K & K Development, Inc. v. Andrews

CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 2023
DocketAC 22-P-851
StatusPublished

This text of K & K Development, Inc. v. Andrews (K & K Development, Inc. v. Andrews) 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
K & K Development, Inc. v. Andrews, (Mass. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1 Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557- 1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us

22-P-851 Appeals Court

K & K DEVELOPMENT, INC. vs. ZACHARY ANDREWS, individually and as trustee.1

No. 22-P-851.

Essex. May 10, 2023. - September 15, 2023.

Present: Meade, Blake, & Brennan, JJ.

Rules of the Superior Court. Practice, Civil, Findings by judge. Agency, Scope of authority or employment. Real Property, Sale, Purchase and sale agreement, Specific performance. Contract, Sale of real estate, What constitutes, Offer and acceptance, Performance and breach, Specific performance, Damages. Frauds, Statute of. Electronic Mail. Damages, Loss of profits.

Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on January 19, 2018.

The case was heard by James F. Lang, J.

Gordon N. Schultz for the defendant. Paul Alan Rufo (Vincent N. DePalo also present) for the plaintiff.

BLAKE, J. The plaintiff, K & K Development, Inc. (K&K or

buyer), brought this action against the defendant Zachary

1 Of ZEA 1 Realty Trust. 2

Andrews, individually and as trustee of ZEA 1 Realty Trust (ZEA1

or seller), alleging that ZEA1 committed a breach of its

agreement to sell two mixed-use rental properties to K&K. After

a bench trial in the Superior Court, conducted pursuant to

Rule 20 of the Rules of the Superior Court (2018) (rule 20), the

judge answered special questions on the elements of each claim.

He concluded that a valid agreement existed between the parties,

ZEA1 committed a breach of that agreement, and, as a result, K&K

was entitled to specific performance and monetary damages based

on lost profits.

On appeal, ZEA1 challenges the sufficiency of the evidence

demonstrating the existence of a binding contract and a breach

thereof, K&K's entitlement to both specific performance and

damages, and the denial of ZEA1's motion in limine to exclude

evidence of a deposit made by K&K to bind the purported

agreement. We affirm in all respects except for one minor

adjustment to the damages calculation.

Background. "We recite the facts that the judge could have

found, . . . reserving some for later discussion." Spinosa v.

Tufts, 98 Mass. App. Ct. 1, 3 (2020). Because the judge's

answers to the special questions turn in large part on the

communications between the parties, our review requires us to

set forth the facts in some detail, all of which are drawn from

the trial record. See Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers of N.Y., 3

Inc. v. Board of Appeal of Billerica, 454 Mass. 374, 375 & n.3

(2009).

1. The properties. Brothers Zachary and Eugene Andrews

own and manage several commercial and residential properties.2

In 1999, they purchased two adjoining buildings located on Union

and Chestnut Streets in Lynn as investment properties

(properties). In 2001, they transferred the titles to the

properties to ZEA1, a realty trust of which Zachary is the

trustee and Zachary and Eugene each are fifty percent

beneficiaries.

The properties consist of eight commercial units on the

ground level and twelve residential units on the second and

third floors. In 2015, a fire resulted in significant damage to

one of the buildings causing it to close (damaged building).

Shortly thereafter, the brothers listed the properties for sale,

with Eugene acting as the licensed broker for the listing.

Because they did not receive any offers within their desired

price range, the brothers decided to demolish the interior and

renovate the damaged building before relisting the properties

for sale.

2. K&K's offers to purchase. K&K is a corporation that

acquires and develops real estate. Boris Kuritnik, K&K's

2 Because the Andrews brothers share a last name, we refer to them hereafter by their first names. 4

treasurer, secretary, and director, works with Hakim Sadler, a

licensed real estate salesperson, to identify real estate

opportunities, and to acquire and sell properties.

Sadler came across the original listing for the properties

and brought it to Kuritnik's attention in 2016. From March 2017

to November 2017, K&K made five unsuccessful offers to purchase

the properties.3 During that time, Sadler and Eugene

communicated about the properties, including the status of the

certificates of occupancy for the damaged building in order for

the premises to be leased.

After the fifth unsuccessful offer, Kuritnik and Sadler

completed a walk-through of the properties.4 On November 2,

2017, Kuritnik, on behalf of K&K, executed a new offer to

purchase (November 2 offer). The November 2 offer included a

purchase price of $2.683 million with a $5,000 deposit to bind

the offer and an additional $95,000 deposit to be paid on the

execution of the purchase and sale agreement (P&S).5 Like the

earlier offers, the November 2 offer was submitted on a

3 The unsuccessful offers included three in March 2017, when the damaged building still required major work, and two in October and November 2017 as that work neared completion.

4 Kuritnik and Sadler previously conducted a walk-through of the properties in March 2017.

5 The deposit was nonrefundable on K&K's receipt of clear title. 5

preprinted form issued by the Greater Boston Real Estate Board

(GBREB) that included a "[t]ime is of the essence" provision,

stated that the offer was "a legal document that creates binding

obligations," and advised the parties to consult an attorney if

they needed further advice. K&K also incorporated in the offer

and affixed to it a contingency page signed by Kuritnik with six

additional terms, including, as relevant here, that the "Buyer

[is] granted the right to market and negotiate all new tenancy

upon acceptance" (original rental provision). Kuritnik included

the original rental provision based on his understanding at the

time that the building unaffected by the fire was occupied, and

the damaged (now renovated) building would be vacant when sold.

ZEA1 asked some follow-up questions about the November 2

offer but did not accept it by the deadline of November 29,

2017. However, Sadler and Eugene continued to communicate

throughout November about the potential sale. At Eugene's

request, Eugene and Sadler spoke by telephone on November 29

about the framework for the sale and ZEA1's concerns about the

November 2 offer. Later that day, Eugene returned the November

2 offer to Sadler with revisions (November 29 counteroffer). On

the offer form, Zachary changed the expiration date of the offer

to noon on November 29, 2017, the date to execute the P&S to

December 15, 2017, and the date to close to February 18, 2018.

On the addendum, Zachary crossed out the original rental 6

provision, and he added in a new provision that the "Seller will

rent and collect income from units until closing." Zachary

initialed his changes to the dates and signed both the form and

the addendum. Eugene signed in the section indicating receipt

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K & K Development, Inc. v. Andrews, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/k-k-development-inc-v-andrews-massappct-2023.