Meredith & Grew, Inc. v. Worcester Lincoln, LLC

831 N.E.2d 940, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 142, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 725
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJuly 28, 2005
DocketNo. 04-P-83
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 831 N.E.2d 940 (Meredith & Grew, Inc. v. Worcester Lincoln, LLC) 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
Meredith & Grew, Inc. v. Worcester Lincoln, LLC, 831 N.E.2d 940, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 142, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 725 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Duffly, J.

We decide in this appeal whether a licensed real estate broker providing commercial mortgage brokering services [143]*143to a client is a “licensed real estate broker . . . acting in [its] professional capacity” under the Statute of Frauds, G. L. c. 259, § 7, inserted by St. 1984, c. 321, and is therefore exempt from the requirement that an agreement for compensation in connection with such services be in writing. We conclude that the plaintiff real estate broker was acting in such a professional capacity and that the oral contract is not void.

Background. This action arises out of an oral brokerage contract between Meredith & Grew, Inc. (M&G), a national real estate service provider, and Sam Adams,2 acting as an agent of Lincoln Plaza Group, LLC (Lincoln Group),3 and, according to the plaintiff, as an agent of the defendants Plaza Properties, LLC (Plaza Properties), and Worcester Lincoln, LLC (Worcester).4 M&G sought payment by the defendants of a one percent commission in connection with financing in the amount of $38.5 million that M&G says it successfully solicited on behalf of the defendants as clients of M&G. When the defendants failed to pay the commission, M&G brought this action in Superior Court. The complaint (as amended) sets forth a claim of breach of contract (count one); an alternative theory of recovery, quantum meruit, in a separate count (two); a claim for an “account stated” (count three); and a count (four) alleging violation of c. 93A.

On cross motions, summary judgment was entered in favor of the defendants on all counts of M&G’s amended complaint. With respect to the breach of contract claim, the motion judge determined that M&G’s real estate broker was not acting in his “professional capacity” within the meaning of G. L. c. 259, § 7, and that, therefore, any agreement for compensation in connection with mortgage brokerage services was void because it was not in writing. M&G filed this appeal.

We agree with M&G that the motion judge’s interpretation of the phrase “licensed real estate broker . . . acting in their professional capacity,” was erroneous. In basing her decision on [144]*144this ground, the motion judge did not consider whether there were other disputed facts material to deciding the breach of contract claim. Because we decide that the contract is not void, and that the record reflects disputed facts material to resolution of the contract claim, the judgment must be vacated as to that claim and the matter remanded for further proceedings. We also vacate the judgment dismissing counts two and four; we affirm the judgment as to the remaining claim.

Summary of facts. As we have intimated, Adams’s role in the creation of the oral brokerage agreement may, on remand, figure significantly in the eventual resolution of this dispute. Adams apparently wore many hats, and it is far from clear on this record which hat or hats he was wearing when he communicated with M&G’s real estate brokers about the need for financing.

Lincoln Group and the defendants, Plaza Properties and Worcester, are all corporate entities related to one another through the Gould family trust and the Gould marital trust (the Gould trusts). Harriet Gould (Adams’s mother) and Robert Bogan are trustees of the Gould trusts.5 The trustees control, on behalf of the Gould trusts, at least twelve other companies in addition to these three.

The role of these companies is, in part, to hold title to commercial properties for the Gould trusts, with Plaza Properties supplying management services to the others. The commercial property that lies at the center of this dispute is a multi-tenanted shopping mall in the city of Worcester known as Lincoln Plaza. It is this forty-five acre property, for which financing was sought and eventually obtained, that is the subject of the brokerage agreement at issue.

The defendants Plaza Properties and Worcester are managed by Adams.6 Plaza Properties and Adams are responsible for the management of Lincoln Plaza on behalf of the Gould trusts. At one point, Adams was also the manager of Lincoln Group, a corporation formed to hold a master lease that governed Lincoln [145]*145Plaza at least until record title was transferred to Worcester in or about September, 1999.

Over the course of several years prior to 1999, M&G had on numerous occasions been engaged by the family members for the purpose of locating lenders willing to extend credit in connection with one or more of its entities. In July, 1999, Adams engaged M&G to find a lender who would be willing to loan funds in amounts sufficient to refinance existing debt secured by a mortgage on the Lincoln Plaza property, as well as to finance construction in connection with a major expansion of that mall. At the time, title to the Lincoln Plaza property was held by RFP-BCIA-WL Realty Trust (RFP-BCIA). Title had been transferred (along with that of several other Gould trust properties) to RFP-BCIA as part of a complex financing arrangement pursuant to which Lincoln Plaza was leased back to the Gould trusts, through Lincoln Group, with an option to repurchase upon repayment of the financing loan. The new loan that Adams had asked M&G to broker would have provided funds for the repurchase of Lincoln Plaza as well as for the mall expansion. Adams and the defendants knew from their prior dealings with M&G that it typically charged a contingent commission of one percent of the amount loaned.

M&G claims that Adams was acting as the common manager and agent of Lincoln Group and the defendants, Plaza Properties and Worcester, when he entered into an agreement for M&G’s services to find a lender that would loan funds for the Lincoln Plaza project. Thus, even if the original borrower was, as represented by Adams, to have been Lincoln Group, the internal decision made by Adams — to change which entity would be borrower and hold title to the property — would have had no impact on the agreement with M&G. The defendants take the position that M&G’s agreement was with Adams acting solely as agent for Lincoln Group,7 and that Lincoln Group, [146]*146Lincoln Properties, and Worcester are “separate and distinct legal and business entities and not part of a single enterprise.”

It is undisputed that M&G invested its efforts and used its contacts in the real estate industry to find a lender.8 Sometime around August, 1999, M&G succeeded in obtaining an offer of a loan commitment from Dime CRE, Inc. (Dime), that was responsive to the defendants’ needs. This offer, which identified Lincoln Group as the borrower, was conditioned on the fulfillment of certain financial requirements, including that leases would be entered into with certain identified “anchor” stores. It appears that the financial conditions could not be completed before the closing date specified in the loan commitment offer.

A month later, the defendants obtained what Dime referred to as a “bridge loan” to cover the refinancing and reacquisition portion of the project. At that time, Adams was involved in the decision that Worcester would be both the borrower on the loan as well as the entity that would reacquire title to Lincoln Plaza.

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Bluebook (online)
831 N.E.2d 940, 64 Mass. App. Ct. 142, 2005 Mass. App. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-grew-inc-v-worcester-lincoln-llc-massappct-2005.