Residential Warranty Corp. v. Bancroft Homes Greenspring Valley, Inc.

728 A.2d 783, 126 Md. App. 294
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 30, 1999
Docket1221, Sept. Term, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 728 A.2d 783 (Residential Warranty Corp. v. Bancroft Homes Greenspring Valley, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Residential Warranty Corp. v. Bancroft Homes Greenspring Valley, Inc., 728 A.2d 783, 126 Md. App. 294 (Md. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge.

In 1995, the Council of Unit Owners of the Club at McDo-nogh Township (the Council) sued ten defendants, including appellant Residential Warranty Corporation, Incorporated and appellees, Bancroft Homes of Greenspring Valley, Incorporated (BHGV), and James Rubenstein and Terry Meyerhoff Rubenstein (the Rubensteins). The Council filed a fifty-two-count amended complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County alleging that, among others, appellees were responsible for a variety of design and construction defects created during and after the construction of the Council’s condominium units. The amended complaint also claimed that appellant was similarly liable, pursuant to residential warranties it issued on individual condominium units. On October 2, 1996, *298 appellant filed an amended cross-claim 1 against the parties who developed and built the property at issue, appellees and Bancroft Homes, Incorporated (BHI), for fraudulent conveyance, concealment, and indemnification based on a breach of contract. 2

Between October 15,1996 and February 24,1997, the circuit court (Byrnes, J.) held hearings on various motions and disposed of forty-five of the Council’s counts, leaving seven counts for trial. 3 In addition, the court issued an order on February 27, 1997, severing appellant’s cross-claims for indemnity from the Council’s suit. The following day, the parties proposed on the record a $4,200,000 settlement, subject to final approval by the Council, in which $625,000 would be paid by appellant and $8,575,000 would be paid by the remaining defendants, appellees. After discussion of the settlement proposal, the Rubensteins made an oral motion for summary judgment with respect to the cross-claim filed against them personally by appellant. The court orally granted the Rubensteins’ motion that day, February 28, 1997. Shortly thereafter, the parties completed the settlement and the remaining counts of the Council’s amended complaint were dismissed.

Appellant, on March 7, 1997, filed a motion for the court to reconsider its grant of the Rubensteins’ motion for summary judgment. On the same date, appellant also filed a second amended cross-claim that clarified its previous claims, separately alleged a piercing the corporate veil claim, and added a claim under the Consumer Protection Act. In response, the Rubensteins filed a motion to strike appellant’s second amended cross-claim as untimely and prejudicial. The court held a *299 hearing on May 22, 1997, during which it denied appellant’s motion for reconsideration and granted BHGV’s motion for summary judgment with respect to appellant’s cross-claims and amended cross-claims. 4 Furthermore, the court granted appellees’ motion to strike the second amended cross-claim because the claim did not add any new counts except for that relating to the Consumer Protection Act, which the court determined was inapplicable.

On April 14, 1998, the court denied BHI’s motion for summary judgment, thereby allowing appellant to proceed with its indemnification claim against BHI. The court also entered final judgment on that date, thereby granting summary judgment to both the Rubensteins personally and to BHGV with respect to appellant’s cross-claim and amended cross-claim. Appellant timely noted its appeal on May 11, 1998 and presents for our review the following questions that we rephrase:

I. Did the circuit court err by determining that the Rubensteins could not be jointly and severally liable with BHI on either the piercing the corporate veil or fraudulent conveyance theory and, therefore, granting summary judgment in favor of the Rubensteins?
II. Did the circuit err, because appellant was entitled to seek contractual indemnification from BHGV, by granting summary judgment to appellee BHGV?
III. Did the circuit court err by granting appellees’ motion to strike appellant’s second amended cross-claim?

The Rubensteins present an additional question for our consideration, which we restate for clarity: *300 We answer appellant’s questions in the negative and the Rubenstein’s additional question in the negative. Consequently, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

*299 IV. Did the circuit court correctly enter summary judgment in favor of appellees on all counts of the amended cross-claim because appellant did not prove the condition precedent that BHI failed to perform its obligations under the warranty agreements?

*300 FACTS

Dr. James Rubenstein was the president and sole shareholder of BHI, a real estate development company and umbrella organization for other entities. 5 Dr. Rubenstein was the sole shareholder and president of all affiliated Bancroft entities, with the exception of BHGV, for which he shared officer duties 6 with his wife, Terry, who also maintained ten percent of the company’s stock. During each year from 1984-1987, appellant entered into one-year building agreements with BHI, providing it with limited warranty agreements on all dwellings constructed. In exchange for the warranties, BHI agreed to construct homes within appellant’s warranty standards and approved building codes, to perform warranty repairs upon notice from the purchaser without appellant’s intervention, and to indemnify appellant for all expenses incurred by appellant resulting from major structural defects occurring during the first two years of warranty coverage.

Appellees contracted to build The Club at MeDonogh Township (Club), a condominium complex consisting of eight buildings, each with four stories and multiple residential units. 7 In accordance with the agreements between BHI and appellant, *301 the sale of each condominium unit within the Club included a limited warranty. The first unit was sold on October 17,1986, at which time the first warranty agreement for a Club unit went into effect. Meanwhile, just prior to the sale of the first unit, Elizabeth Hobby was hired by appellees and BHI as the director of architecture.

Beginning in late 1986 and continuing into 1987, when the buildings were at various stages of completion, appellees learned of problems with the stucco finish used on the buildings. This observation led to the discovery of more serious problems. 8 In February 1997, Hobby, along with the project superintendent, Drayton Harrison, and the sales representative for the stucco manufacturer, Bill Feiss, made inspections which revealed structural technique problems resulting from a lack of consistency in the job specifications.

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Bluebook (online)
728 A.2d 783, 126 Md. App. 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/residential-warranty-corp-v-bancroft-homes-greenspring-valley-inc-mdctspecapp-1999.