Memorial Hospital of Laramie County v. Healthcare Realty Trust Inc.

509 F.3d 1225, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 27454, 2007 WL 4181772
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedNovember 28, 2007
Docket06-8051
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 509 F.3d 1225 (Memorial Hospital of Laramie County v. Healthcare Realty Trust Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Memorial Hospital of Laramie County v. Healthcare Realty Trust Inc., 509 F.3d 1225, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 27454, 2007 WL 4181772 (10th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.

This case concerns several contract and tort claims arising out of the planning, construction, and operation of a medical office building in Cheyenne, Wyoming. That project turned out to be a financial disaster for the plaintiff, Memorial Hospital of Laramie County, which has sued its consultant and de facto landlord, Healthcare Realty. The district court dismissed all of Memorial Hospital’s claims on summary judgment. Because we find that there are disputed issues of fact material to two of these claims — for tortious misrepresentation and contractual bad faith— we reverse the district court’s decision in part and affirm in part.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Parties ’ Dealings

In the late 1990s, Memorial Hospital of Laramie County (d/b/a United Medical Center) began planning the construction of a new medical office building on its campus in Cheyenne, Wyoming. In 1997, Memorial Hospital retained a consultant — Healthcare Realty Management, Inc. (“HRM”), a wholly owned subsidiary of Healthcare Realty Trust, Inc. (“HRT”). (We will call them both Healthcare Realty, for simplicity’s sake.) Healthcare Realty had expertise in building and managing medical office buildings, and the Hospital asked the company to assess the market for such a building and the feasibility of constructing and managing it.

In 1998, Healthcare Realty provided Memorial Hospital with a “Feasibility Study and Funding Analysis,” which concluded that market demand was sufficient for a 42,480-square-foot building and advised that the building should be less than 140,000 square feet. The study specifically warned that a large facility might be unprofitable because it would be hard to rent that much space. The report also presented five funding and ownership options for the building. The first four were each accompanied by an analysis of advantages and disadvantages. The fifth — styled “HRM Ownership Under a Property Operating Agreement” — was billed as a “response to the unfavorable accounting and the negative operational results associated with” the other options and listed no disadvantages. Id. at 80.

Under the suggested operating agreement, the Hospital would control tenancy and operational decisions but Healthcare Realty would finance the construction and hold title to the building, allowing the Hospital to benefit from “favorable off-credit accounting treatment.” Id. Each month, the Hospital would pay “the deficiency, if any, between the net operational cash flow of the facility and HRM’s pre-determined yield requirement on its equity investment in the facility.” Id. at 80. In other words, Healthcare Realty would own the building, but Memorial Hospital would assume most of the associated financial risks.

In response to Healthcare Realty’s warnings about facility size, the Hospital *1228 explained in a letter that it “purposely oversized the structure to allow for expansion” and believed a larger facility “eventually will be fully occupied.” App. 357. The Hospital therefore retained Healthcare Realty to perform further modeling on a larger building. Healthcare Realty agreed to “create, prepare, and refíne a series of ownership models and ownership scenarios for a proposed 170,000 gross square foot” facility. Id. at 363. A Memorial Hospital executive sent a letter to Healthcare Realty, saying that the Hospital “desires HRT’s participation in the project in some form, regardless of ownership.” Id. at 370. The letter acknowledged that because of Healthcare Realty’s concerns about the size of the building, any agreement to build a large building would require Memorial Hospital to provide long-term financial guarantees.

On April 8, 1999, the parties executed a letter of intent, stating that they would enter into an operating agreement similar to the one detailed in the feasibility study, for a building “currently estimated at 122,-850 (rentable) square feet” at a cost of approximately $16.2 million. Id. at 377. Over the course of the next several months, Healthcare Realty provided the Hospital with analyses of the financial outlook for a building with 142,000 gross (137,196 rentable) square feet. These materials were styled as an “Assessment of the Property Operating Agreement” (“APOA”) and an “Assessment of Building Vacancy” (“ABV”). App. 510, 513. The ABV calculated what the Hospital’s surplus or shortfall would be over the first five years of operation given different levels of occupancy. The APOA is a single page document that explains the basic structure of the Operating Agreement and provides two examples of Memorial Hospital’s financial obligations, showing a surplus for the Hospital in the sixth year if the building were 95% occupied.

On November 4, 1999, the Hospital and Healthcare Realty entered a Property Operating Agreement (“POA”). Healthcare Realty agreed to build and own a 142,913-gross-square-foot medical building on the Hospital’s campus. The Hospital retained certain approval and management rights and agreed to pay a monthly “Operations Payment.” This payment was an “Operations Base” of $137,302 per month plus inflation and capital additions, minus any net revenues from the building. Id. at 111. The agreement also gave the Hospital an option to purchase the facility after twenty years. Exhibits, including two budgets relevant to this litigation, were also attached.

Over the ensuing months, several developments affected the financial health of the project. First, Memorial Hospital initiated several revisions to the construction plan that required the outlay of unbudget-ed money by Healthcare Realty. Second, building space did not lease quickly. Third, it became apparent that the building’s actual costs would be substantially higher than Healthcare Realty’s original budgets had indicated.

In light of these developments, the parties executed three amendments to the POA. First, on February 1, 2001, Healthcare Realty agreed to purchase medical office space occupied by one medical provider elsewhere in Cheyenne to induce it to lease space in the new building. Second, on August 29, 2001, the parties agreed to push the commencement date of the agreement back from November 4, 1999, to April 1, 2001. Third, effective July 1, 2002, Healthcare Realty agreed to exclude some tenant improvement costs from its calculation of the Hospital’s “Operations Base” and to postpone the date upon which the Hospital became responsible for “Operations Payments.” In the third Amendment, the parties also includ *1229 ed a ratification clause that represented that neither party was in default under the POA.

As of November, 2005, the medical office building was 88% occupied and the Hospital’s yearly shortfall under the Operating Agreement — that is, the amount it owed Healthcare Realty — was $967,759, or nearly ten times the figure projected in the ABV.

B. This Litigation

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Bluebook (online)
509 F.3d 1225, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 27454, 2007 WL 4181772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memorial-hospital-of-laramie-county-v-healthcare-realty-trust-inc-ca10-2007.