Nantasket Beachfront Condominiums, LLC v. Hull Redevelopment Authority

32 N.E.3d 318, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 455
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 5, 2015
DocketAC 14-P-222
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 N.E.3d 318 (Nantasket Beachfront Condominiums, LLC v. Hull Redevelopment Authority) 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
Nantasket Beachfront Condominiums, LLC v. Hull Redevelopment Authority, 32 N.E.3d 318, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 455 (Mass. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Milkey, J.

In 2004, plaintiff Nantasket Beachfront Condominiums, LLC (Nantasket), and defendant Hull Redevelopment Authority (authority) entered into a contract for the purchase and development of certain land in Hull. Under that “Land Disposition Agreement” (LDA), Nantasket was to purchase the land, construct seventy-two units of housing, and develop a new public park. Subsequently, the proposed project encountered robust neighborhood opposition, and this in turn led to significant delays in the anticipated closing. Eventually, the authority terminated the LDA and notified Nantasket that it was retaining as liquidated damages $857,500 in deposits that Nantasket had made. This action ensued.

In a comprehensive and thoughtful decision, a Superior Court judge ruled in the authority’s favor on summary judgment. He concluded that Nantasket indisputably stood in breach of the LDA, and that the authority was within its rights to terminate the agreement and to retain the deposits. On Nantasket’s appeal, we affirm, albeit on somewhat different grounds.

Background. 1 1. The parties execute the LDA. In order to spur the development of twelve acres of land that it owned, the authority *457 in October of 2003 issued a detailed “Request for Proposals” (RFP). According to the RFP, the property “provides the transition between the [State-owned] . . . Nantasket Beach Reservation and a major residential area of the Town of Hull along Nantasket Avenue.” The RFP set forth a preferred development scenario in which approximately three-quarters of the land would be developed into “primarily passive public open space,” with the rest (approximately three acres) developed as “residential dwelling units, or other uses, as may be acceptable to the [authority].” In a section entitled “Site Constraints and Issues,” the RFP discussed the applicability of various environmental and land use requirements.

Only two developers submitted proposals. One was from Nantasket’s parent company, which emphasized that, based on its thirty years of experience in developing residential and commercial projects, it was “well versed in overcoming a multitude of tough regulatory issues and environmental concerns.” On July 9, 2004, Nantasket and the authority executed the LDA, which spelled out their respective rights and obligations in thirty-three single-spaced pages (not including voluminous attachments).

Under the LDA, Nantasket would purchase the land for $3.5 million (subject to various potential adjustments). Nantasket would then build seventy-two units of housing, develop the open space, and eventually return the park land to public ownership and control. Nantasket’s specific development plans were subject to its completing the authority’s design review process and obtaining •— at its expense — all necessary permits and other approvals (collectively termed “Approvals”) from other State and local agencies. The closing date was set for thirty days after Nantasket obtained the Approvals, but not later than July 9, 2006 (termed the “Outside Closing Date”). Thus, as originally executed, the LDA contemplated that all necessary permitting and the closing would be completed within two years.

2. Deposits. Nantasket paid a $97,000 deposit to the authority at the execution of the LDA, in addition to a $25,500 deposit it had previously paid. An additional deposit of $122,500 was due on August 17, 2004, bringing the total deposit due by that point to $245,000. Until the closing actually took place, additional deposit payments of $122,500 each would be due at the six month *458 anniversary of the date of the LDA and the one year anniversary, and then “Extension Deposits” of $122,500 each would be due every three months after that. The LDA stated that if Nantasket missed any deposit payment, this “shall constitute a default.”

3. Termination rights. The LDA gave each party the right to terminate the agreement in certain situations. In the event that Nantasket defaulted on its obligations and did not achieve a cure of that default within thirty days of receiving written notice from the authority, the authority could terminate the LDA and retain all deposits paid. 2 For its part, Nantasket could terminate the LDA and secure a return of its deposits in three different types of scenarios. First, Nantasket was given until August 4, 2004, to inspect the property, and until August 16, 2004, to inspect the title. If such inspections revealed a defect in either, then it could terminate the LDA within those respective deadlines. Second, Nantasket could terminate the LDA in the event that a local permitting agency prevented the project from going forward as planned and adjustments to the project or purchase price could not be agreed upon to accommodate the potential loss in value (this scenario was termed a “Local Permit Problem”). Third, if a third party challenged the issuance of one or more of the approvals that the project needed, Nantasket could terminate the LDA in lieu of defending the action.

4. Project delays. Almost immediately, the project sparked significant opposition from local residents. In 2004, Jacqueline Chase, a direct abutter, cofounded a group to try to stop it. At Chase’s suggestion, the group called itself “No Way HRA!” The project opponents used every opportunity to attempt to derail the project. Chase herself attended seventy local board meetings on the topic. After the Hull zoning board of appeal (ZBA) issued a special permit for the project on March 30, 2006, six project opponents filed an action in Superior Court appealing the special permit pursuant to G. L. c. 40A, § 17. The lead plaintiffs in that action (zoning appeal) were Chase and Phyllis Aucoin, another leading member of No Way HRA!

5. First amendment to the LDA. Nantasket did not use the filing of the zoning appeal as an occasion to terminate the LDA but, instead, elected to defend it. However, with it becoming increasingly obvious that Nantasket could not obtain all approvals by *459 July 9, 2006 (the original Outside Closing Date), Nantasketrequested and secured an amendment to the LDA. This amendment, dated May 10, 2006, set a new closing date of forty days after Nantasket received all approvals, but in no event later than the earlier of (1) ninety days after the “Appeals Termination Date” (set as the date that the zoning appeal and any other appeals of project approvals eventually were resolved in Nantasket’s favor), 3 or (2) July 9, 2012 (the amended Outside Closing Date). 4 The parties also agreed that after Nantasket paid the additional Extension Deposits due on July 9, 2006, and October 9, 2006 (bringing the total deposits held by the authority to $857,500), further Extension Deposits would be waived until the Appeals Termination Date. 5

6. Chase and Aucoin join the authority’s board. In 2007, Chase and Aucoin ran for, and were elected to, the authority’s board. Even after that, they continued their active opposition to the project in their personal capacity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 N.E.3d 318, 87 Mass. App. Ct. 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nantasket-beachfront-condominiums-llc-v-hull-redevelopment-authority-massappct-2015.