GABRIELE FARIELLO v. LIN ZHAO & others.

101 Mass. App. Ct. 566
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 30, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 Mass. App. Ct. 566 (GABRIELE FARIELLO v. LIN ZHAO & others.) 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
GABRIELE FARIELLO v. LIN ZHAO & others., 101 Mass. App. Ct. 566 (Mass. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FARIELLO vs. ZHAO, 101 Mass. App. Ct. 566

GABRIELE FARIELLO vs. LIN ZHAO & others. [Note 1]

101 Mass. App. Ct. 566

April 21, 2022 - August 30, 2022

Court Below: Superior Court, Middlesex County

Present: Milkey, Sullivan, & Ditkoff, JJ.

No. 21-P-558.

Lis Pendens. Real Property, Purchase and sale agreement. Contract, Sale of real estate, Offer and acceptance. Practice, Civil, Lis pendens notice, Dismissal, Intervention, Attorney's fees.

A Superior Court judge acted within her discretion in allowing the special motion to dismiss by the defendant sellers of real property and dissolving a memorandum of lis pendens, where, although the plaintiff buyer's argument that the accepted offer constituted a binding contract was not frivolous (even if an uphill climb to show that the parties truly reached an agreement on all material terms), in that the offer described the property and set forth the purchase price, the deposit, the date the offer to purchase expired if not accepted, the manner of acceptance, the nature of the title to be conveyed, and the time and place of delivery of the deed, the buyer nonetheless had no nonfrivolous argument that he complied with or secured a waiver of the condition in the accepted offer to sign a purchase and sale agreement by the deadline. [570-571]

This court concluded that, in a civil action in which, following the allowance by a Superior Court judge of a special motion to dismiss by the defendant sellers of real property and dissolution of a memorandum of lis pendens, the sellers sold the property and the judge allowed the subsequent purchasers to intervene as party defendants, the availability of appellate attorney's fees under G. L. c. 184, § 15 (c), extended to such interveners who successfully defended on appeal an order dissolving a lis pendens. [571-573]


Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on August 3, 2020.

A special motion to dismiss and dissolve a memorandum of lis pendens was heard by Maureen B. Hogan, J.

Alan D. Rose, Jr. (Sammy S. Nabulsi also present) for the plaintiff.

Laurence K. Richmond for the interveners.


DITKOFF, J. The plaintiff, Gabriele Fariello (buyer), appeals from an order of a Superior Court judge allowing the special

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motion to dismiss filed by the defendants, Lin Zhao and Jian Hu (sellers), dissolving a memorandum of lis pendens, and awarding attorney's fees. Shortly after the judge allowed the special motion to dismiss, the sellers sold the property to Denise and Gavin Grant (interveners), who were allowed to intervene to defend the dismissal. Concluding that the judge acted within her discretion in allowing the sellers' special motion to dismiss and to dissolve the memorandum of lis pendens, we affirm. Furthermore, we conclude that the interveners may recover appellate attorney's fees under G. L. c. 184, § 15 (c), for successfully defending the dismissal.

1. Background. a. Offer. We rely on the facts in "the verified pleadings and affidavits that were before the judge." Citadel Realty, LLC v. Endeavor Capital N., LLC, 93 Mass. App. Ct. 39, 40 (2018). On June 4, 2020, the buyer submitted an offer to purchase real property from the sellers. The offer was conditioned on a "satisfactory inspection for safety and structural issues." The sellers did not accept the offer.

On June 25, the buyer submitted a second offer for a substantially higher amount. The second offer was conditioned on satisfactory home and radon inspections. The sellers did not accept this offer.

On July 14, the buyer submitted a third offer for a somewhat higher amount. The third offer, like the second, was conditioned on satisfactory home and radon inspections. The sellers did not accept this offer.

Later on July 14, the buyer submitted a fourth offer for the same amount as the third offer. Unlike the buyer's second and third offers, the fourth offer was not conditioned on satisfactory home and radon inspections. The offer stated that the parties must execute a purchase and sale agreement by July 24, 2020, at 6 P.M., and that time was of the essence. The sellers accepted this offer.

b. Purchase and sale agreement. The next day, the sellers' attorney sent the buyer's attorney a draft purchase and sale agreement. Two paragraphs of the draft stated (inaccurately) that the buyer had inspected the property. Five days later, on July 20, the buyer's attorney responded with some minor edits and accepted the paragraphs stating that the buyer had inspected the property but added a rider that, among other things, (1) allowed up to three inspections and (2) required the sellers to warrant and represent "that . . . there are no structural issues, usage issues or no habitability issues they did not willfully disclose regarding the

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property." On July 22, the sellers agreed to much of the rider but not to those two provisions.

When Friday, July 24 arrived without a response, the sellers' attorney asked the buyer's attorney at 1:57 P.M. whether the buyer agreed to the rider as modified. The buyer's attorney responded at 2:19 P.M. that the buyer had already found issues with the property and that the lack of inspections or a warranty was "a big issue." At 4:31 P.M., the sellers' attorney stated that the sellers would "agree to make that representation [to] the best of their knowledge without any independent investigation but they do not agree to the warranty language." At 5:13 P.M., the sellers' attorney sent a version of the rider that stated, "Seller represents to the best of their knowledge without any independent investigation that there are no structural issues, usage issues or no habitability issues." The buyer's attorney immediately asked for an extension until Monday, and the sellers immediately insisted that the agreement be signed that day.

At 6:02 P.M., the buyer's attorney agreed to the rider language proposed by the sellers and asked for a minor addition regarding appliances. The sellers' attorney accepted that request at 6:58 P.M. and provided a clean version of the agreement with two minor additional changes.

At 9:12 P.M., an e-mail message was sent directly from the buyer's e-mail account to the sellers' attorney. For the first time, the buyer objected to the provisions in the agreement stating that an inspection had occurred and demanded an "[a]ttachment with the representations made by the seller." The author of the message claimed to be "[f]ollowing my legal expertise" and signed the message as "Gosia Torzecka, ESQ." [Note 2] The message did not proffer a proposed purchase and sale agreement.

At 11 A.M. on Saturday, July 25, the sellers' attorney sent an e-mail message stating that the buyer could "execute the current version" until 2 P.M. The buyer responded directly, stating that "the accepted offer . . . required us to rely on disclosures in lieu of our own independent inspection" and that the attorneys were not "privy to all facts," and then announcing that he would be representing himself going forward.

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On July 30, the buyer proposed a new offer for $50,000 less and requiring two home inspections. On the same day, the interveners proposed an offer for the property without any contingencies, which the sellers accepted.

c. Lis pendens litigation.

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Bluebook (online)
101 Mass. App. Ct. 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gabriele-fariello-v-lin-zhao-others-massappct-2022.