the witnesses testify. At most, the judge hearing the motion could read, or have read to him a transcription of the evidence given ore tenus on the original trial. The parties have stipulated that the testimony taken at the trial has not been transcribed or read to the judge hearing the motion. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, the judge hearing the motion did not have the benefit of observing the witnesses, and there is no reason known to us why there should be any presumption that his ruling on the sufficiency of the evidence is correct. He was no better advantaged than the appellate court in reviewing the evidence. It is, therefore, our duty to review the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the judgment for defendant without pre[343]*343sumption in favor of the ruling granting the new trial. On the contrary, we should indulge the presumption that the judge who heard the evidence ore tenus on the original trial decided correctly.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baldwin v. Baldwin
160 So. 3d 34 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2014)
Florida Bar v. Graves
541 So. 2d 608 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
608 So. 2d 340, 1992 Ala. LEXIS 778, 1992 WL 164959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-retail-center-associates-ltd-v-eastwood-festival-associates-ala-1992.