The Great Lakes Group, LLC v. Desai

CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 20, 2023
Docket1:19-cv-00465
StatusUnknown

This text of The Great Lakes Group, LLC v. Desai (The Great Lakes Group, LLC v. Desai) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Great Lakes Group, LLC v. Desai, (D.R.I. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND ) THE GREAT LAKES GROUP, LLC, ) YUM YUM PIZZA, LLC, G&H ) ENTERPRISES, LLC, MOTOR CITY ) PIZZA, LLC, MOTOR CITY PIZZA II, ) LLC, and GABBI BAZZI, ) Plaintiffs, ) C.A. No. 19-465-JJM-LDA ) v. ) ) TEJAS V. DESAI and JAI V. DESAI, ) Defendants. )

ORDER This case involves a contract dispute over the purchase price of and money owed on five Little Caesar’s pizza restaurants located in Rhode Island. Two motions for summary judgment—Plaintiffs’ Modified Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 51) and Defendants’ Renewed Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 50)—are now before the Court. In their motion, Plaintiffs argue that there are no disputed facts such that this Court should order Defendants to pay $629,203.70 plus attorney’s fees. Defendants argue to the contrary—that disputes of

material fact persist such that a jury must serve as factfinder at a trial and that

attorney’s fees are not warranted.!

1 During the pendency of these summary judgment motions, Plaintiffs filed two new motions. The first was a Motion to Amend/Correct, seeking to 1) add several fraud claims against Defendants because they have since learned that they have limited assets from which to pay a judgment, 2) editing several paragraphs to reflect the restaurant purchase prices they allege were agreed to, and 8) to attach the Purchase and Sales Agreements reflecting those prices. ECF No. 58. They also

I. FACTS Stores 1-4 Plaintiffs have submitted evidence that the purchase price for Stores 1-4 was

$952,000. This assertion is supported by at least four collaborating documents: (1)

the four Purchase and Sales Agreements (“Purchase Agreements”) signed and dated

on October 18, 2015 show the total price of $951,847, ECF Nos. 51-3 through 51-6; (2)

the Bill of Sale for Stores 1-4 shows the sale price of $952,000, ECF No. 51:9; (8) the

Purchaser’s and Seller’s Statements from the closing with Chicago Title show the

purchase price of $952,000, ECF No. 51-8:? and (4) the Promissory Note (“Note”), executed because Defendants could not make the required payment of $402,000 at

the closing,’ also reflected the $952,000 purchase price. ECF No. 51-10. Defendants claim that the purchase price for Stores 1-4 was $815,684, as

evidenced by the Undated Purchase Agreements.* They claim that the Undated

Purchase Agreements are the operative purchase agreements because Plaintiffs originally attached them to their Complaint and only recently sought to amend the

moved to continue the trial date in light of the new claims. ECF No. 59. Defendants opposed both motions, but they did not address the amendments involving the purchase prices and the Note. ECF Nos. 60, 61. The Court granted both motions after a chambers conference. See September 27, 2023 Text Orders. 2 Defendant Tejas Desai admitted in his deposition that he signed both documents. 3 Defendants admit that they have no evidence that they paid $402,000 at the closing. 4 Plaintiffs attached the five Undated Purchase Agreements to the Complaint that were signed but not- hand dated. According to those documents prepared on or around September 30, 2015, Stores 1-4 were sold for $815,684. ECF Nos. 1-1 through 1-4. In their Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs attached Purchase Agreements (which they produced in February 2021 during discovery) that reflected the higher purchase price of $951,847. ECF No. 58-1.

Complaint to substitute the Purchase Agreements for the Undated Purchase

Agreements.5 See ECF No. 53-11. Defendants alleged in their counterclaims and

now urge the Court to disregard the Note claiming it is a forgery. Although Tejas Desai testified that he believed the Note was a forgery, his

actions at the time prove otherwise. Defendants made fourteen consecutive payments

on this Note (totaling $52,829.14). Mr. Tejas Desai admitted drafting at-least one

check himself. His bookkeeper prepared the remainder for his signature; she testified

that he instructed her to write “Note payment” on the memo line. Defendants

acknowledge that they sent Mr. Bazzi an amortization schedule laying out the Note

- payments and due dates—with the exact sums for which they wrote checks. ECF

No. 51-11; see also ECF No. 52-1 at p.8. Plaintiffs reply that the Purchase Agreements are the operative documents.

They insist that the Undated Purchase Agreements were created during negotiations for the purchases and were. not the final versions—as evidenced by the lack of a

handwritten date on the signature pages. And they argue that all the

contemporaneous supporting documents support the undisputed fact that the total

purchase price for Stores 1-4 was $952,000. Store 5 Both parties agree that the original purchase price for Store 5 was $434,315. ECF No. 51-7. Defendants argue, however, that the price and payment method were

5 Plaintiffs’ previous counsel filed the Complaint with attachments; their current attorney does not know the history of why the Undated Purchase Agreements were filed with the Complaint.

amended such that the Defendants agreed to pay off a $298,000 loan that Plaintiffs

took out at Stearns Bank in full satisfaction of the sale. Defendants have produced

an Amended Purchase Agreement allegedly signed by all parties. The Amended

Agreement notes at the outset that it amends a Purchase Agreement dated

October 15, 2015. The Amended Purchase Agreement for Store 5 states:

1. Purchase Price: Section 2 of the Purchase Agreement shall be deleted in its entirety and replaced with the following: The purchase price for the Property shall be Two Hundred Ninety-Hight Thousand Dollars and Zero Cents ($298,000.00) (“Purchase Price”). The Buyers will assume the Seller’s monthly loan payment to Stearns Bank, contract number 001-2056161-001 (“Monthly Loan Payment”), The Buyers will not owe Seller any other payment for the purchase of Motor City Pizza II LLC, d/b/a Little Caesars Pizza (“Store 1780-0005”), except for assuming the Seller loan payment to Stearns Bank, contract number 001-2056161-001. The date for closing of the sale (“Closing Date”) shall take place no later than ninety (90) days from the execution of this Agreement. ECF No. 53°12. Plaintiffs note idiosyncrasies in the formatting of this Amended Purchase

Agreement, specifically that the signature page repeats the second numbered

paragraph on the second page, making it appear that the signature page was not a

part of the document. Substantively, the Plaintiffs cite an August 6, 2018 letter from

Plaintiffs’ attorney to argue that they did not renegotiate the price but merely allowed

Defendants to make the loan payments until they got their own financing in addition

to paying the amended $298,000 purchase price. ECF No. 53-14. That letter, sent

about three years after an Amended Purchase Agreement was allegedly executed, acknowledged that an amendment was executed on October 15, 2015, where “the

parties agreed to an amended price of $298,000 (‘Amended Purchase Price”) and

assumption of the loan payments to Stearns Bank (“monthly loan payment”). Jd®

Il. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Plaintiffs filed a fifteen-count Complaint against Defendants, alleging breach

of contract, promissory estoppel, and unjust enrichment for each store: Counts 1°5 for

breach of contract for Stores 1-5; Counts 6-10 for promissory estoppel related to the

sale of Stores 1-5; and Counts 11-15 for unjust enrichment related to the sales of

Stores 1-5. ECF No.1. Defendants answered the Complaint and filed affirmative

defenses and counterclaims, alleging that Mr. Bazzi forged their signatures on the

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