Kennedy Associates, Inc. v. Fischer

667 P.2d 174, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 454
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1983
Docket6697, 6753
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 667 P.2d 174 (Kennedy Associates, Inc. v. Fischer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy Associates, Inc. v. Fischer, 667 P.2d 174, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 454 (Ala. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

This appeal arises from a real estate loan agreement entered into by Kennedy Associates, Inc. (Kennedy), and Richard and Teri Fischer (Fischer). In March 1980, Kennedy, an investment advisor representing several pension trusts, issued a commitment to participate as lead lender in a long-term $1.25 million loan to Fischer on commercial rental property in Anchorage. Shortly thereafter, Kennedy notified the joint lender, Alaska Mutual Savings Bank (AMB), that it had decided not to participate in the project. Fischer and AMB refused to accept the withdrawal and Fischer filed suit for breach of contract. The superior court concluded that Kennedy was liable to Fischer on a theory of anticipatory repudiation. This appeal followed. We conclude that the superior court erred in holding that Kennedy was in breach of contract and therefore reverse.

I.

Fischer is an Anchorage real estate investor and developer. His holdings include the Anchorage Fish and Game Building, the subject of the instant litigation. It was constructed in 1971-72 for occupancy by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. The original three-year lease has been extended several times and will expire July 31, 1985 unless Fish and Game exercises its renewal *177 option and extends the lease through July 31, 1990.

On September 13,1979, Fischer negotiated an amendment to the lease with Fish and Game which required him to construct an addition to the building. He obtained interim financing for the expansion from SeaFirst Mortgage Corporation and subsequently sought $1.5 million in long-term financing from AMB. He submitted a loan package to AMB comprised of a copy of the appraisal report on the property, which included sketches of the existing floor plan and preliminary plans and specifications for the addition, a financial statement, a copy of the leases on the building, and cash flow information.

AMB’s representative, Paul Baker, approached a Kennedy loan officer, John Parker, with a proposal that several of the pension trusts which Kennedy represented as an investment advisor participate in the loan to Fischer. Baker forwarded the Fischer loan package to Parker on or about February 27, 1980, stating in the cover letter that AMB would be limited to 10% participation in the loan. Exclusively on the basis of that information, Kennedy decided to issue a commitment to participate in the loan. The commitment letter sent to Baker on March 31,1980 stated that Kennedy was willing to contribute 90% of the funds needed for the $1.25 million loan. Interest on the 25-year loan was set at 13.125%, and the loan was to be secured by a first deed of trust on the building. Kennedy did not inspect the property prior to issuing the commitment. The letter explicitly stated that “[disbursement will be made on or before June 1, 1980,” and that “express conditions] precedent to the disbursement of the loan proceeds or any portion thereof” included

(i) Inspection by Participants. Representatives of Lead Lender and Participants shall be permitted to inspect the completed property and this commitment is subject to the inspection and approval by said representatives.

Parker testified that the purpose of the inspection clause was primarily to permit Kennedy to determine whether the building would provide adequate security for the long-term loan.

AMB and Fischer executed and returned the commitment to Parker on April 21, 1980. 1 The sole reservation Fischer and AMB expressed in the accompanying cover letter pertained to the role Mrs. Fischer would play in the transaction, as Fischer did not want his wife’s name on the loan.

Baker offered to accompany Parker on an immediate inspection of the premises. The inspection was conducted on May 6 or 8, 1980. Baker and Parker walked through the building together. Construction of the addition was completed sufficiently to permit the lenders to conduct a meaningful inspection. Parker subsequently contacted a general contractor and independent consultant, Wayne Cherrier, who inspected the building in early May, both alone and accompanied by Parker. In a written report, Cherrier gave the building a “poor” rating for a variety of reasons, including the difficulty of converting it for multi-tenant use and his conclusions that it was barely constructed up to code and had been poorly maintained.

As a result of Cherrier’s report and Parker’s personal inspection, Kennedy decided not to go forward with the loan to Fischer. Parker telephoned Baker on May 12,1980 to advise him of Kennedy’s decision. Parker informed Baker that the decision was based on the fact that the condition of the building was so poor that Kennedy’s officers were worried that the State would move out after its current lease expired, compromising the security for the loan.

*178 Fischer and AMB refused to accept Kennedy’s withdrawal and did not accept a check for the $12,500 commitment fee which Kennedy had returned to AMB. AMB and Fischer continued to make arrangements to satisfy the conditions set out in the commitment letter. Fischer’s attorney wrote to Baker on May 30,1980, stating that he had gathered the documents necessary to complete the closing and was ready to do so. He admitted at trial, however, that he had been “somewhat stretching the truth” in making such a statement.

The closing never took place and Fischer sought alternative sources of financing. Although he eventually liquidated other holdings to strengthen his financial position, he did not locate another long-term lender. Rather, he continued to pay “prime plus two,” or 17½%, the rate of interest on his interim loan.

Fischer filed suit for breach of contract alleging that Kennedy had wrongfully failed to honor its loan commitment. 2 The case was tried to the superior court, sitting without a jury. The court found that a contract was formed between AMB and Kennedy, whereby Fischer was to be a third-party beneficiary of a loan to be funded jointly by AMB and Kennedy; that the parties to the transaction contemplated that construction would be complete on or before June 1, 1980, the final date for closing of the loan, and that the inspection would take place on or about that date; that the inspection occurred substantially before the June 1 deadline; and that Kennedy terminated the commitment solély on the basis of the inspection. The court concluded that Kennedy’s withdrawal occurred several weeks before Fischer’s duty to perform matured and that the May 12 termination constituted an anticipatory repudiation of the loan commitment. Fischer was awarded damages and attorney’s fees. This appeal and cross-appeal followed.

II.

The central issue before us is the propriety of the superior court’s construction and application of paragraph 14(i) of the letter of commitment. As the court implicitly concluded, paragraph 14(i) stated a condition precedent to Kennedy’s obligation to fund the Fischer loan because it expressly provided that Kennedy’s obligation was “subject to” its approval of the building after it conducted an inspection. 3

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Bluebook (online)
667 P.2d 174, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-associates-inc-v-fischer-alaska-1983.