Cole v. Macklowe

125 A.D.3d 44, 999 N.Y.S.2d 403
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 23, 2014
Docket650100/11 13349
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 125 A.D.3d 44 (Cole v. Macklowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Macklowe, 125 A.D.3d 44, 999 N.Y.S.2d 403 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Acosta, J.

At issue in this appeal is the interpretation of the plain language of a limited partnership agreement whereby plaintiff *46 was obligated to sell his partnership interest upon the termination of his employment with defendant Manhattan Pacific if defendants made a proper offer to purchase it. We find that defendants failed to make a proper offer to purchase plaintiffs partnership interest upon his termination and therefore that plaintiffs obligation to sell was never triggered. Accordingly, when defendants sold the property owned by the partnership in 2008, plaintiff was entitled to his interest in the proceeds.

Defendant Macklowe is a well-known developer and owner of Manhattan real estate. In 1987, he organized defendant MAK West 55th Street Associates, L.P. (MAK West 55th or the partnership) for the purpose of acquiring property at 125 West 55th Street (the property), and developing an office tower on that site. In 1998, MAK West 55th transferred the property to 125 West 55th Street LLC (125 West LLC), another Macklowe entity.

In 1988, Macklowe’s management company, Manhattan Pacific Management Co., Inc. (Manhattan Pacific), hired plaintiff, Warren Cole, an investment banker and real estate professional, who became Macklowe’s “right-hand man” responsible for locating, acquiring and financing properties for Macklowe’s businesses.

In 1994, Cole became a limited partner in MAK West 55th, pursuant to a limited partnership agreement (LPA), which granted him a 9% passive interest in MAK West 55th (partnership interest), with the remaining partnership interests held by Macklowe, his son William, and defendant MAK 55 Acquisition. The LPA provides, among other things, that no partner shall receive distributions other than as expressly provided in the LPA, and that distributions are to be made in proportion to the partners’ partnership percentages..

Under section 11 of the LPA (the buy-sell provision), Cole was required to sell, and Macklowe was required to buy, Cole’s partnership interest upon the termination, for any reason, of Cole’s employment with Manhattan Pacific. 1 Section 11.2 provides that the price

“shall be equal to the amount that he would receive if the partnership sold all of its property for amounts equal to the amounts that [Macklowe] *47 determines it would have received for such property in arms’ length sales on the date of the Termination, satisfied all of its liabilities and other obligations and liquidated.”

Section 11.3 provides that

“[a]t the closing of the purchase . . . , which shall take place 90 days after the date of Termination, [Macklowe] shall deliver to [Cole] as his check in payment . . . and [Cole] . . . shall deliver to [Macklowe] such instruments ... he shall request evidencing the transfer of [Cole’s] interest in the partnership.”

In April 1999, Cole resigned from Manhattan Pacific. It is undisputed that after the termination of his employment, there was no sale or purchase of his partnership interest within 90 days of termination or thereafter.

In 2008, 125 West LLC sold the property for $443 million, and distributed the partnership’s proceeds of $230,549,383 to Macklowe.

On January 14, 2011, Cole commenced this action asserting claims for breach of the LPA against Macklowe and MAK Acquisition for failure to distribute to Cole his 9% share of the partnership’s assets stemming from the 2008 sale, unjust enrichment against Macklowe, and violation of Debtor and Creditor Law § 273 against all defendants for distributing assets to render the partnership insolvent despite its obligation to Cole.

On August 18, 2011, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint, asserting that Cole’s claim for breach of contract was barred by the statute of limitations, as well as by his own breach of the agreement.

Cole argued that his breach of contract claim was timely because it did not arise out of Macklowe’s failure to purchase his interest in 1999, but out of the partnership’s failure to distribute the proceeds from the 2008 sale owed to him based on his continuing 9% interest. He further argued that his obligation to sell was conditioned upon Macklowe’s setting and tendering the purchase price, which he did not do, and that defendants had failed to complain timely that Cole breached the buy-sell provision.

*48 By order entered November 17, 2011, the court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss, finding that the partnership ceased to exist in 1998, when the property was conveyed to another company, and that Cole’s interest was extinguished when he failed to sell his shares in connection with the termination of his employment.

On October 23, 2012, this Court reversed, finding that “plaintiffs failure to sell his interest did not divest him of his partnership interest,” given the absence of express language to that effect in the LPA (99 AD3d 595, 596 [1st Dept 2012]), and the fact that that interpretation of the LPA would be “absurd, not commercially reasonable and contrary to the express terms of the agreement” (id.).

In December 2012, defendants served their answer, including affirmative defenses asserting that Cole’s claims were barred by, among other things, the doctrines of waiver, estoppel, laches, unclean hands and unjust enrichment. Defendants also served discovery requests concerning Cole’s purported interest in the partnership, his tax returns, and his interests in other Macklowe properties.

On February 15, 2013, Cole filed a motion for partial summary judgment on his first cause of action, for breach of contract, against the MAK defendants and Macklowe, citing this Court’s finding that he “continues to hold his partnership interest.” 2 Specifically, Cole argued that defendants breached sections 6.1 and 12.2 of the LPA by not distributing to him 9% of the net proceeds of the 2008 sale of the property.

In opposition, the MAK defendants argued that issues of fact remained as to their affirmative defenses, and that discovery into Cole’s post-termination communications about his partnership interest might reveal facts relevant to those affirmative defenses. Specifically, they alleged, for the first time, that in April 1999, Macklowe offered Cole $2.5 million in cash and debt forgiveness in exchange for all of Cole’s remaining interests in Macklowe-controlled entities, including his partnership interest (1999 offer), that Cole rejected the 1999 offer and did not make any counteroffer, and that Macklowe subsequently informed Cole that he was rescinding all of Cole’s *49 interests. 3 Defendants argued that this conduct, along with Cole’s failure to make any claim or assert any rights with respect to that interest from 1999 until 2011, constituted a breach, or an estoppel or waiver by Cole. They further submitted that this Court’s decision on the motion to dismiss did not foreclose them from establishing their affirmative defenses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A.D.3d 44, 999 N.Y.S.2d 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-macklowe-nyappdiv-2014.