Rizika v. Donovan

695 N.E.2d 1097, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 159
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1998
DocketNo. 96-P-1440
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 695 N.E.2d 1097 (Rizika v. Donovan) 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
Rizika v. Donovan, 695 N.E.2d 1097, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 159 (Mass. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Kass, J.

On the ground that the contract between the parties lacked an essential term, a judge of the Superior Court, acting on a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict,3 set aside a $4,844,912 jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff Rizika. The missing piece, the judge thought, was that Rizika, at the time he contracted with the defendants, did not own the real property he [160]*160had agreed to lease to the defendants. We conclude that a party may bind itself to lease property that it does not own, taking the risk of liability for damages to the tenant should it not acquire ownership of the leased premises by the time of the commencement date of the lease. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment for the defendants.

Facts. During the relevant period, John J. Donovan was the controlling officer of Cambridge Technology Group, Inc. (CTG). Donovan’s business connections with Rizika dated back to 1980, when Donovan, on behalf of his company — it was then called Advanced Information Systems and Services, Inc. — leased 219 Vassar Street, Cambridge, from Rizika.4 Donovan rented additional space from Rizika in 1982 at 301 Vassar Street. Under the Vassar Street leases, Donovan had highly favorable options to buy the underlying fee-simple interest in the leased premises. By 1993, CTG needed more space. Rizika and Donovan met at Donovan’s office on July 12, 1993. They identified a building numbered 600 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, as just the right fit for CTG. That property was owned by Gunwyn/600 Memorial Drive Limited Partnership and was thought to be for sale.

On the strength of the July 12th meeting, Rizika sounded out Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) about the prospect of MIT acquiring 600 Memorial Drive and exchanging it with Rizika for the Vassar Street properties. The Vassar Street properties were well located for MIT’s campus expansion plans, hence MIT’s interest in a transaction that would wind up with it owning the Vassar Street properties. Rizika’s interest in this circuitous method of acquiring 600 Memorial Drive was the income tax advantages to him from an exchange of property of like kind. MIT’s response was encouraging.

Rizika got back to Donovan and from July 23, 1993, to July 27, 1993, there were negotiations between Rizika, on one side, and on the other side, Donovan, Donovan’s son (John J. Donovan, Jr.), and Charles Stefanidakis, CTG’s chief financial officer. On July 27, 1998, Donovan, Jr., and Stefanidakis, on behalf of the Donovan interests, and Rizika signed a document, written by Rizika, that bore the title, “Basic Terms of the Lease Agreement Between JJD and JWR” (the basic terms agreement). That [161]*161document lays out, with conciseness and precision, agreement on the major economic issues, although the document lacks much of the peripheral detail that a lawyer would write into a lease. There was evidence, however, which the jury could have believed, that the parties proposed to write the business points they had agreed upon into a lease identical in form to the lease they had employed in the renting of the Vassar Street properties. See Goren v. Royal Investments Inc., 25 Mass. App. Ct. 137, 141-142 (1987).

Included in the basic terms agreement5 is a statement of the rent to be paid, $750,000 per year on triple net basis, with a rent escalator formula that begins to operate in the sixth lease year. Rizika was to retain 5,000 square feet on five floors, subject to an option by Donovan, which he might exercise after one and one-half years, to take over that space for an additional rent of $75,000 per year. Donovan was to have six months’ occupancy rent free while he renovated the building. Rizika was to contribute $1,000,000 to the cost of renovation. Donovan would cause the trust he controlled to surrender its leases of 219 and 301 Vassar Street. That provision was crucial to Rizika’s exchange of those properties with MIT. As to the term of the lease, Donovan could select such term as he required so long as it was at least ten years. Until July 1, 1998, Donovan could select which of two options he might have to acquire 600 Memorial Drive from Rizika. The first option provided for exercise by Donovan during the sixteenth lease year for two times its then market value. In the alternative, Rizika might “put” the property to Donovan for a price of 1.3 times its then existing market value. The second option formula would operate in the twelfth lease year and provided for three annual payments based on two times market value. Donovan was to have a right of first refusal or a right of second refusal if Rizika had given a right of first refusal to MIT as a term of acquiring 600 Memorial Drive.

Armed with the signed basic terms agreement, Rizika at once pursued the MIT segment of the transaction. MIT took steps [162]*162toward the acquisition of 600 Memorial Drive6 and prepared a short document to be signed by it, Rizika, and Donovan, memorializing the proposed property exchange. That document touched on CTG being allowed to continue to occupy the Vassar Street properties after MIT acquired them while renovations were being made to 600 Memorial Drive. Donovan declined to sign that three-party document, which Rizika had left for him on August 3, 1993. Rather, on August 4, 1993, Donovan (speaking through Donovan, Jr.) informed Rizika that he was not going through with the deal. Following that conversation, and that day, Donovan, Jr., wrote to Rizika demanding copies of any document committing Rizika to swapping the Vassar Street properties with MIT for 600 Memorial Drive and copies of any purchase and sale agreement involving MIT and 600 Memorial Drive. Donovan, Jr.’s, interest was not to be wondered at. He was by then engaged through a broker in an attempt to acquire 600 Memorial Drive directly.

In a letter of August 9, 1993, from Donovan, Jr., the “Dear Jack” of earlier correspondence became “Dear Mr. Rizika.” There had been a meeting earlier that day and it had not been friendly. In his letter, Donovan, Jr., described the “term sheet” — his phrase for the basic terms agreement — as “merely that, an attempt to set forth preliminary terms . . . [i]t was not viewed or described by anyone as a final agreement.” The letter chided Rizika with having no “legal interest whatsoever in 600 Memorial Drive . . . .’’In another paragraph, Donovan, Jr., denies having had authority to “execute contracts” for CTG. He goes on to say that “we have no choice but to confirm that the ‘term sheet’ document is null, void, and of no further effect.” Before he concludes his letter, Donovan, Jr., having earlier disavowed authority to act for his father and CTG, purports to exercise the Donovan purchase option rights on the Vassar Street properties. Rizika did not contest the manner in which the purchase option was exercised (Stefanidakis had cosigned the exercise of the option with Donovan, Jr.) — it would have been repairable —. and an entity controlled by Donovan ultimately wound up with ownership of the Vassar Street properties.

Whether the contract lacked an essential term. Neither the [163]*163briefs and arguments of the parties nor the judge seem to quarrel with the jury’s finding that there was a “complete and binding contract between the parties.” That is, there is no effort to argue that the basic terms agreement represented imperfect negotiations.

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Bluebook (online)
695 N.E.2d 1097, 45 Mass. App. Ct. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rizika-v-donovan-massappct-1998.