Tauber v. Quan

938 A.2d 724, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 689, 2007 WL 4439742
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 2007
Docket04-CV-891
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 938 A.2d 724 (Tauber v. Quan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tauber v. Quan, 938 A.2d 724, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 689, 2007 WL 4439742 (D.C. 2007).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

This is an appeal from an award of summary judgment and specific performance in a suit to enforce an agreement to sell commercial real estate. The reluctant sellers, appellants Paul and Phyllis Tau-ber, argue that the agreement is too indefinite to be enforced. Alternatively, appellants assert that they were entitled to *727 avoid the contract because they signed it by mistake. Appellants further claim that specific performance should have been denied because the purchaser, appellee Tin Quan, had unclean hands, and because the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on that issue without proper notice.

Concluding that appellants’ contentions lack merit, we affirm the judgment on appeal.

I.

The commercial property at issue is located at 2412 18th Street, N.W., in the District of Columbia neighborhood of Adams Morgan, and we shall refer to it as the “Adams Morgan property.” The owners, Paul and Phyllis Tauber, employed an attorney, Eric Sayles, to manage the Adams Morgan property and to assist them with its sale. Paul Tauber is an experienced real estate investor.

Tin Quan is a restaurateur in Adams Morgan. He hoped to purchase the Adams Morgan property from the Taubers in order to relocate his restaurant there. 1 Quan engaged David Crowley of Randall H. Hagner & Co., a real estate brokerage firm, to help him acquire the property.

Quan and Crowley negotiated with Paul Tauber and Sayles over a period of five months, from September 2002 through January 2003. The protracted negotiations culminated in a multi-page standard form Sales Contract dated September 3, 2002, and a General Addendum to that contract prepared by Crowley in January 2003. 2 The General Addendum modified the terms of the September 3 Sales Contract in a few respects. Notably, the General Addendum reduced the purchase price stated in the Sales Contract from $699,900 to $625,000. 3 This change was attributable, at least in part, to the purchaser’s discovery that the Adams Morgan property was encumbered by a long-term, below-market lease, which reduced its market value and impaired Quan’s ability to secure independent financing. The Taubers agreed to finance the transaction themselves by taking a first deed of trust note from Quan in the principal amount of $550,000. The essential provisions of that note, including the interest rate, the amount of the monthly payment, and the due date, were spelled out in the General Addendum. Quan agreed to pay the balance of the purchase price, $75,000, in cash at settlement, and to deposit $46,250 in escrow as good faith earnest money.

The General Addendum provided that Quan rather than the sellers would pay the 4.5% brokerage fee. This modification of the September 3 Sales Contract partially offset the reduction of the purchase price (the fee would have been $28,125). The General Addendum also expressly stated that Quan would be responsible for paying transfer and recordation taxes.

As set forth in the General Addendum, settlement was to occur no later than Feb *728 ruary 18, 2003. Quan stood to forfeit his entire deposit of $46,250 if he was unable to settle on the property by that date. The General Addendum provided that the Taubers were to pay “appropriate fees” to their attorney, Eric Sayles, to prepare the closing documents. 4 The General Addendum further stated that “[n]o contingencies exist in this contract....”

Tin Quan signed the General Addendum on January 30, 2003. Paul and Phyllis Tauber each signed it the following day. At that time, Paul Tauber personally inserted two handwritten clarifications relating to the terms of the $550,000 note, 5 which Quan initialed to signify his assent. Thus, the agreement to sell the Taubers’ Adams Morgan property to Quan was fully executed on or about January 31, 2003.

The Taubers refused to go to settlement with Quan, however. In a letter to David Crowley, Paul Tauber asserted that the General - Addendum did not “reflect the arrangement made by you and me.” Tau-ber stated that the total purchase price “according to our agreement” was to be $724,000, adding that the “only reason I agreed to change the listed contract price was to save the buyer some fees and have a separate contract for the remainder of the total price.” More specifically, Tauber claimed, Quan was supposed to pay Eric Sayles’ fees in addition to the purchase price and the brokerage fee. Accordingly, Tauber concluded, “I will not go to settlement if you do not include Mr. Sayles in the second part of this sale, i.e., the other costs above the net amount due me of $625,000.” 6

Quan did not accede to Tauber’s demand that he pay Sayles. In the ensuing litigation 7 to compel the Taubers to sell their Adams Morgan property in accordance with the September 3 Sales Contract and the General Addendum, the trial court eventually granted partial summary judgment in favor of Quan on his breach of contract claim. Rejecting the Taubers’ legal defenses, the court ruled on March 10, 2004, that the parties had made “a valid and binding contract” which the Taubers were “not entitled to void” on the basis of their unilateral mistake.

Although the court thus found the Tau-bers liable for breach of contract, it declared itself undecided as to whether to compel specific performance. Opposing such equitable relief, the Taubers had claimed that Quan and Crowley had “sought to lower the purchase price by the artifice of paying costs [ie., brokerage and attorney’s fees] out of closing” in order to “cheat” the District of Columbia out of transfer, recordation, and other real estate taxes (which would be based on the consideration paid for the Adams Morgan property). In view of this allegation of “unclean hands,” the court ordered the parties *729 to appear for a hearing on April 15, 2004, to address whether Quan was entitled to specific performance.

After listening to the arguments of counsel on April 15, the trial court asked to hear testimony. Without objection from the Taubers’ counsel, Quan and Crowley each took the stand. Crediting their testimony, the court found that they had not tried to structure the transaction to defraud the government of taxes. 8 Accordingly, rejecting the Taubers’ “unclean hands” defense, the court ordered specific performance and directed the parties to advise it within ten days whether it would need to appoint a trustee to finalize the seller financing documents. Pursuant to a provision of the September 3 Sales Contract, the court subsequently awarded reasonable attorney’s fees and costs to Quan as the prevailing party. The Taubers have appealed the trial court’s rulings to this court.

II.

We first address the order granting partial summary judgment on Quan’s breach of contract claim, as to which our review is de novo.

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Bluebook (online)
938 A.2d 724, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 689, 2007 WL 4439742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tauber-v-quan-dc-2007.