Roeland v. Trucano

214 P.3d 343, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 114, 2009 WL 2568541
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 2009
DocketS-12850
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 214 P.3d 343 (Roeland v. Trucano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roeland v. Trucano, 214 P.3d 343, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 114, 2009 WL 2568541 (Ala. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Real estate investors sued for two alleged breaches of the investors' right of first refusal regarding a parcel of real property. The first arose from the proposed transfer of a twenty-five percent interest in the property to a third party in exchange for a twenty-five percent interest in a business to be operated by a third party on the property. The see-ond arose from the later actual transfer of the entire property to an LLC owned by the parties involved in the initial proposed transaction. After trial, the superior court found against the investors on all issues. Because the investors had reasonable notice of the proposed transaction and did nothing to clar *346 ify any confusion about its precise terms, and because the later transfer was a matter of structural convenience to effectuate the originally proposed transaction and not a separate sale triggering the right of first refusal, we affirm the superior court's decision in all respects.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Appellants Boudewijn Roeland and Hen-drika Flamee resided in Belgium but owned several investment properties in Juneau. In 2000 Appellee Steve Landvik approached Roeland and Flamee with a proposal to build a retaining wall for their property in the heart of Juneau's downtown tourist retail district on South Franklin Street. Roeland and Flamee had purchased the property in an undeveloped state in the 1990s, intending to develop it into a building with shops and apartments or offices. They agreed to pay Landvik $300,000 for a retaining wall for the property to be completed by April 1, 2001.

Landvik later informed Roeland and Fla-mee that he would be unable to complete the wall on time or within budget. In August 2001 Landvik and a business associate, Douglas Trucano, met with Roeland and Flamee several times to attempt to determine how to proceed regarding the retaining wall. During the negotiations, Landvik and Trucano offered to purchase Roeland and Flamee's property and provide Roeland and Flamee a right of first refusal in the event Landvik and Trucano decided to sell the property. Roe-land and Flamee agreed. The agreement stated that if Trucano and Landvik decided to sell the property, they would notify Roe-land and Flamee of their intent to sell. Roe-land and Flamee would then have the first right to purchase for ninety days "on terms identical to the terms [Trucano and Landvik] have offered to, or received from, any third party." Title to the property was ultimately transferred to Trucano Construction Company for bank financing purposes, and Trucano and Landvik were each personal guarantors of the right of first refusal. 1

Trucano and Landvik wished to build a retail building on the property and posted a sign seeking potential renters for the future building. In late 2001 they were contacted by David Coates. Coates owned souvenir shops in Ketchikan and desired to open businesses in Juneau. He offered an interest in any future souvenir shops that he opened in Juneau in exchange for an interest in the property. The parties negotiated and entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU). Trucano and Landvik mailed a notice to Roeland and Flamee informing them of the offer, attaching a copy of the MOU, and giving them first right to purchase "on terms identical to the terms that they have offered to, or received from, a third person or entity."

The MOU memorialized the parties' "intentions and desires" and was a "framework for entering binding agreements in the future." Trucano and Landvik agreed to sell twenty-five percent of the property to Coates, and Coates agreed to sell to Trucano and Landvik a twenty-five percent interest in any stores he would operate in the future building. The MOU further stated that the "same arrangement would apply" in the event Coates opened any other businesses in Juneau, and that Coates intended to acquire two stores and establish a wholesale business. The parties stated that they would apply for a bank loan to finance the building. They also stated their understanding as to when and how much rent Coates would pay to "T & L Building," an entity that is not defined in the agreement. Additionally, Coates agreed that "the conveyance or transfer of any interest in the T & L Building or the property on which the T & L Building is constructed" would be subject to a third party's right of first refusal. The MOU estimated the value of the business at seven million dollars.

Roeland and Flamee responded to the notice of the MOU in an April 2002 letter informing Trucano's attorney that they were "not in the possibility yet to reply positively or negatively regarding the Right of First *347 Refusal." Roeland and Flamee went on to state that the MOU was "just a business proposal" with no exact sale price, and that they did not "have any interest in becoming partners with Landvik, Trucano and/or their renter." They concluded at the end of the letter that "this is NOT a Right of First Refusal" and said they wanted a new offer of sale with exact figures for the twenty-five percent interest in the property. Trucano's attorney responded to this communication by stating that "there was an exact figure in the MOU; it was $7 million," referring to the estimated valuation of the business enterprise contained in the MOU. Trucano's attorney also wrote, "if you want [Trucano] to sell [the interest] to you, then pay the $7 million," and otherwise generally reasserted that the terms of the sale were contained in the MOU.

Roeland and Flamee had no further communication with Trucano's attorney. Flamee testified that she attempted to e-mail Truca-no and to call Landvik. The trial court found credible Trucano's statement that he did not get the e-mail because he did not use that email address; the trial court was not able to determine why Landvik did not return Fla-mee's call. Development of the property proceeded as planned under the MOU except that Landvik could not or did not contribute his financial share and was not thereafter involved with the project.

In July 2004, in the final effectuation of the MOU, Trucano Construction Company deeded the property to A & J Building LLC. That LLC was owned seventy-five percent by Tru-cano, twelve and one-half percent by David Coates and his wife, and twelve and one-half percent by Gary and Meeta Jethani. Gary Jethani is a business partner with Coates in Ketchikan. Trucano, Coates, and the Jeth-anis also formed Alaska-Juneau Mining LLC at or around the same time. Trucano owns a twenty-five percent interest in that LLC, which owns the retail business contemplated by the MOU. The Coateses and Jethanis together own the remaining seventy-five percent of the second LLC. During the summer of 2004 the retail business began operations in the building constructed on the property.

Roeland and Flamee sued Truecano Construction Company, Landvik, and Trucano in March 2005 for breach of their right of first refusal with regard to both the 2002 MOU and the 2004 effectuating transactions, later adding A & J Building LLC as a defendant, as well. They also sued for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing and for misrepresentation. The case was tried before Superior Court Judge Patricia A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 P.3d 343, 2009 Alas. LEXIS 114, 2009 WL 2568541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roeland-v-trucano-alaska-2009.