Mike Building & Contracting, Inc. v. Just Homes, LLC

27 Misc. 3d 833
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 Misc. 3d 833 (Mike Building & Contracting, Inc. v. Just Homes, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mike Building & Contracting, Inc. v. Just Homes, LLC, 27 Misc. 3d 833 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Carolyn E. Demarest, J.

Plaintiff Mike Building & Contracting, Inc. (plaintiff or Mike Building) moves, pursuant to CPLR 3212, for an order granting it partial summary judgment on its first cause of action against Just Homes, LLC (JH) for breach of contract, dismissal of JH’s first counterclaim for breach of contract, and for an award of attorney’s fees and costs. Defendants JH, Albert C. Tew, II, Garry Gutterman, William Berry, Sergio Condi, and James Berry (collectively defendants) move, pursuant to CPLR 3212, for an order granting them partial summary judgment dismissing the fifth cause of action of the complaint pleaded under article 3-A of the Lien Law for trust fund diversion and the sixth through tenth causes of action to pierce the corporate veil against the individual defendants who are the members of JH.

Facts and Procedural History

This is an action for breach of a construction contract entered into by plaintiff, a general construction contractor, and defendant LLC, which is a building developer owned by the individual defendant members. JH was formed as a limited liability company in February 2002 for the purpose of developing afford[836]*836able housing in New York City. In September 2000,1 JH applied to the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) to be designated a developer under the HomeWorks Homeownership Program (the HomeWorks program) — a program through which HPD conveys vacant city-owned buildings to developers at nominal cost for rehabilitation into multifamily dwellings. These construction projects are funded by loans from the Community Preservation Corporation (CPC), a private not-for-profit lending institution.

In March 2004, HPD awarded JH three real properties in Brooklyn, New York — 824 Friel Place, 455 18th Street, and 298 20th Street (the properties) — from the HomeWorks program. The instant action involves the property located at 298 20th Street (the subject property or premises).2-

According to the affidavit submitted by defendant Tew, as early as October 2004, JH began working with plaintiff and the architectural firm RCGA Architects (RCGA) concerning the rehabilitation of the properties. Architect Robert St. C. Gaskin, A.I.A., RCGA’s principal, became the architect of record on the properties.

On July 12, 2005, plaintiff entered into a contract with JH for the improvement of all three properties for the sum of $1,350,965 (the contract). Mr. Tew states that he executed the contract solely on behalf of JH, and not in any individual capacity, although plaintiff maintains that Mr. Tew executed the contract in his individual capacity because JH did not pass an appropriate resolution. However, Mr. Tew also executed the mortgage and loan agreement with CPC and the land disposition agreement with the City of New York, HPD, as JH’s member. This court rejects plaintiffs suggestion that a resolution of the entire membership of JH was necessary to authorize Tew’s acts since they were clearly performed within the context [837]*837of JH’s business purpose. The contract, which was drafted by CPC’s engineer, Ira D. Streitfeld, a licensed architect in the State of New York, lists only JH and plaintiff as contracting parties but many of the provisions of JH’s agreement with CPC are incorporated into plaintiff’s contract. The face of the contract bears the caveat: “In the event the Community Preservation Corp. (C.EC.) does not enter into a mortgage with the owner, this contract shall be null and void.”

On August 25, 2005, JH closed on the purchase of the properties from HPD, paying $1 for each. On that same date, JH closed on a building loan (the building loan) from CPC in the sum of $1,225,000. Under the building loan agreement with CPC, JH was obligated to provide $193,415 in borrower’s or owner’s equity (borrower’s equity) from its own funds towards the project’s construction contract price of $1,350,965.® Susan Foresta, assistant vice-president of CPC, testified at her deposition that CPC required borrowers to “have a minimum of 20 percent equity in [the] [p]roject” before it underwrote the building loan.3 4 According to Ms. Foresta, “[w]ithout the owner’s equity, the [p]roject could not have been completed.” The building loan agreement provides “[a]s a condition precedent to any advances of the Loan, the Borrower shall first have paid the Borrower’s Equity Requirement set forth in Exhibit B.” (Schedule I, section 2.) Exhibit B provides that the $193,415 in borrower’s equity would be funded within the first 10 building loan advances at the rate of $19,341.50 per advance. Ms. Foresta explained that borrower’s equity is not in CPC’s possession, but that the borrower, JH, was expected to fund its portion of the equity, in increments of $19,341.50, together with the funds advanced by CPC, in making payment to the contractor (Foresta deposition at 24-25, 92-93). Thus, the contractual provision anticipates that CPC would deduct $19,341.50 from each authorized advance, to be made up to plaintiff by JH.

[838]*838The operative facts are not significantly disputed.5 6Work commenced on the project in October 2006, and, on or about October 23, 2006, plaintiff submitted its first payment requisition to JH, certified by RCGA Architects, in the amount of $124,914, exclusive of retainage of $13,879.® The building loan agreement (schedule I, para 5 [a]) required CPC’s engineer, Ira Streitfeld, to approve each payment requisition, following inspection of the site, to ensure that the actual quantity of work on the properties was consistent with that claimed by plaintiff, as certified by the architect. This requirement was also incorporated into the contract with plaintiff (contract, at 16, 11 8).7 Only $111,497 out of the $124,914 requested was approved by CPC on the first requisition, purportedly because of deficiencies in the work found by CPC’s engineer. On or about November 27, 2006, CPC advanced to JH $82,939.95 for the first requisition and JH paid plaintiff $83,000. The discrepancy between the amount approved by CPC’s engineer and the amount advanced to JH from CPC under the building loan agreement was the result of CPC deducting $19,341.50 in owner’s equity, and then withholding 10% retainage of $9,215.50 ($111,497 - $19,341.50 - $9,215.50 [$92,155.50 x 10%] = $82,939.95).

On or about January 22, 2007, plaintiff submitted its second payment requisition, again approved by RCGA Architects, in the amount of $180,182.40, deducting retainage from the total claim. CPC’s engineer approved only $68,123 as the value of plaintiffs completed work at the project and, on or about January 29, 2007, CPC advanced to JH $43,903.35 for the second requisition. The next day, JH paid plaintiff $47,000. The discrepancy between the amount approved by CPC’s engineer and the amount advanced to JH from CPC was again the result of CPC deducting $19,341.50 in owner’s equity from the amount approved by CPC’s engineer and then withholding 10% retain-[839]*839age of $4,878.15 ($68,123 - $19,341.50 - $4,878.10 [$48,781.50 x 10%] = $43,903.35).

On or about March 12, 2007, plaintiff submitted its third payment requisition, as certified by the project’s architect, claiming payment due in the amount of $336,555.18.® CPC’s engineer only approved $26,194.50 of the third payment requisition as the value of plaintiffs work at the project.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Misc. 3d 833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mike-building-contracting-inc-v-just-homes-llc-nysupct-2010.