Carvalho v. Lincoln, 00-5899 (r.I.super. 2005)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 16, 2005
DocketNos. 00-5899, 01-1136, 02-3629
StatusUnpublished

This text of Carvalho v. Lincoln, 00-5899 (r.I.super. 2005) (Carvalho v. Lincoln, 00-5899 (r.I.super. 2005)) 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
Carvalho v. Lincoln, 00-5899 (r.I.super. 2005), (R.I. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
Before this Court is the Intervener/Co-Plaintiff, LPD Development, LLC's ("LPD"), motion for partial summary judgment as to the Defendant/Plaintiff-in-Counterclaim, Eddy Carvalho's ("Carvalho"), breach of contract claim. LPD contends that the contract at issue — a purchase and sale agreement executed on March 12, 2001 — has previously been judicially declared valid and enforceable and that Carvalho is precluded from raising a breach of contract claim. Carvalho insists that LPD's summary judgment motion should be denied and that his counterclaim should be assigned to trial, alleging that genuine issues of material fact exist as to whether LPD performed on the contract within a reasonable time and whether it acted with due diligence and good faith in its performance. For the reasons herein, the Court grants LPD's motion.

* * * * *
On March 12, 2001, Co-Plaintiff Robert Houghton ("Houghton") entered into a purchase and sale agreement (the "Agreement") with Carvalho, the land owner, to buy a parcel of land — identified as Assessor's Plat 20, Lot 15 (the "Property") — located on Breakneck Hill Road in Lincoln, Rhode Island. Under the terms of the Agreement, Houghton was to pay a $50,000 deposit ($25,000 at the time the Agreement was signed; an additional $25,000 within 30 days of its signing), and the remaining $875,000 of the purchase price at the time of the closing. While section 4 of the Agreement provides that the closing was to be held on May 31, 2001, section 23 states:

"Sale is subject to all approvals from the State and Town of Lincoln for a 21 lot sub-division, said approvals to be paid for by seller). All state and local permits to be paid for by buyer. Buyer shall close within ten (10) days after all final approvals have been given."

Section 20 of the Agreement also contains a default provision stating that if either party defaults, the other is entitled to the deposit, specific performance, and any other available legal remedies.

At the time the Agreement was executed, Carvalho was involved in litigation with the Town of Lincoln in Providence County Superior Court (C.A. No. 00-5899) regarding a subdivision application that he had previously filed with respect to the Property. The Court had to determine which year's regulations were to be applied by the town Planning Board in assessing Carvalho's proposal. According to Carvalho, sometime in September of 2001, while his suit was pending, he met with Houghton, who told him that the subdivision approval process would take three to six months.

On December 27, 2001, the Court ruled that Carvalho's subdivision proposal was vested under the 1986 regulations of the Town of Lincoln and remanded the matter to the town's Planning Board. Shortly thereafter, on January 15, 2002, Houghton met with the Lincoln Town Solicitor and Town Administrator regarding the proposed subdivision of the Property. The town representatives expressed concerns with respect to the proposed sewage system and informed Houghton that it had to be altered.

Thereafter, Houghton assigned all of his rights and duties under the Agreement to LPD. Carvalho's then-attorney authorized LPD to "proceed with the development of the Subject Property for a residential subdivision in accordance with the plans submitted." LPD met with the Planning Board during the summer of 2002 and attempted to test the suitability of the land for installing individual septic disposal systems in December of that year, but because the ground was frozen the testing had to be postponed until the spring of 2003. Some time in late October or early November of 2003, the Department of Environmental Management ("DEM") application was prepared and ready for Carvalho to sign Although it is unclear exactly when Carvalho was presented with the DEM application for his signature, it is undisputed that he had received the document some time in the fall of 2003.

In an October 29, 2003 letter, Carvalho's attorney informed LPD's counsel that Carvalho considered LPD in breach of the Agreement because of its failure to receive approval for the subdivision and failure to proceed with the closing. As a result, Carvalho refused to sign the DEM application to allow LPD to move forward with the approval process. On January 5, 2004, LPD requested the Court to order Carvalho to sign the document. Thereafter, the parties signed a consent agreement, filed with the Court on March 29, 2004, stating that Carvalho agreed "to sign any and all applications, along with all the required plans, exhibits and documents and fees for processing any regulatory permits necessary to obtain approval for a subdivision." That consent agreement also provided that the purchase and sales contract was to remain in "full force and effect, without any waiver of claims or defenses, or ability to raise the same." On June 4, 2004, Carvalho finally signed the DEM application so that LPD could proceed with the approval process.

At a July 28, 2004 meeting, the Lincoln Planning Board voted to approve LPD's preliminary plan to develop a 13 lot subdivision on the Property. The Board also decided to delegate final plan approval to the Town Planner for recording, once all of the necessary state and local permits could be obtained and upon LPD's posting a performance bond to complete all of the required public improvements.

On November 5, 2004, while the permit applications were still pending, LPD filed an amended complaint with the Court seeking specific performance of the Agreement and alleging a breach of contract by Carvalho resulting from his refusal to acknowledge the validity of the Agreement and his obligations therein. Carvalho denied those allegations and, by counterclaim, alleged that LDP breached the Agreement by failing to perform.

Subsequently, LPD filed a motion for partial summary judgment, arguing that the assignment of the Agreement, and the Agreement itself, was valid and enforceable and, as a result, Carvalho was legally obligated to perform under the contract. Associate Justice Michael A. Silverstein issued a bench decision on April 26, 2005, granting LPD's motion. In his decision, he noted that "[t]he facts in this matter thereafter are somewhat twisted, but those twists do not impact the decision that the Court makes because they are not substantive or necessary to this decision." (Tr. at 3-4). Ultimately, he held that "the purchase and sale agreement constituted a valid and binding agreement; that the assignment of the purchase agreement was a valid and binding assignment." (Tr. at 6). Furthermore, in granting LPD's motion, Judge Silverstein stated:

"[T]here is no question but that at all times the parties here have acted, as evidenced by the letter and as evidenced by the signing by Mr. Carvalho of the permits, consistently with the final sentences of Paragraph 23 of the purchase and sales agreement, calling for a close within ten days after all final approvals had been given." Id.

In addition to finding that the Agreement was valid and enforceable, Judge Silverstein's Order provides:

"[T]he decision of the Court to grant LPD's Motion for Summary Judgment on the enforceability of the purchase and sales agreement is without prejudice to the right of Carvalho to contest before this Court the amount and reasonableness of the expenses he may be required to pay LPD pursuant to paragraph 23 of the Agreement in connection with LPD's procurement of all state and local approvals in this matter."

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Bluebook (online)
Carvalho v. Lincoln, 00-5899 (r.I.super. 2005), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carvalho-v-lincoln-00-5899-risuper-2005-risuperct-2005.