Sun Kyung Ahn v. Merrifield Town Center Ltd. Partnership

584 F. Supp. 2d 848, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 93242, 2008 WL 4763251
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedOctober 27, 2008
DocketCase 1:08cv73
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 584 F. Supp. 2d 848 (Sun Kyung Ahn v. Merrifield Town Center Ltd. Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Kyung Ahn v. Merrifield Town Center Ltd. Partnership, 584 F. Supp. 2d 848, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 93242, 2008 WL 4763251 (E.D. Va. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

T.S. ELLIS, III, District Judge.

In this federal question suit, plaintiffs, purchasers of condominiums, sue the seller for rescission and damages pursuant to the Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act (“ILSFDA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1701 et seq., and various pendent state claims. Seller seeks dismissal, inter alia, of the ILSFDA claim on the ground that the seller’s contractual promises to build the condominiums within two years of the date seller “ratified” the sales contracts exempts the transactions from ILSFDA.

At issue on summary judgment 1 with respect to the ILSFDA claim is whether the Act’s exemption for land sales contracts containing promises to complete building within two years applies here where the sales contracts provide that building must occur within two years of “ratification” of the contracts, defined as the date the seller signs the contracts, even though the purchasers signed the contracts and incurred obligations at a much earlier date. Put differently, the question is whether ILSFDA’s two-year building exemption requires the two-year period to commence when a purchaser signs a sales contract and incurs obligations, or at some later date when a seller elects to sign or ratify the contract.

For the reasons that follow, the contracts at issue here are not exempt from ILSFDA’s reporting and disclosure requirements.

I. 2

Plaintiffs are twenty-nine individuals, all residents of Virginia, who contracted to purchase condominium units from defendant Merrifield Town Center Limited Partnership (“Merrifield”), a Virginia limited partnership. In 2005, Merrifield began planning development of the Vantage Condominiums at Merrifield Town Center in Falls Church, Virginia. To promote interest in the project, Merrifield hosted an open house and preview party in May 2005 for approximately 3500 potential buyers. Sales of the units commenced on June 2 and 3, 2005, and the entire project sold out by mid-July.

Merrifield used two contract forms, titled “Unit Purchase Agreements” (“UPAs”) to sell its units: (i) one UPA form that required Merrifield to complete construction within 36 months of “ratification,” defined in the UPA as the date Merrifield signed the UPA; and (ii) a sec *850 ond UPA form that obligated Merrifield to complete construction within 24 months of “ratification,” also defined in the UPA as the date Merrifield signed the UPA. Only the second UPA form is at issue here, as all plaintiffs in this case signed 24-month UPAs in June or July 2005.

The UPAs signed by each plaintiff, as purchaser, required delivery of an “Initial Agreement Deposit” to Merrifield “upon Purchaser’s execution of [the] Agreement,” or in other words, the date each purchaser signed a UPA. UPA ¶2. The required deposit was either 5% of the purchase price in the event a purchaser intended to occupy the unit, or 10% of the purchase price in the event a purchaser was an investor who intended to sell or lease the unit, not occupy it. 3 The UPAs required payment to the seller of a second deposit within 180 days of the date each purchaser signed a UPA. Failure to deliver the second deposit within the 180-day period triggered the UPAs’ default provision, which provided that Merrifield could retain a purchaser’s initial deposit in the event of purchaser default. Moreover, according to the terms of the UPAs, Merrifield was to hold each purchaser’s deposits in a segregated escrow account pursuant to Va.Code § 55-79.95. 4 There is no claim by Merri-field that plaintiffs did not comply with these requirements; each plaintiff paid both deposits as required by the sales contracts.

The two deposit requirements were not the only obligations incurred by plaintiffs at the time they signed the UPAs in issue; additionally, plaintiffs, at the time they signed the UPAs, assumed two further obligations: (i) to make a written loan application to a lender within seven days of the date each purchaser signed a UPA, and (ii) to obtain financing approval and submit documentation of that approval within two weeks of the date each purchaser signed a UPA. 5 In the event a purchaser failed to comply with these loan application requirements, Merrifield could terminate the contract and refund to the purchaser any deposits already made. The UPAs also provided that a purchaser could, within ten days of receiving the “Public Offering Statement” required by the Virginia Condominium Act, Va.Code §§ 55-79.39 et seq., cancel the contract and obtain a refund of the initial deposit without penalty. If a purchaser chose not to exercise this right to cancel, the contract was to “remain in full force and effect.” UPA ¶ 11(b).

On signing the UPAs, the purchasers also made several representations reflected in the UPAs’ various provisions, including that (i) “purchaser is contracting to purchase the property solely from [Mer-rifield] and not any affiliate of [Merri-field],” UPA ¶ 38; (ii) purchaser “waive[s] trial by jury in any action ... with respect *851 to any matter whatsoever relating in any way to this agreement,” UPA ¶ 36; (iii) purchaser “acknowledges receipt of a copy of the Public Offering Statement [required under Virginia law] for the [c]ondomini-um,” UPA ¶ 11; and (iv) purchaser either intends or does not intend to occupy the unit as a full-time residence. Finally, the first sentence of each UPA states, “This Condominium Unit Purchase Agreement ... is made on_, 200_, by and between” each purchaser and Merrifield. UPA at 1. In each UPA, the typed-in date matches each plaintiffs signing date.

Despite the obligations incurred by the purchasers upon signing, the UPAs’ final paragraph also stated, in bold, capitalized letters:

Purchaser and [Merrifield] acknowledge that this agreement as signed by Purchaser or [Merrifield] alone does not constitute ratification of this agreement. This agreement shall not be binding upon [Merrifield] until executed by [Merrifield].

UPA ¶ 39. This ratification provision is important because the UPAs also provided that Merrifield’s obligation to build within two years — the obligation at issue for the ILSFDA question presented — began on the date that Merrifield ratified each UPA. Specifically, the UPAs provided, “[Merri-field] acknowledges an absolute obligation to deliver the Unit no later than twenty-four (24) months from the date this Agreement is ratified.” UPA ¶ 21(a). Finally, the UPAs provided that Merrifield’s obligation to deliver the finished condominium units within 24 months was “absolute,” except for “reasons outside of Declarant’s control or as a result of the action or inaction of a third party whose actions are necessary to the performance of Declar-ant’s obligations.” Id.

As matters turned out, Merrifield did not ratify these UPAs at the time the purchasers signed them.

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Bluebook (online)
584 F. Supp. 2d 848, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 93242, 2008 WL 4763251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-kyung-ahn-v-merrifield-town-center-ltd-partnership-vaed-2008.