Cecort Realty Development, Inc. v. Llompart-Zeno

100 F. Supp. 3d 145, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 54229, 2015 WL 1876167
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 24, 2015
DocketCivil No. 3:15-cv-01335 (JAF)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 F. Supp. 3d 145 (Cecort Realty Development, Inc. v. Llompart-Zeno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cecort Realty Development, Inc. v. Llompart-Zeno, 100 F. Supp. 3d 145, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 54229, 2015 WL 1876167 (prd 2015).

Opinion

[148]*148 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

JOSÉ ANTONIO FUSTÉ, District Judge.

This case involves a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim by a one-man corporation that is the owner of two high-rise buildings leased to the Puerto Rico Judicial Branch. The lease agreement was subscribed on April 14, 2000, by the then Director of the Office of Courts Administration of Puerto Rico and Cecort Properties & Services Corporation, the one-man corporation owned by attorney César Cortés-Gareía (hereinafter, “Lease Agreement”).1 The negotiations that led to the contract entailed Cecort Properties purchasing a plot of land where the corporation would construct two buildings. One building was intended to house the Puerto Rico Circuit Court of Appeals (hereinafter, “Court of Appeals”) and its thirty-nine authorized appellate judge-ships. The second building would be the seat of the Office of Administration of the Courts of Puerto Rico. (Hereinafter referred to as “OAT” for the Spanish name Oficina de Administración de los Tribu-nales.)

The § 1983 claim by Cecort Realty Development, Inc.2 (hereinafter referred to as “Cecort”) against the present Court Administrator, Superior Court Judge Isabel Llompart-Zeno, claims deprivation of property rights, the taking of property without due process of law, and a host of other claims as a result of the cancellation of the Lease Agreement after the conclusion of the first ten-year period of a contract that the Administrator of the Courts had the right to extend for two additional periods of ten years each, for a total occupancy possibility of thirty years. Notice of nonrenewal was due to Cecort 360 days before the conclusion of the first ten-year period.

This is the type of case in which judges, state or federal, find no professional satisfaction-when diving into the controversy that requires decision making. It involves the location of the home of Puerto Rico’s second most important appellate, tribunal after the Puerto Rico Supreme Court. For years before the appellate tribunal’s creation in its present form in the year 2003, it struggled to conduct business in locations less than favorable or deserving of a Court of Appeals. Indirectly, the Judges of that Court of Appeals are some of the unnamed third-party victims and sufferers of this controversy. The decision by the OAT to cancel the lease based on certain Puerto Rico Comptroller’s findings, complicated with the dire insolvency of the local government, has resulted in the rushed and difficult plan to move to a 40-plus year old run-down building once the home office of The Western Bank of Puer-to Rico which had failed by insolvency and was now in the hands of a governmental entity.

The Court of Appeals and the OAT will suffer the consequences of a hurried, unpleasant relocation. A judicial institution deserves better than that. There is another non-objective party, the one-man corporation Cecort, all because under law and contract, there is only one way to proceed; the law must be adhered to. When even [149]*149well-intended actions result in contradiction to the order of law, societal norms require that the law prevail irrespective of foreseen or never anticipated consequences.

Before proceeding any further, we find that the court has jurisdiction, even to eventually dismiss the § 1983 complaint on the merits. We find that the Lease Agreement suffers from the effects of nullity. We also find that in addition to being null and void, the contract was properly cancelled by the OAT Court Administrator on account of the comptroller’s findings and contractual clauses. We find that Ce-cort pleaded the federal complaint in a way that adequately invoked federal jurisdiction only to lose on the merits.

How it all Started

In or about 1999 or 2000, Attorney Cé-sar Cortés-García, an entrepreneur involved in real estate, got wind that the Puerto Rico courts had interest in securing recently-built facilities in conformity with court design guidelines for both the Puerto Rico Circuit Court of Appeals and the OAT. Cortés established some personal contacts and seeing a business opportunity, located a vacant lot 'in the Hato Rey area that was available for purchase. Cortés, through his one-man corporation Cecort Properties, entered into a preliminary agreement with the OAT Administrator to construct two adjacent buildings with parking facilities in the vacant lots available for sale. He then proceeded to purchase the lots and hire an architect, Antonio Suárez, who would meet with court personnel, study their needs, and design the buildings. These structures would be leased to Puerto Rico Courts for a period of ten years, giving the courts two renewal options for two extra terms of ten years each, for a total potential occupancy of thirty years.

Cortés attempted to establish during his testimony that the existence of a so-called “pre-contract” and later the Lease Agreement,3 were creatures fathered solely by the OAT, but later he admitted to having participated fully in the negotiation of the terms of the- Lease Agreement and that the agreed-upon terms were reduced to final form, that is, typed and printed as a final document at the offices of OAT. Contrary to the impression Cortés tried to create at the federal hearing, this was not an adhesion contract placed on the table by the OAT on a “take it or leave it” basis. César Cortés-García is a seasoned businessman, and he was the face and force behind the offer to build to specification and lease the constructions to the Puerto Rico Courts.

Cortés placed great emphasis in the first ten-year term and throughout his testimony and demeanor, omitted much reference to the thirty years, trying to distance himself from the purpose behind the division of the contract into three ten-year terms. Under law and regulations, any contract of such magnitude, where two tailor-made buildings are to be erected for a special tenant, would have required a bidding process because public funding was involved, and a thirty-year term was part of the agreement. The Lease Agreement contemplated a deal that would place the Court of Appeals and the OAT in the specifically-designed buildings for a period of thirty years. No one, including César Cortés-García, can reasonably say that the intent was just to have a ten-year lease. Instead, by presenting the deal as a ten-year contract with renewable terms, a dice was rolled stretching the regulations, or interpreting them conveniently, to avoid public bidding. For all purposes, the transaction was intended to hopefully last thirty years, producing rent per square [150]*150foot of office space and parking space far exceeding the going prices for prime real estate in the Hato Rey area of San Juan. Eventually, these three ten-year terms of the contract, the combination of term of years and public cost, were the object of adverse findings by the Comptroller of Puerto Rico. On the OAT’s side, the then Administrator of Courts testified that she proceeded to accept the terms and sign the contract relying in good faith on a legal opinion that the OAT’s internal legal division issued, vouching for the legality of the terms and conditions.

The financing of this major project was all arranged by César Cortés-García and his companies, Cecort Properties & Services Corporation and Plaintiff Cecort. The architectural design was contracted and paid for by Cortés/Cecort.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 F. Supp. 3d 145, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 54229, 2015 WL 1876167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cecort-realty-development-inc-v-llompart-zeno-prd-2015.