Sunset Beach Development, LLC v. AMEC, Inc.

675 S.E.2d 46, 196 N.C. App. 202, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 454, 2009 WL 910166
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 7, 2009
DocketCOA08-324
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 675 S.E.2d 46 (Sunset Beach Development, LLC v. AMEC, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sunset Beach Development, LLC v. AMEC, Inc., 675 S.E.2d 46, 196 N.C. App. 202, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 454, 2009 WL 910166 (N.C. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

McGEE, Judge.

Sunset Beach Development, LLC (Plaintiff) was formed in 2002 for the purpose of identifying and acquiring undeveloped real property for development and resale. The majority members of Sunset Beach are corporate entities owned by Ralph Teal (Teal) and Blair Tanner (Tanner). Plaintiff began the process of acquiring four separate but contiguous parcels of land (the four tracts) in Brunswick County, North Carolina from four separate owners in late summer 2002. Plaintiff prepared its preliminary land plan for development of the four tracts in early 2003, subject to the required delineation of jurisdictional wetlands. Plaintiff intended to develop the four tracts into a residential development if the delineation of jurisdictional wetlands established that development was feasible on the four tracts.

Plaintiff entered into contracts of sale in 2003 with the four owners. Plaintiff closed with one owner in August 2003. Plaintiff closed with the remaining three owners in November 2003, including the contract of sale with Defendant GGSH Associates (GGSH) for the purchase of GGSH’s 453-acre parcel (the GGSH tract) for $4,500,000.

Tanner’s father, Don Tanner, developed Sandpiper Bay, which abuts the land purchased by Plaintiff, through a business entity he controlled. During the early to mid-1990s, Don Tanner considered purchasing the GGSH tract, and in 1998 hired Michael Ball (Ball) to conduct a “wetlands assessment” of the GGSH tract. At that time, Ball was the president of East Coast Environmental Consultants, Inc. Relevant to the instant case, Ball was a senior project manager for AMEC, Inc., AMEC Earth & Environmental, Inc., and AMEC Earth & Environmental, Inc. of North Carolina (collectively AMEC). Ball’s wetlands assessment of the GGSH tract estimated that approximately *205 seventy percent of it was uplands and thirty percent was wetlands. Don Tanner did not purchase the GGSH tract.

GGSH also hired Ball in 1999 to perforin a wetlands assessment of the GGSH tract. Ball’s 1999 assessment of the GGSH tract indicated areas of wetlands and provided “an approach to utilizing such areas for development or marketing purposes.” Ball’s assessment of the GGSH tract concluded that about “112.2 acres of the [GGSH tract] could be considered wetlands.” Jerry L. Sellers (Sellers), a general partner in GGSH, disagreed with Ball’s assessment of the amount of wetlands in the GGSH tract and told Ball he thought there were fewer acres of wetlands on the GGSH tract.

The GGSH tract was the linchpin of Plaintiff’s planned development. Between the time Plaintiff showed interest in purchasing the GGSH tract and the time Plaintiff closed the sale, GGSH provided Gene Blanton (Blanton), an employee of Plaintiff, with a key to the GGSH tract, giving Plaintiff unfettered access to it.

As stated above, Plaintiff and GGSH entered into a contract of sale for the GGSH tract on 18 April 2003. The contract of sale contained certain environmental warranties in which GGSH warranted and represented that “[t]here are no known violations of environmental laws on or which have occurred with respect to the [GGSH tract.]” The contract of sale also stated that Plaintiff’s obligation to close was contingent on GGSH’s providing Plaintiff with “a wetlands delineation approved by the [United States Army Corps of Engineers], which shall not vary more than three (3) acres over or under twenty-five (25) acres. A price adjustment shall be negotiated if the variation is greater or less than three (3) acres.” GGSH hired Ball to perform the required wetlands delineation on the GGSH tract. GGSH never provided Plaintiff with a delineation of the GGSH tract before closing.

Plaintiff hired Ball to perform the wetlands delineations for the three contiguous tracts not owned by GGSH. Plaintiff also asked Ball to produce a composite map of all four tracts (the Master Wetlands Map), which was received on 29 August 2003.

Prior to the signing of the contract of sale between Plaintiff and GGSH, Ball informed GGSH that the effects of drainage ditches had reduced the jurisdictional wetlands on the GGSH tract to twenty-five acres. Plaintiff argues that the “twenty-five acres of wetlands” referred to in the contract of sale is based on representations made by Ball to Sellers, who in turn made those representations to Plaintiff. *206 Plaintiff also asserts that Sellers admitted to representing to Plaintiff that there were twenty-five acres of wetlands on the GGSH tract.

Plaintiffs engineering firm was Robert L. Bellamy & Associates, Inc. (Bellamy). John Poston (Poston), a licensed professional engineer, was the main Bellamy engineer responsible for overseeing Bellamy’s work. Poston received a composite wetlands map, including the GGSH tract, from Ball on 19 August 2003. Poston informed Plaintiff on or about 25 August 2003 that “the wetland[s] information received was not sufficient for design due to the lack of information concerning wetland size, type and directional/distance ties to an established property boundary.” Poston noted that the only date on the map was 9 January 1998. Poston also questioned whether, in addition to the signed plat depicting the location and extent of the wetlands on the GGSH tract, the United States Army Corps of Engineers (the Corps) was required to issue a separate letter of wetlands certification.

Teal, one of Plaintiff’s majority members, also raised concerns about Ball’s wetlands delineations and advised Poston to do whatever was necessary to ensure the wetlands issues were properly addressed. Poston requested and received from Ball the Master Wetlands Map on 29 August 2003. This map provided the information that was missing from the map Poston received on 19 August 2003. Plaintiff’s corporate attorney, Larry Ferree (Ferree), testified that Teal raised concerns to him about the Master Wetlands Map.

Sellers testified that at some point before closing, he offered to pay Ball $90,000 for Ball’s work so long as the sale occurred for the original purchase price of $4,500,000. Plaintiff contends it was unaware of this agreement between Ball and GGSH. Plaintiff contends Ball led Plaintiff to believe Ball’s delineation work would cost GGSH “about $15,000.” Plaintiff asserts that because of this contingent payment of $90,000 to Ball, Ball forged the name of Allen Davis (Davis), a prior employee of the Corps, on five wetlands maps, including a map showing twenty-five acres of wetlands on the GGSH tract. Ball admitted in his deposition that, rather than performing an actual delineation on the GGSH tract, he used AutoCAD software to “shrink” the wetlands depicted on the 1999 assessment he prepared of the GGSH tract. By using the AutoCAD software, the wetlands depicted on Ball’s 1999 assessment were shown to be twenty-five acres.

A few days after the sale closed, Sellers met Ball at a steakhouse outside Myrtle Beach and paid Ball $90,000. Ball was paid by a check *207 made out to “Todd Ball” and not to his employer, AMEC.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
675 S.E.2d 46, 196 N.C. App. 202, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 454, 2009 WL 910166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunset-beach-development-llc-v-amec-inc-ncctapp-2009.