Stallings v. Owens

2002 SD 63, 646 N.W.2d 272, 2002 S.D. LEXIS 67
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 2002
DocketNone
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2002 SD 63 (Stallings v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stallings v. Owens, 2002 SD 63, 646 N.W.2d 272, 2002 S.D. LEXIS 67 (S.D. 2002).

Opinion

KONENKAMP, Justice.

[¶ 1.] A developer discussed with the landowners the potential sale of their land conditioned on the feasibility of obtaining sufficient lot purchasers and local government approval. When the developer obtained commitments for lot purchases and offered the landowners their asking price, the landowners nevertheless decided to sell the land to a neighbor. The developer sued the landowners for breach of an oral joint venture agreement and sued the neighbor for intentional interference with contractual relations. The circuit court granted summary judgment against the developer on all issues. We conclude that the essential elements for a binding joint venture agreement were missing and the absence of an agreement moots the question of the alleged tortious interference. Accordingly, we affirm.

Background

[¶ 2.] Defendants Leycester and Helen Owens are the owners of a 10.67-acre parcel of land in the southern part of Sioux Falls, South Dakota. James Reynolds is- a neighbor, as well as a physician-partner with Leycester Owens in North Central Heart Clinic. In the early 1980s, Reynolds had suggested to Dr. and Mrs. Owens (the Owens) that they buy the tract, with a view toward eventually building a house there. However, by the summer of 1998, the Owens,- not having developed the property, decided to sell it. As they had given Reynolds a right of “first and last refusal,” the Owens asked Reynolds whether he was interested in purchasing it. At that point, Reynolds declined to exercise his option.

[¶ 3.] Plaintiffs Troy Stallings and his wife, Jane Shorma, are land developers, operating under their business, Creative Building, Inc. In September 1998, Troy Stallings,' heard that the Owens were interested in selling the property. He called them to determine what their intentions were. At their first meeting, Leycester Owens told Stallings that he was asking $700,000 for the property. Interested, Stallings accompanied Owens to the land, and they walked it together. On that occasion, Owens also introduced him to Reynolds and his wife Debbie, and the four of them discussed development possibilities. Stallings expressed the view that the parcel might be divided into eight or nine lots for home sites. According to Stall-ings’s uncontested testimony, Reynolds mentioned that he was not, at that time, interested in exercising his option. In his own testimony, Reynolds explained his initial refusal by reference to another condition which' Owens had placed on the sale: it was to be developed only in such a way as would gather the approval of the four neighboring households. At this first meeting, Stallings understood that Reyn *274 olds had given the Owens carte blanche to develop the property as they chose.

[¶ 4.] At a second, later meeting, Stall-ings and Leycester Owens discussed the price that eight lots would be likely to bring and the cost of necessary infrastructure. By that time, Stallings had engaged the services of an engineer-surveyor, who estimated the development costs at $338,200. Stallings reckoned that the individual lots would sell for $125,000 at most; Owens thought that they might bring $150,000 each. At the end of the meeting, Stallings agreed to see whether he could find buyers willing to pay $150,000 per lot, and Owens agreed to let Stallings stake the property and to allow prospective buyers to look it over. Stallings proceeded to do so, and, according to him, told his prospects that the Owens were “selling the property to him, ... that the property was going to be divided into eight lots, and that he would then close on the property with [the Owens] and would expect them to close immediately on their lots.” According to his testimony, Stallings also imparted three more bits of information to potential buyers: (1) that the existing households in the neighborhood were generally opposed to the proposed development, (2) that if the eight-lot subdivision were not approved by the Planning Commission, they would not be obliged to purchase their lots because he would not consummate the purchase with the Owens, and (3) that he, Troy Stallings (not the Owens), was to be the home developer on all of the lots. Stallings also testified that, on more than one occasion, when he asked to put his agreement with Leycester Owens in writing, Owens responded that no contract was necessary because his word was his bond. Owens denied such an exchange.

[¶ 5.] The opposition from the neighbors stemmed from two principal causes. First, the acreage had been a defacto park for the neighborhood for over fifteen years, and the neighbors were reluctant to lose the recreational opportunities and aesthetic enhancement it afforded. Second, the proposed entry to the property would at least double the traffic on an already narrow private road. In addition, the neighbors were variously concerned about drainage, access by fire and police vehicles, and the length of the road leading to the cul-de-sac that would provide access to the new houses.

[¶ 6.] Hearing of the development plans, the neighbors began to meet in late 1998 or early 1999 to discuss what might be done to deter the development. They engaged a lawyer to advise them and a surveyor to provide an independent opinion of the likely topical impacts of the development. The neighbors also began a letter-writing campaign to the Sioux Falls Planning Commission. Because the development called for more than one house on the property, the Commission had to approve the plan before work could begin. The plan was submitted to the Commission in the early spring of 1999. After studying it, the Commission’s staff recommended that the development be limited to four single-family residences. An initial hearing before the Commission was to be held on April 7, 1999, but, learning of the staffs recommendation, Stallings’s surveyor-engineer requested a postponement until May 5, 1999, so that the plans could be reworked to address the problems mentioned in the staff report. The Commission granted the request.

[¶ 7.] The days just before the May 5 hearing were eventful. On May 3, the Owens hosted a meeting of the neighbors at their home to present the development plan, at that time somewhat revised in response to the concerns of the Commission’s staff, but still containing eight lots. The neighbors argued vigorously that the *275 property should .be divided into no more than two lots. On the next evening, the neighbors met again to complete their planned presentation for the next day’s Commission hearing. After the meeting was over, Reynolds telephoned Leycester Owens to report that the neighbors were “dead set against” the project. During that conversation, Reynolds offered to purchase the property for $550,000. Owens rejoined that he would be willing to consider an offer of $575,000, and Reynolds amended his offer to $575,000 payable on a contract for deed at eight percent interest. On the morning of May 5th, Stallings spoke with Leycester Owens by telephone and offered to pay $600,000 for the land and to divide it into no more than four lots. Owens, in turn, telephoned Reynolds to report this offer and to ask whether it would be acceptable to the neighbors. Upon hearing that a four-residence development would still meet with the neighbors’ opposition, Owens agreed to sell the land to Reynolds for $575,000. Owens then called Stallings to tell him that he had accepted Reynolds’s offer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 SD 63, 646 N.W.2d 272, 2002 S.D. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stallings-v-owens-sd-2002.