Tierney v. Javaid

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 2018
DocketA147221
StatusPublished

This text of Tierney v. Javaid (Tierney v. Javaid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tierney v. Javaid, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 5/31/18 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

JOSEPH TIERNEY et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A147221 v. NASIR JAVAID et al., (City & County of San Francisco Super. Ct. No. CGC-13-531997) Defendants and Respondents.

This case arises out of a failed real estate purchase by appellant Joseph Tierney from respondents, husband and wife, Nasir Javaid and Dejauna Joseph, the owners of the real property at 376 Castro Street in San Francisco (Property). Tierney contracted with Nasir and Dejauna in 2004 to purchase the Property, where the couple ran a gas station, so he could build a condominium project. As a condition of closing the deal, however, he had to first obtain the necessary “Entitlements” for development from the City and County of San Francisco (City). The entitlement process was complicated and involved. It ended up taking Tierney eight years—until 2012—to secure the conditional use permit authorizing him to demolish the gas station and construct the residential units. At that point, however, Nasir refused to sell, asserting their deal had expired and Tierney had failed to perform on time. In 2014, Tierney and 376 Castro Street, LLC (collectively Tierney) sued Nasir, Dejauna, and their business Naz Auto Services (collectively the Naz Parties). Two causes of action were tried to the jury—breach of contract (specific performance) to

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts II.B, III, and IV.

1 compel sale of the Property and quantum meruit for Tierney to recover costs for work performed at a separate gas station Nasir owned in Mountain View. On the breach of contact claim, the trial court found the jury hopelessly deadlocked and declared a mistrial. At Tierney’s request, the court decided that claim in a statement of decision. It found Tierney failed to perform his contractual obligations and was not entitled to specific performance. But the jury reached a verdict in Tierney’s favor on the quantum meruit claim, awarding him $156,000 as the reasonable cost of work he did at Nasir’s Mountain View gas station. The court vacated this verdict because Tierney had not produced a certificate of licensure to show his compliance with Business and Professions Code section 7031. The trial court thus entered judgment in favor of the Naz Parties and awarded them attorneys’ fees, costs, and other expenses. We affirm in part and reverse in part. In the published portion of this opinion, we conclude Tierney’s election to have the trial court decide his specific performance claim waived any claims of error he had based on the jury trial proceedings leading up to and including the mistrial declaration. We also conclude there was substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding that Tierney failed to perform his part of the contract by not timely paying the purchase price after securing the Entitlements, and thus, he was properly denied specific performance. However, we reverse the trial court’s order granting judgment notwithstanding the verdict on Tierney’s quantum meruit claim. We also conclude the court erred in awarding the Naz Parties $96,233.12 to in non-statutory costs. In all other respects, we affirm the attorneys’ fees and costs award. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The Parties and the Property In 2004, Nasir and Dejauna bought the Property and gas station for $2.75 million. The following year, Tierney, a general contractor and real estate developer who wanted to build condominiums on the site, offered to purchase the Property.

2 The Purchase and Sale Agreement The parties executed a non-binding letter of intent summarizing the terms and conditions for Tierney’s purchase. Their deal was memorialized in a purchase and sale agreement dated August 20, 2004 (“PSA”). The PSA required the purchase price of $3,434,000 be paid to Nasir and Dejauna in two stages. In the “First Closing,” Tierney had to pay 10% of the price, or $340,000, by August 23, 2004, for a 10% ownership of the Property as a tenant in common. In the “Second Closing,” Tierney had to pay the $3,094,000 balance of the purchase price, to obtain 100% ownership. Section 5(a) of the PSA set forth two conditions precedent to the second closing. First, Nasir and Dejauna had to satisfy the “ARCO Condition,” which required them to secure a quitclaim deed from the Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO), the gas station’s historic supplier, to release any interest ARCO potentially had in the Property. Second, Tierney had to obtain “all permits, approvals and other entitlements required by the [City] with respect to the construction and development of at least [22] residential units,” which the PSA defined as the “Entitlements.” The Entitlements did not include “ministerial building permits.” If either condition was unfulfilled by August 31, 2005—defined in the PSA as “the Entitlement Deadline”—Tierney could reclaim his initial $340,000 payment (minus $50,000) upon relinquishing his 10% interest in the Property. Alternatively, Tierney could “retain [his] 10% tenancy in common interest in the Property without proceeding to the Second Closing,” and Nasir and Dejauna would keep the initial $340,000 payment. Section 5(b) of the PSA obligated Tierney to “proceed in good faith to attempt to obtain the Entitlements” but did not obligate him “to pay extraordinary application fees or accept any particular restriction on the proposed project.” This subsection also made Tierney responsible for clearing the ARCO Condition to the extent Nasir and Dejauna wanted him to help.

3 If the second closing conditions were fulfilled, Section 8(d)1 of the PSA required Tierney to pay off the balance of the purchase price—$3,094,000—“on or before the date (30) days after both (i) [Tierney] obtained the Entitlements, and (ii) the ARCO condition has been satisfied. . . . Time is of the essence of this deadline.” The second closing was “expressly subject to the satisfaction of the conditions set forth in Section 5.” The PSA reflected “the entire agreement between the parties” and could not “be modified in any manner except by an instrument in writing executed by the parties.” The Process to Secure Entitlements Tierney paid Nasir and Dejauna $340,000 in August 2004 and satisfied the first closing. To secure the Entitlements, Tierney assembled a development team, which included a “permit expediter” to work as a liaison with the City to move the project through the entitlement process, a project designer, and a land use attorney. Tierney’s land use attorney described the process for securing a conditional use permit (CUP) from the City as “extraordinarily difficult.” The length of a given project’s entitlement process varies and cannot be predicted; the process can go anywhere from two years to 10 years. A significant portion of the time is taken up by the City’s Planning Department’s (Planning) review processes. The project’s entitlement phase began in September 2004 when Tierney submitted an environmental review application to Planning. In August 2005, the project was assigned an environmental planner. In November 2005, Tierney filed the conditional use application for demolition of the gas station and construction of residential units on the Property. During the entitlement process, the project encountered several difficulties, including two separate lawsuits. In November 2005, Nasir and Dejauna filed a partition action against Tierney alleging Tierney breached the PSA because he had failed to obtain the Entitlements by August 31, 2005. Since Tierney was a 10% owner of the Property,

1 The PSA contained two sections labelled number 8. This refers to the first Section 8, headed “Second Closing.”

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Tierney v. Javaid, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tierney-v-javaid-calctapp-2018.