Jsm Tuscany, LLC v. Superior Court

193 Cal. App. 4th 1222, 123 Cal. Rptr. 3d 429, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 366
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 2011
DocketNo. B227360
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 193 Cal. App. 4th 1222 (Jsm Tuscany, LLC v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jsm Tuscany, LLC v. Superior Court, 193 Cal. App. 4th 1222, 123 Cal. Rptr. 3d 429, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 366 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion

CROSKEY, Acting P. J.

In these writ proceedings, we consider the trial court’s denial, without prejudice, of petitioners’1 motion to compel arbitration [1226]*1226pursuant to the provisions of three separate, but substantially identical, real estate purchase contracts. Petitioners are 12 of the 27 defendants named in the first amended complaint (the operative pleading before us) filed by the four plaintiffs, N. Neil Shekhter; NMS Properties, Inc.; 15394 NM, LLC; and NMS/JSM San Lorenzo, LLC.2

Plaintiffs’ complaint, although pleading some 16 causes of action, essentially seeks recovery of damages and other relief from the several defendants for their breach of the three real estate sales contracts (hereinafter, PSA’s) and the failure of some of the defendants to meet the requirements of three related deed restriction (Deed Restriction) agreements that those defendants had entered into with the City of Santa Monica, and as to one of which two of the plaintiffs, 15394 NM or NMS/JSM San Lorenzo, claim to be third party beneficiaries.

The three PSA’s each contained a broad arbitration clause which petitioners moved to enforce. The trial court denied the motion to compel arbitration on the grounds that not all of the plaintiffs and only a small number of the defendants were actually signatories to the PSA’s. In addition, the Deed Restriction agreements entered into by several of the defendants and the City of Santa Monica contained no arbitration clause, and the trial court concluded that those agreements were not dependent on or intertwined with the PSA’s, thus giving rise to nonarbitrable disputes.

After reviewing the record in this factually complex matter, we conclude that the trial court did not have before it sufficient information to determine whether plaintiffs should be compelled to arbitrate and therefore properly denied the motion to compel without prejudice. We will therefore deny the petition and remand the matter with directions.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND3

Preliminarily, we note that while, in broad outlines, this case appears to be a dispute between Jones and Jones-related entities on one side and Shekhter and Shekhter-related entities on the other, this is not necessarily the case. The [1227]*1227Jones-related entities generally include “JSM” in their names, while the Shekhter-related entities begin with “NMS.” One of the plaintiffs, however, is named NMS/JSM San Lorenzo, a name which suggests that, perhaps, at one point, Jones and Shekhter may have been in business together.4 In any event, it is apparent that the NMS/JSM San Lorenzo entity is now aligned with Shekhter and the other Shekhter-related plaintiffs.

JSM Construction, a Jones-related entity, was an active real estate developer in the City of Santa Monica (the City). In or about 2004 and 2005, JSM Construction was granted administrative approval to develop four mixed-use buildings,5 each to include dozens of residential rental units. The properties were to be located at 626 Broadway, 1548 6th Street, 1418 7th Street, and 1539 4th Street in the City. The City’s administrative approvals were subject to certain conditions, one of which related to the provision of affordable housing units. JSM Construction could satisfy these conditions by paying an in-lieu fee, dedicating onsite affordable housing units in each of the projects, constructing offsite affordable housing units, or acquiring land for affordable housing. As we shall soon discuss, JSM Construction chose to satisfy this obligation by means of the construction of offsite affordable housing units.

At approximately the same time, Jones contracted to sell to Shekhter, for $4 million, a “deed restricted” affordable housing apartment building in the City. The contract was originally dated November 11, 2004, and pertained to the sale of “1244 [6th] Street, or, in the sole discretion of Seller, such other property reasonably comparable in size and location developed by Seller [with a deed restricted affordable housing apartment building].” On or about September 15, 2005, the agreement was amended to designate the property to be sold as the property located at 711 Colorado Avenue. Pursuant to the 711 Colorado PSA, Shekhter paid a $500,000 deposit toward the total purchase price of $4 million. The PSA provided that Jones was to develop and construct a low-income deed restricted apartment building on the 711 Colorado property, [1228]*1228and that escrow would close on the sale to Shekhter within 60 days after the City issued a certificate of occupancy for the project.

JSM Construction then agreed with the City that it would satisfy its affordable housing requirements with respect to the properties at 626 Broadway, 1548 6th Street, 1418 7th Street, and 1539 4th Street, by constructing the necessary amount of affordable housing units at 711 Colorado. Pursuant to the City’s requirements, a deed restriction was to be recorded on the property to insure that the offsite affordable housing units would be maintained for 55 years.

JSM Construction’s agreement with the City was memorialized in a Deed Restriction agreement dated April 2, 2007.6 Pursuant to the Deed Restriction agreement, JSM Construction and JSM Modena, the Jones-related entity which, by this time, owned 711 Colorado, agreed to “provide and maintain” 26 affordable housing units on the 711 Colorado property. However, the Deed Restriction agreement did not set forth any particular schedule for performance; it did not indicate when (if ever) the affordable housing units would be built. Instead, the Deed Restriction agreement provided that it ran with the property, and would “apply to and bind the heirs, successors and assigns of all the parties hereto and shall run with and burden the 711 Colorado Property for the benefit of the City, the public, and surrounding landowners .... [JSM Modena] shall expressly make the conditions and covenants contained in this Agreement a part of any deed or other instrument conveying any interest in the property.”

By this Deed Restriction agreement, JSM Construction was permitted to develop the four properties at 626 Broadway, 1548 6th Street, 1418 7th Street, and 1539 4th Street as market-rate rental apartment buildings, as the City’s requirements relating to affordable housing were to be satisfied by the affordable housing to be constructed on JSM Modena’s property at 711 Colorado. For this reason, we refer to the four properties as the Modenabenefitted properties, and 711 Colorado as the Modena affordable housing property. Two of the Modena-benefitted properties, 1548 6th Street and 1539 4th Street, are now owned by two (Shekhter-related) plaintiffs in this case, NMS/JSM San Lorenzo and 15394 NM, respectively. The remaining two Modena-benefitted properties are owned by Jones-related entities (JSM [1229]*1229Lugano and JSM Genoa).7 The record does not indicate how or when the Shekhter-related plaintiffs became owners of two of the Modena-benefitted properties.8

The affordable housing project was never constructed on the 711 Colorado property; the parties eventually agreed that the cost of construction would exceed the $4 million original purchase price. On May 18, 2009, the parties entered into an amendment and assignment of the PSA.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 Cal. App. 4th 1222, 123 Cal. Rptr. 3d 429, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jsm-tuscany-llc-v-superior-court-calctapp-2011.