Martinez v. United States

51 Fed. Cl. 1376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 2002
DocketNo. 01-5092
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Fed. Cl. 1376 (Martinez v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martinez v. United States, 51 Fed. Cl. 1376 (Fed. Cir. 2002).

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, Senior Circuit Judge.

This appeal challenges the Court of Federal Claims’ dismissal of counts of a complaint seeking damages for the alleged breach by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) of a contract [1378]*1378provision authorizing HUD to approve disbursement to the appellant of certain funds held in trust. The Court of Federal Claims took that action because it concluded there was no privity of contract between HUD and the appellant. We affirm.

I

A. The background facts, as found by the Court of Federal Claims and as further shown by the record, are undisputed.

Blue Ridge Development, Ltd. (“Blue Ridge”) was a Florida limited partnership that owned a tract of land in Florida. The appellant Martinez was formerly a general partner of Blue Ridge and is a trustee of that entity, which has been dissolved.

In order to develop the property by constructing moderate income apartments on it, Blue Ridge obtained a construction loan of $17,800,000 from Professional Mortgage Co. (“Professional Mortgage” or “Lender”) and hired Cipicorp Construction (“Cipicorp” or “Contractor”) as the general contractor. HUD guaranteed the loan and mortgage in a “commitment” that specified various terms and conditions, including compliance with HUD rent schedules.

Pursuant to HUD regulations, 24 C.F.R. § 221.542, in 1987 Cipicorp executed a “Completion Assurance Agreement” with both Blue Ridge and Professional Mortgage. Although the agreement was on a HUD form, HUD was not a party to it and did not sign it. The three parties to and signatories of the agreement were Cipicorp, Blue Ridge and Professional Mortgage.

As the Completion Assurance Agreement required, the Contractor deposited with the Lender an unconditional irrevocable letter of credit for $2,914,316, which constituted a “Completion Assurance Fund,”

to secure or indemnify the Owner or Lender ... for any expenses, loss, or damage suffered or sustained as the result of any default by the Contractor in the performance of the Construction Contract.... [S]aid Fund shall at all times be under the control of the lender.

The Completion Assurance Agreement required the Lender to

Maintain such Fund as a separate trust account to be disbursed in the following order:
(a) To the Contractor ... with prior written approval of the Commissioner [of HUD]....
(b) To the Owner such portion of the Fund as deemed necessary by the Commissioner to recover any overpayment to the Contractor.
(c) To the Contractor ... the balance of such fund so deposited....
(d) To the Lender the entire Fund or balance remaining therein in the event of a default by the Contractor... to be used by the Lender to indemnify it and the Owner ... for any loss, damage or expense whatsoever which they may suffer by reason of the Contractor’s failure to properly perform said Construction Contract. In any event, any and all disbursements from said Fund shall be made only upon the prior written approval of the Commissioner, or his/her authorized agent.

Finally, the Completion Assurance Agreement provided:

In the event of a default by the Contractor in any of its obligations under the Construction Contract, the entire Fund or balance remaining therein may, at the option of the Lender and the Commissioner, be paid to the Commissioner together with an assignment of all rights hereunder granted to the Lender and the Owner.

HUD and Blue Ridge entered into a Regulatory Agreement, which required [1379]*1379Blue Ridge “to only rent the finished property to certain income tenants in exchange for HUD’s insuring the loan.”

Following various asserted defaults in the Contractor’s performance of the contract, in January 1989 Blue Ridge requested HUD to release completion assurance funds of approximately $650,000 “for the repair of construction defects and to reimburse Blue Ridge for the overpayments made to the Contractor.” Three months later HUD “responded ... that it would not release any monies at that time but it would consider the request and make a decision at a later date.”

Also in January 1989 Blue Ridge missed a payment on the construction loan. The Lender requested HUD to disburse funds from the trust and accept an assignment of the mortgage. The Lender made that assignment in January 1989, in a document in which it “does hereby sell, transfer, assign, and set over unto [HUD] ... all right, title, and interest in and to the following documents: (1) Completion Letter of Credit No. 8-6145, issued by Professional Bancorp Mortgage Co., dated June 10, 1987, in the amount of Two Million Nine Hundred Fourteen Thousand Three Hundred Sixteen ($2,914,316.00) dollars .... ” In September 1990 HUD purchased the mortgaged property at a foreclosure sale.

B. Martinez then instituted the precursor to the present suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. After some skirmishing in that court (in which the court dismissed the complaint, and Martinez filed a second complaint that the district court then transferred to the Court of Federal Claims), Martinez filed the present complaint in the Court of Federal Claims. The amended complaint contained three counts — Counts I and II for “Breach of Contract” and Count III for “Unjust Enrichment.” Count I alleged in paragraph 10:

HUD had contractual control over all expenditures from the completion assurance fund at the time that Blue Ridge made its demand for disbursement and HUD owed Blue Ridge an implied contractual duty of good faith and fair dealing. HUD violated that duty and violated the Completion Assurance Agreement when it failed to authorize the release of funds from the completion assurance fund to reimburse Blue Ridge for overpayments made to Cipicorp and when HUD failed to authorize release of the funds to repair defects in the construction.

Count II alleged that, as the result of the Lender’s assignment to HUD of its interest in the Completion Assurance Agreement and the Fund,

HUD has stepped into the shoes of the Lender as the trustee of the Completion Assurance Fund. HUD currently holds these funds in a miscellaneous income trust account. HUD, as trustee, has a contractual duty to comply with the Completion Assurance Agreement provisions and those provisions require that as between the Lender and the Owner the trustee is required to first repay the Owner to recover any overpayments made to the Contractor, and thereafter to indemnify itself and Blue Ridge for any loss, damage or expense caused by the Contractor’s breach of its construction contract.
14. HUD breached its obligations by failing to pay Blue Ridge for the over-payments made to the Contractor.

Finally, the unjust enrichment count alleged that “HUD has been unjustly enriched at the expense of Blue Ridge because, among other things, HUD has been paid the entire $2,914,316.00 Completion Assurance Fund, a portion of which is owed to Blue Ridge for, among other [1380]*1380things, overpayment made to the Contractor.”

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Related

Martinez v. United States
48 Fed. Cl. 851 (Federal Claims, 2001)
Katz v. Cisneros
16 F.3d 1204 (Federal Circuit, 1994)
Cienega Gardens v. United States
194 F.3d 1231 (Federal Circuit, 1998)
Sherman Park Apartments v. United States
120 S. Ct. 62 (Supreme Court, 1999)
Sherman Park Apartments v. United States
528 U.S. 820 (Supreme Court, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Fed. Cl. 1376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-united-states-cafc-2002.