Smart Oil, LLC v. DW Mazel, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 29, 2019
Docket1:15-cv-08146
StatusUnknown

This text of Smart Oil, LLC v. DW Mazel, LLC (Smart Oil, LLC v. DW Mazel, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smart Oil, LLC v. DW Mazel, LLC, (N.D. Ill. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

SMART OIL, LLC,

Plaintiff, Case No. 15 C 8146 v. Judge Harry D. Leinenweber DW MAZEL, LLC,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Plaintiff Smart Oil, LLC (“Smart Oil”) and Defendant DW Mazel, LLC (“DWM”) cross-move for summary judgment on Counts I and II of Smart Oil’s Complaint. DWM also moves for summary judgment on Counts I and II of its Counterclaim. For the reasons stated herein, DWM’s Motion (Dkt. No. 74) is denied, and Smart Oil’s Motion (Dkt. No. 71) is granted as to Count I of the Complaint. Count II of the Complaint is moot. I. UNDISPUTED FACTS For convenience of the reader, the Court provides both a succinct summary and a more detailed overview of the facts. The following facts are undisputed unless designated otherwise. Lastly, since this case deals with a contractual dispute, the Court will provide the specific contractual provisions at issue when relevant throughout the Opinion. First, a summary: This lawsuit arises out of a contractual dispute between a buyer, DWM, and a seller, Smart Oil, concerning a November 2, 2014, Purchase and Sale Agreement and Joint Escrow

Instructions (the “November Agreement” or “Agreement”). The purpose of the November Agreement was to sell thirty parcels of real property, including gas stations and convenience stores. As part of that Agreement, DWM was required to pay an initial deposit of $300,000.00 (“Deposit”) to the Initial Escrow Holder, Jeffrey Zwick & Associates (“Zwick”). The November Agreement required Zwick in turn to transfer the initial deposit to the Title Company Escrow Holder, which the Agreement designated as First American Title Insurance Company (“FATICO”). It also provided that DWM was to pay a subsequent deposit of $450,000.00 (“Additional Deposit”) to FATICO at the close of the Due Diligence Period on November 30, 2014. As it turns out, DWM never paid the Deposit or the Additional

Deposit. DWM’s failure to make such payments led Smart Oil to file the instant action for breach of contract. Smart Oil seeks to enforce its right to the deposits in the total amount of $750,000.00. Now to dig into the finer points. During 2014, Mehmood Syed, the sole member of Smart Oil and the President of Syed Brokerage & Capital Co., organized and marketed the proposed sale of numerous gas stations, convenience stores, and real properties. (Def.’s Resp. to Pl.’s Stmt. of Material Facts (“Smart Oil SOF”) ¶ 5, Dkt. No. 82.) DWM contracted with Syed Brokerage & Capital Co. and entered into an initial Purchase and Sale Agreement and Joint Escrow Instructions on June 11, 2014 (the “June Agreement”). (Pl.’s

Resp. to Def.’s Stmt. of Material Facts (“DWM SOF”) ¶ 1, Dkt. No. 79.) As part of that initial agreement, DWM had deposited $250,000.00 with the Title Company Escrow Holder Zwick on June 6, 2014. (DWM SOF ¶¶ 3-4.) That same day, Zwick confirmed that his firm was “holding $250,000.00 for DW Mazel LLC in connection with its proposed purchase of a portfolio of 25 gas stations located throughout Illinois, from Smart Oil LLC.” (Zwick Email #1, Ex. B to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J., Dkt. No. 75-2.) On July 11, 2014, however, that agreement was declared null and void. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 10.) On November 2, 2014, Smart Oil and DWM executed a second Purchase and Sale Agreement and Joint Escrow Instructions—the

