Cuesport Properties, LLC v. Critical Developments, LLC

61 A.3d 91, 209 Md. App. 607, 2013 WL 706902, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 27, 2013
DocketNo. 2752
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 A.3d 91 (Cuesport Properties, LLC v. Critical Developments, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuesport Properties, LLC v. Critical Developments, LLC, 61 A.3d 91, 209 Md. App. 607, 2013 WL 706902, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 12 (Md. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

KRAUSER, C.J.

Cuesport Properties, LLC, appellant, sold a commercial condominium unit in Anne Arundel County to Critical Developments, LLC, appellee. Under the terms of the agreement of sale, Cuesport Properties, as the seller, was to build a demising wall1 between Critical Developments’ unit and an adjacent unit. Cuesport Properties was to complete the wall within thirty days of closing and, if it failed to do so, to pay liquidated damages in the amount of $126 per day until completion. The wall was finished on time, as required by the agreement of sale, but construction was performed without a building permit, and the wall did not comply with the Anne Arundel County code,2 a failing that Critical Developments learned of while it was undertaking further planned interior improvements to the property.

Nearly five months later, Critical Developments arranged for the wall to be modified so as to comport with the code. At least 260 days had elapsed from the date of the contractual deadline for completion of the demising wall to the date that Critical Developments’ contractor completed modifications to that wall so as to bring it into compliance with the county code.

[611]*611Critical Developments thereafter brought an action in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County against Cuesport Properties for breach of contract, requesting damages for, among other things, lost rental and loss of use of the property. Following a bench trial, the Anne Arundel circuit court entered judgment in favor of Critical Developments and awarded liquidated damages for the 260 days that had elapsed from the date of the contractual deadline until the date that modification of the wall was completed.

Challenging that decision, Cuesport Properties noted this appeal, raising three issues for our review. Rephrased and redacted of argument, they are:

I. Whether the circuit court erred in construing the per diem damages provision as a lawful liquidated damages clause rather than as an unlawful penalty;
II. Whether the circuit court erred in awarding damages, based on a per diem damages provision in the agreement of sale; and
III. Whether the circuit court erred in failing to take equitable considerations into account when it awarded damages for each of 260 days.

We conclude that the contractual language at issue is a valid liquidated damages provision, that Cuesport Properties breached the agreement of sale by building a demising wall that did not comply with the county code, that the circuit court did take equitable considerations into account in awarding damages, and that it did not err in awarding liquidated damages for each of the 260 days that had elapsed from the date of the contractual deadline until the date that modification of the wall was completed. We therefore affirm.

Background

Cuesport Properties owned a commercial building, known as the “Severn Commerce Center,” in Anne Arundel County. It subdivided certain space in the building, which had formerly housed a pool hall, into three separate units, that is, into “Units 3, 4, and 5.”

[612]*612In May 2008, Cuesport Properties and Critical Developments entered into an agreement of sale whereby Critical Developments agreed to purchase “Unit 4” from Cuesport Properties. The agreement provided, among other things, that Cuesport Properties build a demising wall separating Unit 4 from Unit 3 (ownership of the latter Cuesport Properties retained) and that the wall be built “within 30 days from the date of closing of this sale, at [Cuesport’s] sole cost and expense.” Although the agreement further provided that the property “shall not be in violation of any governmental laws, ordinances, rules, or regulations or the subject of any court action,” it mandated, in contravention of the county code, that the wall be “of the same type, materials, and specifications as the demising wall which [Cuesport Properties] recently installed in an adjoining unit previously owned or being sold by [Cuesport Properties].” It appears that neither party knew, at the time of the formation of the contract, that the “recently installed” wall referred to in this provision did not comply with the county code. The agreement further required Cuesport Properties to install a separate electrical improvement (specifically, a 400-ampere service line) for Unit 4 “within 60 days from the date of closing.”

After asserting that time was “of the essence,” the agreement, in a paragraph labeled “Late Performance,” provided that, if Cuesport Properties did “not accomplish and complete the above-described work relating to the installation of the demising wall within 30 days from the date of the completion of the closing, [Cuesport Properties] shall pay a penalty to [Critical Developments] of $126 per day for each day that this work is not completed,” payable “within 10 days from the completion of such work.” Moreover, in accordance with the terms of the agreement of sale, $20,000 was to be taken from the sale’s proceeds and placed in escrow, to be used for payment of the work required to be performed by Cuesport Properties, as well as any damages that might accrue for failure to complete that work on time and “any late performance penalty.” Any funds that remained, after these sums were paid, were to be released to Cuesport Properties.

[613]*613On June 20, 2008, the parties closed on the sale of Unit 4. Within thirty days, the demising wall was completed by a contractor hired by Cuesport Properties, and the wall was built in compliance with the clause of the agreement of sale requiring that the wall be of “the same type, materials, and specifications as the demising wall which [Cuesport Properties had] recently installed” between Units 4 and 5. But, no building permit was obtained by the seller, Cuesport Properties, or its contractor, nor was the wall constructed in conformity with the applicable county code provisions, as required by paragraph 3.7 of the agreement of sale, which provided that the property “shall not be in violation of any governmental laws, ordinances, rules, or regulations or the subject of any court action.” Unaware of these violations of county law, the parties accepted the wall as built and approved payment to the contractor from the escrow fund established by their agreement.

In November 2008, well after the thirty-day contractual deadline for completion of the demising wall, Critical Developments, while undertaking further planned interior improvements to Unit 4, learned that no county building permit for construction of the demising wall had ever been obtained and that the wall did not comply with the relevant provisions of the county code. Ordered by the county to bring the wall into compliance with the county code, Critical Developments applied for a permit to rebuild the wall. But that permit, for reasons the record does not disclose, was not issued until February 4, 2009, delaying reconstruction of the wall until at least that date.

Moreover, the electrical work, which Cuesport Properties was required to perform, under the agreement of sale, was not completed in a timely manner. Michael Hanlon, the electrician whose company, M &

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Bluebook (online)
61 A.3d 91, 209 Md. App. 607, 2013 WL 706902, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuesport-properties-llc-v-critical-developments-llc-mdctspecapp-2013.