Manuel v. City of Jacksonville (In Re Blunt)

210 B.R. 626, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1142, 1997 WL 425782
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 28, 1997
DocketBankruptcy No. 92-3146-BKC-3P7, Adversary No. 94-293
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 210 B.R. 626 (Manuel v. City of Jacksonville (In Re Blunt)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manuel v. City of Jacksonville (In Re Blunt), 210 B.R. 626, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1142, 1997 WL 425782 (Fla. 1997).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

GEORGE L. PROCTOR, Bankruptcy Judge.

This proceeding came before the Court upon a complaint by the Chapter 7 Trustee seeking judgment for monetary damages based on breach of contract, detrimental reliance and violation of the automatic stay against the Defendants City of Jacksonville and A. James Agett. Trial was held on October 16, 1996, October 29, 1996, December 10,1996, December 12, 1996 and May 13, 1997.

On October 16, 1996, Plaintiff made an ore terms motion to dismiss Defendant A. James Agett. The Court granted the motion, and an order was entered on December 12, 1996 dismissing Defendant A. James Agett and Count IV of the Complaint. Upon the evidence presented, the Court enters the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of law on the remaining counts of the complaint:

*628 FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Izell Blunt and Raydeen Blunt (“Debtors”) operate Blunt & Blunt Enterprises. (Tr. 22). Debtors owned and managed various rental properties, including the following-located in Jacksonville, Florida: Society Court at 1780 Pearce Street; Grothe Gardens at 1402 through 1414 Grothe Street; and Mercedes Court at 1477 North Davis Street. (Tr. 22-23).

2. In 1988, Debtors applied to the City of Jacksonville Department of Housing and Urban Development Rental Rehabilitation Program for rehabilitation loans to renovate the Grothe Gardens, Mercedes Court, and Society Court complexes. (Tr. 24-26; Pl.’s Ex. F5). The Rental Rehabilitation Loan Program (“RRLP”) is funded through the Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development for the purpose of increasing the number of rental units available for low to moderate income tenants and rehabilitating existing housing structures within the private sector. (Pl.’s Ex. G 1). The City of Jacksonville, through Jacksonville Department of Housing and Urban Development (“JHUD”/“Defendant”), uses the federal grant to make deferred payment loans to owners who meet the program’s criteria. (Id.). The owners then use the loan to repair existing rental structures and bring them up to federal housing standards. (Id.). The owners must match JHUD’s loan portion through a private lender, and allow the JHUD to take a second mortgage on the property. (Id.). JHUD began in 1984. (Id.).

The Society Court Complex

3. Based on JHUD’s budgetary concerns, it advised Debtors it would renovate one complex at a time, and Debtors chose to begin with the Society Court complex. On September 8, 1989, Debtors and Defendant entered into a Construction Loan Agreement (“Loan Contract”), under which Defendant agreed to make a loan for improvements to the Society Court Apartments. (Def.’s Ex. 2). On the same day, Debtors also entered into a Rehabilitation Work Contract (“Rehab Contract”) with Harold D. Drake and the JADME company (“JADME”) as contractor to renovate the Society Court complex. (PL’s Ex. 33).

4. The Loan Contract provides that Defendant should disburse loan funds only if certain conditions were satisfied. (Def.’s Ex.2, at Art. 3, Ex.B). These conditions include:

(1) Proofs as to paid and unpaid construction bills for materialmen and subcontractors which show full payment of such bills then due and payable;
(2) Lien waivers for all work and materials as required by the title insurance company for the issuance of endorsement;
(3) Any inspection reports or architectural certificates with respect to the stage of completion of the improvements, and such other proof as Lender [Defendant] may reasonably require to establish that development or construction progress has been made in compliance with the plans and specifications.

(Id.).

5. Although the Rehab Contract was only between JADME and Debtors, it laid out very specific duties for Defendant. (PL’s Ex. 33). Article 9 of the Rehab Contract assigned the following duties to Defendant:

9.1 JHUD shall provide general administration of the Contract and shall assist the Owner by acting as the Owner representative during the construction period.
9.2 JHUD’s authorized representative shall make inspections of the work while it is in progress to determine if it is proceeding in accordance' with the contract documents.
9.3 JHUD shall have the authority to reject work which does not conform to the Contract documents, local codes or adopted program standards.

(Id.). Defendant also had very specific duties and rights pursuant to Articles 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 15, and 16 of the contract. (Id.). The Rehab Contract required that there should be a performance bond for construction in excess of $100,000 to comply with federal law. (Id.). The Debtors and JAD-ME were involved in construction in excess *629 of $100,000 and no construction bond was obtained. (Pl.’s Ex. Gl).

6. The first disbursement of funds to JADME was made on October 10, 1989 in the amount of $22,490, which represented eleven percent (11%) of project completion. (Def.’s Ex. 26). By February 1990, Defendant made four disbursements to JADME, which represented approximately forty-nine percent (49%) of project completion. (Id.).

7. In February 1990, the Society Court project began experiencing difficulties associated with the failure of JADME to perform satisfactorily as the contractor. (Pl.’s Ex. 35). On March 1, 1990, a First Change Order was approved, extending the Society Court rehabilitation project from February 25 through March 30, 1990. (Def.’s Ex. 26). On April 15, 1990, Mr. Maahs, the City’s representative, recommended a replacement of JADME’s project manager because the Society Court project was not being completed. (Tr. at 603-06, 615, 632-635; Def.’s Ex. 29). The project manager was replaced after April 15,1990, and the renovations continued. (Id.).

8. The Society Court renovations were not completed by the established date of March 30, 1990; however, on April 26, 1990, the eighth disbursement was made representing ninety-one percent (91%) of project completion. (Def.’s Ex. 26). The first eight disbursement were made after Defendant’s representative inspected of the Society Court renovations. (Id.). The cheeks were made payable to the Debtors and JADME. (Id.). The disbursement checks were delivered to Debtors, who endorsed them and subsequently delivered them to JADME. (Tr. at 245, 518-27; Def.’s Ex. 26).

9. On July 10, 1990, the Blunts certified completion of all fifty (50) Society Court apartment units, except apartment number 10.(Tr. 112-16,247-51,527-30; Def.’s Ex. 17).

10. On August 30,1990, JHUD and Debtors became aware that JADME had not paid the subcontractors and that the final disbursement still being held in the approximate amount of $31,000, would not be sufficient to pay all that was owed under the project. (Pl.’s Ex. 48). The proposed final disbursement to JADME was never made because JADME failed to produce a final release of liens. (Tr. 578-80).

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 B.R. 626, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 1142, 1997 WL 425782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manuel-v-city-of-jacksonville-in-re-blunt-flmb-1997.