November Agreement. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 12; Purchase and Sale Agreement and Joint Escrow Instructions (“November Agreement”), Ex. D to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J., Dkt. No. 75-4.) That Agreement serves as the crux of this lawsuit. The purpose of the Agreement was for the purchase and sale of thirty parcels of real property for $67,000,000.00, (Id.), but the transaction never closed (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 43). Prior to the consummation of the transaction, however, the Agreement provided for the Deposit of $300,000.00 and the Additional Deposit of $450,000.00, which combined constituted the “Earnest Money Deposit” of $750,000.00. (Smart Oil SOF ¶¶ 17- 19; November Agreement 2.) The Agreement explicitly designated Zwick as the Initial Escrow Holder and established that the initial

escrow was to take place during the Due Diligence Period—the period for investigations and potential negotiations following the acceptance of the November Agreement. (November Agreement 2-3.) According to Smart Oil, DWM’s Deposit of $300,00.00 was due by November 2, 2014. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 17.) DWM disputes this statement and asserts that such payment was dependent on Smart Oil’s satisfaction of conditions precedent, which Smart Oil allegedly failed to satisfy. (Id.) Regardless, at the close of the Due Diligence Period—November 30, 2014—the Agreement required Zwick to transfer the Deposit to the Title Company Escrow Holder, FATICO. (November Agreement 3.) The Agreement also directed DWM to remit the Additional Deposit of $450,000.00 to FATICO at the close of the Due Diligence Period. (Id.)

The November Agreement acknowledged that DWM had already deposited $250,000.00 per the parties’ initial agreement in June, and thus only required DWM to remit an additional good faith deposit of $50,000.00 to satisfy the Deposit. (November Agreement 2.) Apparently, DWM never paid this difference. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 28.) But despite having failed to do so, on November 3, 2014, Zwick emailed DWM, stating: “This shall confirm that as of today, I am holding $300,000.00 for DW Mazel LLC in connection with its proposed purchase of a portfolio of 30 gas stations located throughout Illinois, from Smart Oil LLC. And the monies shall be held in accordance with the Purchase and Sale Agreement execute

[sic] on November 2, 2014.” (Zwick Email #2, Ex. E to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J., Dkt. No. 75-5.) That email was addressed to several individuals, including the President of DWM David Ebrahimzadeh, who then forwarded the email to Syed. (Id.) As it turns out, Zwick was not holding the $300,000.00. (DWM SOF ¶ 26.) The email was somewhat of a hoax, the reasons for which the Court is uncertain. As far as the Court can determine, Zwick had returned the June Agreement deposit of $250,000.00 to DWM at some point in July 2014. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 11.) But neither Zwick nor DWM notified Smart Oil that the deposit was returned, and that Zwick no longer held any funds in escrow. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 26.) For its part, DWM contends that Zwick’s email was only a draft never intended to be

sent to Smart Oil, yet DWM fails to explain why the email was then forwarded to Syed. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 27.) Either way, DWM remitted neither the Deposit nor the Additional Deposit to FATICO, as specified by the November Agreement. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 28.) By the close of the Due Diligence Period on November 30, 2014, DWM was required to provide written notice to Smart Oil if DWM, as a result of its due diligence investigations of the properties, disapproved of the purchase. (November Agreement 4.) Such notice would terminate the Agreement and return the Earnest Money Deposit to DWM. (Id.) Without any such notice, the Agreement presumed DWM was satisfied with its due diligence investigations, thus entitling Smart Oil to the Earnest Money Deposit regardless of whether the parties consummated the transaction in full. (Id.) By

the November 30th deadline, Smart Oil asserts that DWM never provided any such notice of disapproval. (Smart Oil SOF ¶ 32.) DWM disputes this and points to subsequent emails between the parties, asserting that those emails extended the Due Diligence Period and ultimately terminated the November Agreement. (DWM SOF ¶¶ 29-31.) DWM states that, by responding to DWM’s emails asking for an extension and continuing negotiations of the transaction, Smart Oil effectively rendered the Due Diligence provisions inapplicable.

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Smart Oil, LLC v. DW Mazel, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smart-oil-llc-v-dw-mazel-llc-ilnd-2019.