Homefield Commons Homeowners Ass'n v. Roy H. Smith Real Estate Co.

500 S.W.3d 910, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 1004, 2016 WL 5903120
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 11, 2016
DocketNo. ED 103858
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 500 S.W.3d 910 (Homefield Commons Homeowners Ass'n v. Roy H. Smith Real Estate Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Homefield Commons Homeowners Ass'n v. Roy H. Smith Real Estate Co., 500 S.W.3d 910, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 1004, 2016 WL 5903120 (Mo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

KURT S. ODENWALD, Judge

Introduction

Appellant Roy H. Smith Real Estate Company, d/b/a Smith Management Group (“SMG”), appeals the judgment of the trial court entered after a bench trial. SMG entered into a one-year contract with respondent Homefield Commons Homeowners Association (“HCHOA”) to provide property-management services. Section 4 of the parties’ contract specified the method by which either party could terminate the contract for cause prior to its expiration. HCHOA contends that it properly terminated the contract pursuant to Section 4. Following a bench trial, the. trial court agreed.- Because the trial court erroneously applied the terms of the contract as required by law, we hold that HCHOA did not terminate the contract in conformance with the requirements of Section 4. We reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand this matter to the trial court with instructions to enter judgment in favor of SMG on HCHOA’s petition; to consider SMG’s counterclaim and make the required factual findings; and to enter judgment on SMG’s counterclaim in accordance with its finding of facts.

Factual and Procedural History

Homefield Commons is a subdivision of detached villas in St. Charles County. Homefield Commons is governed by a homeowners’ association, respondent [912]*912HCHOA, and is part of a larger real-estate development. The entire development is governed by a master homeowners’ association, Homefield Master Homeowners Association (“Homefield Master”). In other words, Homefield Master controls the entire development, while the HCHOA su-bassociation only governs the Homefield Commons subdivision.

HCHOA entered into a valid contract with SMG to manage the Homefield Commons subdivision. The contract between HCHOA and SMG ran for the calendar year of 2014. Included in the contract was the following termination clause, contained in Section 4:

[E]ither party may terminate this Agreement for cause by the dissatisfied party giving the other party written notice of the concerns, along with a written list or matters on which said dissatisfaction is based. The dissatisfied party will allow the other party thirty (30) days to rectify and address such concerns. If the dissatisfied party is still not satisfied with the management relationship thereafter,' said dissatisfied party shall give the other party written notice terminating this Management Agreement for causé effective thirty (30) days from the date of said written notice.

In a letter to SMG dated March 29, 2014,1 HCHOA wrote, “Pursuant to [Section] 4 of our Management Agreement, 30 day notice is hereby given to terminate the agreement.” The letter asserted that SMG’s management of both Homefield Master2 and HCHOA created a conflict of interest. This conflict allowed HCHOA’s issues “to go unaddressed or ignored” because the SMG property manager followed the direction of Homefield Master rather than HCHOA. The letter identified two issues that illustrated the conflict problem, “the Trash Can Screening issue and the Solar Panel issue,” but lacked any specificity regarding those issues. However, with both issues, HCHOA alleged that it had given specific directions to an SMG property manager and those directions were ignorpd. The letter concluded that a “person cannot have two masters and therefore we respectfully wish to terminate our management agreement with [SMG].” Although the letter was dated in March, the trial court found that SMG did not receive the letter until April 23.

SMG responded by letter dated April 28. In its letter, SMG expressed disappointment that HCHOA would want to terminate the agreement and stated it was confident it could “correct and/or explain the issues if given the opportunity.” The letter also declared SMG’s position that HCHOA had pot followed the proper procedure under Section 4 to terminate the agreement. Specifically, SMG expressed that the concerns listed were vague or inaccurate, and that the termination letter did not allow SMG the requisite thirty days to rectify HCHOA’s concerns.

SMG sent another letter dated May 5. The letter provided notice that SMG was appointing a new manager for HCHOA. This new manager, SMG stated, would follow all of SMG’s operational procedures. Nothing in SMG’s letter acknowledged HCHOA’s claim that a conflict of interest existed.

HCHOA responded by letter dated May 6 rejecting SMG’s appointment of a manager as a solution to the conflict of interest. HCHOA reiterated its complaint about the perceived conflict of interest and its [913]*913desire to terminate the contract. HCHOA emphasized that the termination letter to SMG dated March 29 would “stand” because SMG’s efforts to rectify the conflict of interest were not acceptable. In its letter, HCHOA instructed SMG to transition all files associated with HCHOA to another management company.

When SMG did not transfer the flies to another management company, HCHOA sent an email to SMG on May 21 repeating HCHOA’s termination of the contract, and again directing SMG to transfer all flies to the new management company.

Despite HCHOA’s communications, SMG continued to collect its management fees from HCHOA—at the contractual rate of $2,385 per month—from HCHOA’s bank account3 for June, July, and August. In September, HCHOA closed the bank account accessible to SMG, and SMG then transferred management of Homefield Commons to another management company-

HCHOA filed suit against SMG to recover the amounts paid to SMG after the contract was purportedly terminated. SMG filed a counterclaim, alleging that HCHOA had not properly terminated the contract under Section 4, and that HCHOA had breached the parties’ contract by transferring its business to another management company before the contract expired. SMG sought damages for management fees due through the remainder of the contract (September through December) and for various unreimbursed expenses incurred while managing the property.

After a bench trial, the trial court issued a judgment in favor of HCHOA on both its petition and SMG’s counterclaim. The trial court interpreted Section 4 (the termination provision) as a three-step process: (1) a written complaint, (2) thirty days to cure, and (3) thirty-days written notice to terminate. The trial court found that the March 29 letter satisfied the written-complaint condition. The trial court addressed the second condition by noting that SMG’s response to the March 29 letter ignored HCHOA’s concerns regarding SMG’s conflict of interest. The trial court did not mention in its judgment SMG’s May 5 letter stating that it was appointing a new manager, but found that HCHOA’s May 6 letter fulfilled the third and final condition because HCHOA advised SMG that it still wished to terminate the contract. The trial court allowed three days for delivery of the May 6 letter, finding that HCHOA met the conditions to terminate the contract for cause on May 9, and that the contract terminated thirty days later under Section 4. The trial court found that SMG was entitled to collect management fees in June bepause the contract did not terminate until the middle of the month, but that SMG was not entitled to the fees it collected from HCHOA for July and August. Thus, the trial court awarded HCHOA $4,686.16, representing SMG’s fees collected in July and August minus $83.84 in expenses4 that benefitted HCHOA. The trial court also concluded that its ruling on the termination of the contract effectively defeated SMG’s counterclaim.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
500 S.W.3d 910, 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 1004, 2016 WL 5903120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/homefield-commons-homeowners-assn-v-roy-h-smith-real-estate-co-moctapp-2016.