Estate of Truax

2007 ND 182
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 2007
Docket20070121
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2007 ND 182 (Estate of Truax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Truax, 2007 ND 182 (N.D. 2007).

Opinion

Filed 11/19/07 by Clerk of Supreme Court

IN THE SUPREME COURT

STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

2007 ND 181

Hendricks Property Management Corp., Plaintiff and Appellee

v.

Birchwood Properties Limited

Partnership, Breezy Shores, LLC,

Bramley Properties Limited

Partnership, Marcy’s, LLC, and

O’Grady, LLC, Defendants and Appellants

No. 20070028

Appeal from the District Court of Cass County, East Central Judicial District, the Honorable Georgia Dawson, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

Opinion of the Court by Maring, Justice.

Ronald H. McLean (argued) and Jane L. Dynes (on brief), Serkland Law Firm, P.O. Box 6017, Fargo, N.D. 58108-6017, for plaintiff and appellee.

Michael D. McNair, McNair, Larson & Carlson, Ltd., P.O. Box 2189, Fargo, N.D. 58108-2189, for defendants and appellants.

Hendricks Property Management v. Birchwood Properties

Maring, Justice.

[¶1] Birchwood Properties Limited Partnership, Breezy Shores, LLC, Bramley Properties Limited Partnership, Marcy’s, LLC, and O’Grady, LLC, (collectively referred to as “defendants”) appeal from a judgment entered after the district court found they had each breached property management agreements with Hendricks Property Management Corporation and awarded Hendricks Property Management $298,643 in liquidated damages.  We conclude the district court did not err in deciding the defendants breached the property management agreements and the court’s findings of fact on the foundational requirements for a valid liquidated damages clause are not clearly erroneous.  We affirm the judgment.

I

[¶2] In the late 1990s, Melvin Hendricks approached Scott Fridlund and Wynn Juran to sell his government subsidized housing units.  Melvin Hendricks’ housing units had been managed by Hendricks Property Management, a management company owned by his son, Chuck Hendricks.  Fridlund and Juran eventually purchased Melvin Hendricks’ housing units in 1999, which they subsequently operated as Birchwood Properties.

[¶3] Birchwood Properties executed a property management agreement with Hendricks Property Management, which provided for a three-year term beginning on May 7, 1999, and ending on April 30, 2002, with an automatic year-to-year renewal unless either party terminated the agreement “with or without cause, at the end of the initial term or of any following term year upon the giving of 60 days’ written notice prior to the end of said initial term or following term year.”  The management agreement also included language authorizing termination for cause:

Thirty (30) days after the receipt of notice by either party to the other specifying in detail a material breach of this Agreement, if such breach has not been cured within said thirty (30) day period; or if such breach is of a nature that it cannot be cured within said thirty (30) day period but can be cured within a reasonable time thereafter, if efforts to cure such breach have not commenced or/and such efforts are not proceeding and being continued diligently both during and after such thirty (30) day period prior to the breach being cured.  HOWEVER, the breach of any obligation of either party hereunder to pay any monies to the other party under the terms of this Agreement shall be deemed to be curable within thirty (30) days.

The management agreement further provided for “termination compensation” if Birchwood Properties terminated the agreement before the end of the initial term or any subsequent term year, which required Birchwood Properties to pay Hendricks Property Management “as liquidated damages an amount equal to the management fee . . . for the calendar month immediately preceding the month in which the notice of termination is given . . . multiplied by the number of months and/or portions thereof remaining from the termination date until the end of the initial term or term year in which the termination occurred.”

[¶4] In 2001, Fridlund and Juran purchased three additional groups of government subsidized housing units from other individuals, which they operated under separate entities as Bramley, Marcy’s, and O’Grady.  Those three entities executed separate property management agreements with Hendricks Property Management to manage the respective properties, and the three management agreements each set a beginning date of July 1, 2001, and an ending date of June 30, 2004.  Each of those three management agreements also included language identical to the Birchwood Properties’ agreement for termination and for liquidated damages.

[¶5] In April 2002, the initial three-year term for the Birchwood Properties’ management agreement was about to expire without either party providing a 60-day notice of termination.  As a result, the language authorizing an automatic year-to-year renewal was triggered, which resulted in a scheduled expiration date of April 30, 2003.  At an April 2002, meeting, Chuck Hendricks provided Fridlund and Juran with a copy of a proposed new management agreement.  In a May 10, 2002, letter to Chuck Hendricks, Fridlund and Juran, on behalf of Birchwood Properties, “decided to accept an automatic renewal [of the management agreement] for the term of one year” with an expiration date of April 30, 2003, and they requested that before that renewal date, they receive a copy of the new contract for review “NO LATER THAN January 31, 2003” with any changes in the current contract “underlined in red” or “blacklined.” According to Chuck Hendricks, he called Fridlund on January 16, 2003, with a question, and Hendricks left a message that he thought they were “just auto renewing” and he received “no reply by 1/31/03.”

[¶6] By letter dated April 23, 2003, Birchwood Properties informed Hendricks Property Management that it had “elected to terminate the management agreement that will expire on June 30, 2003, as agreed to by the parties at the time of the one (1) year renewal term.”  Hendricks Property Management thereafter informed Birchwood Properties that the one-year automatic renewal of the management agreement extended that agreement from April 30, 2003, through April 30, 2004.  Fridlund and Juran nevertheless began managing Birchwood Properties on July 1, 2003.

[¶7] Meanwhile, by letters dated April 24, 2003, Bramley, Marcy’s, and O’Grady informed Hendricks Property Management that they were terminating their respective property management agreements at the end of the June 30, 2004, three-year term.  In those letters, Bramley, Marcy’s, and O’Grady also informed Hendricks Property Management that its failure to “timely deliver reports” constituted a material breach of the management agreements and that the respective letters constituted a 30-day notice to cure the deficiency.  By letter dated May 8, 2003, Hendricks Property Management stated it had delivered various reports to the three entities on April 30, 2003, to cure any alleged deficiency.  By letter dated August 6, 2003, the defendants gave Hendricks Property Management notice of alleged breaches of the management agreements involving all four properties.  Fridlund and Juran assumed management responsibilities for the Bramley, Marcy’s, and O’Grady properties on September 1, 2003.

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Related

State v. Horn
2014 ND 230 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
2007 ND 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-truax-nd-2007.