Cong. Fine Dining, LLC v. E, F & C, LLC

111 N.E.3d 1111
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 2, 2018
Docket17-P-1113
StatusPublished

This text of 111 N.E.3d 1111 (Cong. Fine Dining, LLC v. E, F & C, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cong. Fine Dining, LLC v. E, F & C, LLC, 111 N.E.3d 1111 (Mass. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

The issue before us in this case is whether the parties fulfilled their obligations relative to a right of first refusal (ROFR) contained in a purchase and sale agreement executed in 2010 (2010 agreement). We conclude that the plaintiff had standing to exercise the ROFR with regard to a 2013 third-party offer to purchase, the parties could not agree on a ROFR purchase and sale agreement despite reasonable and good faith negotiations, and because defendant E, F and C, LLC (EFC), did not ultimately sell the disputed property to the third party, the plaintiff's ROFR remains in force.

Background. Prior to 2010, Congress Fine Dining, LLC (Congress) leased from EFC level one and part of level two of "The Congress Condominium," a five-level condominium building located at 355 Congress Street in Boston. On April 9, 2010, Congress and EFC entered the 2010 agreement and ultimately completed the sale of levels one and two of the building to Congress's nominee. The 2010 agreement provides that it is between EFC as "Seller" and Congress "or its nominee, as provided in Section 12, herein," as the "Buyer." Section 12 provides that "[a]cceptance of the Deed by Buyer or the nominee(s) designated by Buyer with the same principals as Buyer, as the case may be, shall be deemed to be a full performance and discharge of every agreement and obligation herein contained or expressed, except for the representations which survive the delivery of the Deed by their terms."3

Section 19 of the 2010 agreement provides a ROFR for the "Buyer" for the third level of the condominium building (option space). The ROFR requires EFC to give notice to the buyer of EFC's intent to sell the option space, including the basic terms, conditions, and effective purchase price of a third-party offer.4 The ROFR provides that "[u]pon receipt of the Third Party Purchase Offer from Seller, Buyer shall have a right to purchase the Option Space on the terms set forth therein. Tenant's right to purchase the Option Space shall be exercised by giving notice to Seller to such effect within three (3) business days after Buyer's receipt of the Third Party Purchase Offer" (emphasis supplied). The ROFR further provides that if "Buyer exercises its purchase Right of First Refusal, then Seller and Buyer ... shall enter into a mutually acceptable purchase and sale agreement ... within ten (10) business days from Buyer's acceptance of said offer. Said ROFR Purchase Agreement shall reflect the terms and conditions set forth in the Third Party Purchase Offer, including a closing date of at least sixty (60) days from the date of execution of the ROFR Purchase Agreement."

The 2010 agreement contemplates various scenarios that could arise from the exercise or nonexercise of the ROFR. First, if the buyer does not exercise its ROFR, the premises shall be sold free and clear of the ROFR. In addition, "[t]he non-exercise by Buyer of its rights ... shall be deemed a waiver of any of Buyer's rights of first refusal to purchase the Premises ... at any subsequent time," unless, as relevant here, the seller "fails to enter into an enforceable purchase and sale agreement on the terms set forth in said Third Party Purchase Offer within ninety (90) days." Second, if the buyer notifies the seller of its election to purchase the premises and then fails to execute and deliver the required ROFR purchase agreement once one has been mutually agreed upon by the buyer and seller, the buyer shall be deemed to have waived its rights under the ROFR, the seller shall have the unrestricted right to sell, and the buyer's ROFR shall terminate. Finally, if the seller and buyer each act reasonably and in good faith but fail to agree on a ROFR purchase agreement within ten days, such failure shall be treated as a nonexercise by the buyer of the ROFR.

In June of 2010, counsel for Congress sent an electronic mail message (e-mail) to EFC's counsel stating "please note that the Unit Deed and 6(d) certificates and any [other] closing [documents] for the Buyer should run to Congress Street 355-1, LLC, a Massachusetts limited liability company, which is the new entity created to take title to the Unit. There will be an internal lease of the Unit back to Congress Fine Dining, LLC." (Emphasis added.) At closing, Congress Street 355-1, LLC (355-1), took title to levels one and two and leased level one to Congress, which operates a restaurant known as Lucky's in it.

During the course of Congress's prior tenancy and after 355-1 took title to levels one and two, disputes arose between Congress or 355-1 and EFC, first regarding past rent owed to EFC by Congress and then regarding the common areas and costs. In addition, Congress asserted that EFC's manager, Francis X. Crowley, had mismanaged condominium funds. Those disputes led to a lawsuit commenced by 355-1 which was ongoing when in 2013, EFC received a third-party offer to purchase level three. A second lawsuit brought by the building department against EFC in the Housing Court was also pending. As a result, the purchase and sale agreement negotiated between EFC and the third-party purchaser included a purchase price of $1.8 million and an indemnity agreement whereby EFC would indemnify the third-party purchaser from any and all losses, costs, liabilities, and damages, including attorney's fees, in connection with the two pending lawsuits.

As specifically required by the 2010 agreement, EFC gave written notice of the third-party offer. Notice was addressed to the "Lyons Group, Ltd."5 The letter referred to the 2010 ROFR between EFC and Congress, as buyer. It stated, "You have the right to purchase this space on the terms set forth in the enclosed Agreement for the third level of The Congress Condominium." It enclosed both a copy of the purchase and sale agreement and the indemnification agreement.

In response, Congress gave the required notice that it was exercising its option to purchase the option space in a timely September 3, 2013, letter signed by David Joaquin, as a "member" of Congress. Although the judge found that Joaquin did not have authority to sign the letter, EFC raised no issue regarding Joaquin's authority and proceeded to negotiate with Congress. During negotiations to come to a mutually acceptable purchase and sale agreement, Congress took the position that the indemnification agreement was part of the third-party purchase and sale agreement and insisted it be included as part of its agreement. EFC declined, taking the position that it made no sense to indemnify Congress for litigation to which it or a related entity was a party. The parties could not come to agreement, and EFC ultimately took the property off the market and did not sell it either to the third party or to Congress.

Congress commenced this action seeking specific performance of the ROFR, and damages for breach of contract and violation of G. L. c. 93A.6 EFC filed counterclaims seeking a declaratory judgment that Congress waived its right of first refusal, and damages for breach of contract arising from amounts owed under the former lease, for failure to negotiate with EFC in good faith regarding the ROFR, and for violation of G. L. c. 93A.7 After motions to dismiss were denied, the judge conducted a jury-waived trial. The judge concluded that there was no contract between Congress and EFC because when Congress designated 355-1 to take title to levels 1 and 2, all of the rights of the buyer contained in the 2010 agreement transferred to 355-1 and 355-1 did not exercise the ROFR.

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.E.3d 1111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cong-fine-dining-llc-v-e-f-c-llc-massappct-2018.