Hovnanian Land Investment Group, LLC v. Annapolis Towne Centre at Parole, LLC

25 A.3d 967, 421 Md. 94, 2011 Md. LEXIS 498
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 20, 2011
Docket71, September Term, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 25 A.3d 967 (Hovnanian Land Investment Group, LLC v. Annapolis Towne Centre at Parole, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hovnanian Land Investment Group, LLC v. Annapolis Towne Centre at Parole, LLC, 25 A.3d 967, 421 Md. 94, 2011 Md. LEXIS 498 (Md. 2011).

Opinion

ADKINS, J.

In this case, we must revisit contracts with “non-waiver” clauses and determine whether and how a party to such a *98 contract can waive its requirements and conditions. Respondent, the owner of a large, mixed-use development near Annapolis, Maryland, agreed to sell a portion of the property to Petitioner, a developer, for the construction of a residential tower. The contract required certain conditions to be met by Respondent prior to the closing, and also contained a clause saying that any waiver or modification of the contract had to be in writing. After two years of negotiation by the parties, Petitioner terminated the agreement and refused to go to closing, alleging that Respondent failed to meet a condition precedent regarding the establishment of a maintenance fee system for the development’s common areas.

Respondent filed a complaint in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, seeking a declaratory judgment that Petitioner breached the contract. Petitioner, in its answer, alleged that the Respondent failed to meet the condition precedent regarding common area maintenance funding, and that this breach relieved it of its obligation to purchase the land at closing. The trial court, in granting summary judgment, held that the Petitioner waived the condition precedent regarding common area maintenance funding, even though there was no written waiver as required by the contract’s non-waiver clause. The Court of Special Appeals affirmed. We granted certiorari, Hovnanian Land v. Annapolis Towne Centre, 415 Md. 337, 1 A.3d 467 (2010), to answer the following questions, rephrased for brevity and clarity: 1

1) Can waiver of a contract right be inferred from a party’s conduct where the contract contains an express “non-waiver” provision requiring any waiver to be in writing?
*99 2) Did the Circuit Court err in finding that Petitioner waived the condition precedent in this case, when there was no signed waiver?
3) Did the seller strictly fulfill a condition precedent requiring it to “provide annual assessments against the office and retail portions of the Development” when it recorded a declaration that the seller will enter into separate, unrecorded contracts with “some of all Parcel Owners”?

We shall hold that a condition precedent may be waived by a party’s conduct, despite a non-waiver clause. Whether Hovnanian’s actions amounted to a waiver, however, was a dispute of material fact that could not be resolved on summary judgment. The question of whether Respondent strictly fulfilled the condition set forth in question (3) also involved material questions of fact, and so summary judgment was inappropriate. We shall therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

1. The Annapolis Towne Centre and The Purchase Agreement

Annapolis Towne Centre at Parole, LLC (“ATC”), the Respondent, is the owner and developer of a 33-acre, mixed-use development known as the Annapolis Towne Center at Parole (the “Development”). As contemplated by ATC, the entire project would be declared a land condominium pursuant to the Maryland Condominium Act. See Maryland Code, (1974, 2003 *100 Repl.Vol.), § 11-101, et seq. of the Real Property Article. The “units” of ATC’s land condominium were a mixture of office, retail, and residential parcels. 2 The Development also had one additional and unusual feature—the Declaration and plat showed a nominal common element of only one square foot. Areas that would typically be included in a common area were instead designated as the “Common Facilities Parcel.” 3 ATC retained ownership of the Common Facilities Parcel even after the other parcels were sold, and planned to pay for its upkeep by collecting annual common area maintenance (“CAM”) fees from each of the parcel owners.

This case deals with “Parcel 14” and “Parcel 15,” residential parcels at the western end of the development, abutting Riva Road. As with the other residential parcels, ATC sought a residential developer to purchase these parcels and construct residential towers and parking garages. Petitioner Hovnanian Land Investment Group, LLC (“Hovnanian”), 4 a residential developer who, on March 3, 2005, entered into a Purchase and Development Agreement (the “Purchase Agreement”) with HTC for Parcels 14 and 15. Under the Purchase Agreement, Hovnanian was to construct three residential towers on the properties, containing 550 residential units, each with a minimum of 1,300 net useable square feet.

Section 14 of the Purchase Agreement, titled “Seller’s Undertakings,” required ATC to meet certain obligations prior to the closing. Relevant here, Section 14(d) addressed the funding of common area maintenance (“CAM”):

*101 ... [ATC] shall be solely responsible for ... recording a declaration (the “Declaration”) for the maintenance of the common areas of the Development[ 5 ]....The Declaration ... shall provide annual assessments against the office and retail portions of the Development for the purpose of providing funds for the maintenance of the office and retail buildings and associated common areas.... The Declaration ... shall also provide that each owner of a condominium unit shall pay an annual fee of [$1,200], which annual fee shall increase at the rate of three percent (3%) per annum to be calculated on a per diem basis.

(Emphasis added). 6 The Purchase Agreement thus required ATC to establish predetermined CAM fees for Hovnanian’s parcel, and provide CAM funding for the other parcels.

The Purchase Agreement stated that Hovnanian’s obligation to go to closing “shall be conditioned upon completion” of the conditions precedent, and gave Hovnanian certain remedies in case ATC failed to meet them:

If [ATC] is unable or unwilling to complete or fulfill its obligations as set forth ... for the parcels to be closed upon, [Hovnanian] may at its option (i) close on said parcels to be closed upon notwithstanding [ATC’s] failure but without waiving [ATC’s] obligations to perform hereunder, or (ii) delay the applicable Closing until after [ATC] has satisfied its obligations, or (iii) terminate this Agreement and have its Deposit returned!.]

The Purchase Agreement also contained a non-waiver clause:

No change or modification of this Agreement shall be valid unless the same is in writing and signed by Purchaser *102 and Seller. No purported or alleged waiver of any of the provisions of this Agreement shall be binding or effective unless in writing and signed by the party against whom it is sought to be enforced.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
25 A.3d 967, 421 Md. 94, 2011 Md. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hovnanian-land-investment-group-llc-v-annapolis-towne-centre-at-parole-md-2011.