Fort Lincoln Civic Ass'n v. Fort Lincoln New Town Corp.

944 A.2d 1055, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 108, 2008 WL 731562
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 2008
Docket05-CV-1410
StatusPublished
Cited by121 cases

This text of 944 A.2d 1055 (Fort Lincoln Civic Ass'n v. Fort Lincoln New Town Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fort Lincoln Civic Ass'n v. Fort Lincoln New Town Corp., 944 A.2d 1055, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 108, 2008 WL 731562 (D.C. 2008).

Opinion

REID, Associate Judge:

Appellants, Fort Lincoln Civic Association, Inc. (“the Civic Association”) and Nora Faison, Lillie Mae Griffin, Carol Hood-Mainor, and Harry D. Morgan (collectively “appellants”), appeal the trial court’s dismissal of their breach of contract and non-breach of contract claims against appellees, Fort Lincoln New Town Corporation, Inc. (“New Town”), Fort Lincoln Realty Corp., Inc. (“the Realty Corp.”), Michele V. Hagans, and Barbara A. Jones (collectively “appellees”). The trial court dismissed appellants’ breach of contract claims against appellees after concluding that appellants were incidental beneficiaries of a contract entered into by a District of Columbia government agency, then known as the Redevelopment Land Agency (“the RLA”) and New Town. Subsequently, the trial court dismissed appellants’ remaining claims after granting ap-pellees’ motion for summary judgment. The trial court concluded that the appellants’ non-contract claims were not separate and distinct claims from their breach of contract claim, and that appellants did not provide sufficient evidence to establish that any specific duties were owed to them by appellees.

We hold that the trial court properly dismissed the appellants’ breach of contract claims because the Civic Association and its members are only incidental beneficiaries of the Land Disposition Agreement (“LDA”). We also conclude that the trial court properly granted summary judgment in favor of appellees on appellants’ tort and equitable claims. Thus, we affirm the judgment of the trial court with respect to all of these claims. However, we conclude that summary judgment in favor of appellees on appellants’ statutory claims was improper, and hence, we remand the statutory claims to the trial court for further proceedings.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

The record reveals that on June 13, 1975, Fort Lincoln New Town Corporation (“New Town”), the “Redeveloper,” and an agency of the District of Columbia, then known as the Redevelopment Land Agency (“the RLA”), 1 entered into a contract, the Land Disposition Agreement (“the LDA” or “the Agreement”). Under the LDA, the RLA “agree[d] to sell and/or to lease as lessor, and the Redeveloper [] agreefd] to purchase and or to lease as lessee,” certain “Private Development Property,” 2 located in the “Fort Lincoln Urban Renewal Area,” in the Northeast *1060 quadrant of the District of Columbia. The Urban Renewal Plan for the Fort Lincoln Urban Renewal Area (“the Urban Renewal Plan”) called for “the creation of an attractive and racially, socially, economically, and functionally inclusive community of approximately 16,000 persons.” 3 The stated “general development objectives” focused on a “multifunctional Town Center”; community facilities; secondary and higher education institutions; public parks and recreational facilities; and housing, including “construction of approximately 4,600 Dwelling Units with a wide variety of housing types, densities and bedroom sizes for Low Income, Moderate Income, and Middle Income families and individuals, including the elderly.” 4 The LDA, § l(j), defined “Dwelling Unit” as “one or more habitable rooms forming a single household unit with kitchen and bathroom facilities exclusively for the use of, and under the control of, the occupants thereof.”

Article III, § 3.1 of the LDA contained restrictions on the use of the Private Development Property. Section 3.2 set forth various covenants binding on successors in interest to New Town, and placed enforcement rights and remedies in the RLA, the District of Columbia, “any successor in interest to the Private Development Property,” and the United States. Section 3.3 of Article III specified that the RLA and the United States were deemed the beneficiaries of the agreements and covenants provided for in § 3.1, “both for and in their own right and also for the purpose of protecting the interests of the community and the other parties, public or private, in whose favor or for whose benefit such agreements and covenants have been provided.” Section 3.3 further lodged the right to bring judicial enforcement action in the RLA and the United States. 5 Section 3.4 stated that “[ejxcept as otherwise expressly provided in this Agreement (including but not limited to, provisions in favor of the United States in Section 3.3), no person other than a party to the Agreement or a successor or assign, shall have any right to enforce the terms of the Agreement against a party, its successors or assigns.”

Article VII concerned “Equal Employment Opportunities], Social and Economic Programs,” and contained prohibitions on discrimination (§ 7.2), as well as a requirement that the Redeveloper “provide opportunities for minority firms as contractors, subcontractors and suppliers” (§§ 7.4 and 7.5). Section 7.5(b) called for the “creation of a real estate company, 25% of whose ownership would rest in a non-profit corporation”; 6 and § 7.5(c) imposed obli *1061 gations on the Redeveloper relating to investment in the Town Center. 7 Section 7.8 pertained to “Community Organization,” and subsection (a) required the Redevelop-er within three months of the execution of the LDA to create a non-profit corporation “which will attempt to secure funds from foundations and from governmental entities and to perform selected community services for the Project during the period of the Plan....” 8 Section 7.7 obligated the Redeveloper to “provide [an] opportunity for investment by members of the District of Columbia community, particularly minority group members, in the Re-developer,” in part, by “makfing] available for purchase by members of the local community such number of shares ... as shall constitute 15% of the authorized common stock of the Redeveloper immediately after the issuance thereof....”

At the time the LDA was executed, New Town was owned and operated by Theodore R. Hagans, an African American businessman. New Town was incorporated by Mr. Hagans on March 17, 1975, to develop the Fort Lincoln Urban Renewal Area. The Realty Corp. was incorporated by Mr. Hagans on August 18,1975, to manage the sale, rental, management, and maintenance of improvements owned and held for sale or lease by New Town. Mr. Hagans died in a plane crash, in 1984. Appellee, Michele Hagans, is the daughter of Mr. Ha-gans and has been the President and Treasurer of New Town and the Realty Corp. since April 1984. Appellee, Barbara Jones, inherited 33.33% of the stock in New Town and the same amount of the stock in the Realty Corp. Prior to the end of the probate of Mr. Hagans’ estate, Ms. Jones sold her prospective right to the stock of the Realty Corp. to Ms. Hagans. Hence, majority control of New Town and the Realty Corporation always has been in the hands of minority investors.

On August 8, 2002, the Civic Association and Ms. Faison, 9 filed a complaint against *1062 New Town, the Realty Corp., Ms. Hagans, and Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
944 A.2d 1055, 2008 D.C. App. LEXIS 108, 2008 WL 731562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-lincoln-civic-assn-v-fort-lincoln-new-town-corp-dc-2008.