Domus Dev. LLC v. Titan Dev. LLC

350 F. Supp. 3d 683
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedNovember 26, 2018
DocketNO. 2:18-cv-00052
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 350 F. Supp. 3d 683 (Domus Dev. LLC v. Titan Dev. LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Domus Dev. LLC v. Titan Dev. LLC, 350 F. Supp. 3d 683 (M.D. Tenn. 2018).

Opinion

WAVERLY D. CRENSHAW, JR., CHIEF UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

Before the Court is Defendants' Partial Motion to Dismiss Any Claim for Specific Performance in Plaintiffs' Amended Complaint and For an Order Declaring Plaintiffs' Lien Lis Pendens Invalid. (Doc. No. 25.) Plaintiffs have filed a response in opposition.

*685(Doc. No. 29.) For the following reasons, Defendants' motion is denied.1

I. Background

Plaintiffs Domus Development, LLC ("Domus"), MMA Investments, LLC ("MMA"), and Sonnyman, LLC ("Sonnyman") (collectively "Plaintiffs") have worked together for a number of years to build student-housing projects throughout the Southeast. (Doc. No. 24 at 4.) In March 2016, Plaintiffs sought to develop a student-housing project at Tennessee Technological University ("Tennessee Tech") in Cookeville, Tennessee and met with Defendant Wayne Cravens, a financial advisor, about acquiring real estate in Cookeville. (Id. at 4-5.) Plaintiffs and Cravens discussed the potential project for several months, and, in August 2016, representatives from Sonnyman and MMA traveled to Cookeville and met with Cravens and Defendant Justin Cumby, owner of Defendant Titan Development, LLC ("Titan"). (Id. ) Cravens and Cumby showed Plaintiffs two parcels of land suitable for student-housing, which were located near Tennessee Tech's campus (the "Property"). (Id. )

In February 2017, Titan acquired the Property for a total purchase price of $1 million. (Id. at 6.) Cravens and Cumby then traveled to Fort Worth, Texas in May 2017 to meet with Plaintiffs. (Id. ) During the meeting, Cravens and Cumby, on behalf of themselves and Titan, communicated that they wanted to form a formal partnership with Plaintiffs to develop student-housing on the Property. (Id. ) Plaintiffs, Cravens, and Cumby orally agreed on: (1) the essential terms of the partnership; and (2) each partner's contribution to the partnership (money, skill, labor). (Id. ) Specifically, the parties agreed that: (1) Sonnyman would fund the partnership's pre-development costs related to efforts to rezone the Property for the student-housing project; (2) Titan would contribute the Property in fee simple to the partnership; and (3) Domus would lead the partnership's local efforts in Cookeville to rezone the Property. (Id. at 7.) The parties also agreed to memorialize the pertinent information about the partnership in a financing "pitch book" to attract additional investors for the project. (Id. )

The parties then began pre-development activities, including preparing rezoning efforts, compiling information for the pitch book, and creating architectural and engineering designs. (Id. at 7-8.) The parties agreed to name the student-housing development "Aerie," and met in Cookeville in July 2017 to further discuss the development. (Id. ) During this time, the parties contracted with HFF, Inc. ("HFF"), a provider of capital markets and brokerage services, and HFF created the "pitch book" necessary to attract additional funding. (Id. at 8-9.) The pitch book contained certain information about the parties' partnership, including that: (1) the parties were in "a partnership led by Domus Development" intended to develop the Property; (2) Domus was the "key principal" of the partnership; (3) other "key principals"

*686included representatives of MMA, Cravens, and Cumby; and (4) the Property had been purchased by the parties and rezoning efforts were ongoing. (Id. )

Domus then met with Defendant Clinton Engineering, a local engineering firm in Cookeville, about providing limited civil engineering services with respect to the Aerie project. (Id. at 10.) Clinton Engineering provided some preliminary plans to Domus, and Domus and Clinton Engineering agreed on proposals for more work in the future. (Id. at 10-11.) After creating these plans ("Aerie Plans"), Domus met with additional stakeholders in the project, including the president of Tennessee Tech, members of Cookeville's planning and zoning commission, and members of Cookeville's City Council, to secure additional support for the Aerie development. (Id. at 11.) As a result, in November 2017, Domus, Cravens, and Cumby, on behalf of Titan, appeared before the Cookeville Planning Commission and requested that the Property be rezoned from single family residential to multi-family residential. (Id. at 12.) Cravens confirmed at the meeting that the Property was being developed by the partnership according to the Aerie Plans. (Id. ) At the conclusion of the November 2017 meeting, the Cookeville Planning Commission approved the request to rezone the Property. (Id. at 13.) Domus attended a final meeting on January 4, 2018, where it obtained final zoning approval. (Id. )

Plaintiffs allege that, once the rezoning efforts were complete, Titan and Cravens began shopping the Property to other third-party developers. (Id. at 14-15.) When confronted by Plaintiffs, Defendants refused to perform pursuant to the agreed-upon partnership. (Id. at 15.) Plaintiffs then filed the instant lawsuit seeking a declaratory judgment that a partnership was formed among the parties, with an agreement to develop the property, and Defendants breached that partnership agreement by engaging in negotiations to sell the property to a third-party and otherwise failing to proceed with the development. (Id. at 18-21.) Plaintiffs also allege claims of unjust enrichment, promissory estoppel, misappropriation of trade secrets, trademark infringement, conversion, breach of contract (as against Clinton Engineering), and civil conspiracy. (Id. at 16-30.) Moreover, based on its claims that Titan intended to contribute the Property to the partnership, Plaintiffs, on June 20, 2018, filed a lien lis pendens on the Property based on their complaint. (Doc. No. 25-1.) Defendants Titan, Cravens, and Cumby then filed the instant partial motion to dismiss. (Doc. No. 25.)

II. Defendants' Partial Motion to Dismiss

In their partial motion to dismiss, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs' conclusory allegation that they have an interest in the Property is barred by Tennessee's Statute of Frauds because Plaintiffs cannot identify any written document memorializing an agreement to convey the Property to the alleged partnership. (Doc. No. 26 at 1.) For this same reason, Defendants also argue that any claim for which Plaintiffs request specific performance as a remedy should be dismissed, as there is no writing establishing what specific performance could possibly be sought. (Id. at 6.) Further, Defendants contend that, because there is no writing related to the alleged conveyance of the Property to the partnership or other facts demonstrating that the Property was conveyed to the partnership, Plaintiffs cannot assert equitable estoppel to prevent application of the Statute of Frauds. (Id. at 8-11.)

Moreover, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs' lien lis pendens on the Property is *687defective because: (1) it does not state the amount of the lien "sought to be fixed"; and (2) Plaintiffs have no valid claim to any ownership interest in the Property. (Id.

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Bluebook (online)
350 F. Supp. 3d 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/domus-dev-llc-v-titan-dev-llc-tnmd-2018.