Turner v. Community Homeowner's Ass'n

816 N.E.2d 537, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 319
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 21, 2004
DocketNo. 02-P-1328
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 816 N.E.2d 537 (Turner v. Community Homeowner's Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Community Homeowner's Ass'n, 816 N.E.2d 537, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 319 (Mass. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Perretta, J.

Orrina Turner brought this action against Community Homeowner’s Association, Inc. (Community), seeking [320]*320an order declaring that she had an enforceable lease agreement with Community which gave her an option to purchase the leased property. On cross motions for summary judgment, the judge ruled that, because Turner was indisputably in breach of any existing lease agreement, she had no enforceable right to purchase the property. She denied Turner’s motion and granted that of Community. On Turner’s appeal, we conclude that whether Turner lost any right to exercise the option to purchase provided for in the lease agreement turns on disputed questions of fact and reverse the judgment.

1. The undisputed background facts. Attempting to stave off eviction from her home after the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) (FNMA) foreclosed the mortgage on her property, Turner sought help from Community, a nonprofit organization that assists people with unfavorable credit histories in maintaining ownership of their homes. She and Community settled on a plan designed to allow her to remain in her home, repair her credit rating, and regain ownership of her property: Community would purchase the property from Fannie Mae and then enter into a lease agreement with Turner, the terms of which would include a provision affording her an option to purchase the property.

Consistent with this strategy, Community purchased the property in question from FNMA on or about June 18, 1997, for $65,000. The purchase was financed by a loan from Crossland Mortgage Corporation (Crossland) in the amount of $71,437.2 The loan was secured by a mortgage on the property. In addition, Turner paid Community $5,000 to be used with respect to its purchase of the property.3 After Community purchased the property from FNMA, Turner continued to reside in her home [321]*321as Community’s tenant. Sometime thereafter, however, the landlord-tenant relationship appears to have soured.

On December 14, 1999, Community served Turner with a notice to quit for failure to pay rent for the months of July through December of that year, and in January, 2000, brought a summary process action in the Boston Housing Court. Turner responded by commencing this suit in Superior Court in May, 2000, against Community, seeking a declaration of her rights with respect to the property, offering to pay the purchase price of her property, and asking that Community be ordered to perform its obligation under the option to purchase provisions of its agreement with her.

While the Superior Court action was pending, Turner and Community entered into an agreement for judgment, dated June 12, 2000, in Community’s action for summary process. Their agreement was entered as an order of the Housing Court on that action.

2. The documentary evidence. In support of her motion, Turner offered two versions of a document entitled “Agreement for Lease with Purchase Option” as evidence of her agreement with Community.4 Both of these documents, respectively dated May 30, 1997, and July 1, 1997, were prepared and signed by Community but not by Turner. Because the terms and language of these two documents are substantially similar, we refer to them collectively as the “agreement” while noting any dissimilarities.

The terms of the agreement allowed Turner to lease the property with an option to purchase it by her assumption of Community’s mortgage.5 The agreement specified that Turner was to pay Community rent, on the first day of each month, [322]*322until her assumption of Crossland’s mortgage and her exercise of the purchase option.6

Section 3(f) of the May 30 version of the agreement provides that Turner “understands and agrees that [her] failure to . . . make required payments on time to [Community] will, at [Community’s] sole and exclusive option, terminate th[e] Lease, Option Period, and the Purchase Option.”7 This section of the agreement also entitled Turner to written notice of “potential or actual deficiencies or default” and a thirty-day opportunity to cure, after which Community would have the right to terminate the entire agreement. Also, section 3(n) provides that “ [notwithstanding subsection (m) above [provision concerning eviction upon termination of the agreement] and without limiting [Community’s] options with respect to occupancy, [Community] agrees that [Turner] may elect to purchase the property by tendering all sums necessary to satisfy the mortgage, outstanding title liens, and [Community’s] expenses to date, within forty-five (45) days after receipt of the above [subsection l] notice.”

While Turner’s action in the Superior Court was pending, and as noted in part one of this opinion, supra, Turner and Community stipulated to and agreed upon the terms of a judgment, [323]*323dated June 12, 2000, in Community’s summary process action in the Housing Court. According to the terms of their agreement for judgment, Community was entitled to possession of the premises and damages in the amount of $6,725.16, Turner could continue to occupy the premises so long as she made timely rental payments, further summary process proceedings were to be stayed pending the outcome of Turner’s action in the Superior Court and, at the conclusion of the Superior Court action, either she or Community could move to modify or vacate their agreement for judgment for purposes of resolving certain issues which they therein reserved for further litigation, including the issue of possession.

3. The motions for summary judgment. Based on her review of the various documents attached to the motions, the Superior Court judge denied Turner’s motion on the stated basis that “multiple partially signed agreements exist” raising factual questions as to the existence and terms of any enforceable contract between the parties. In ruling on Community’s motion, the judge took the facts in the light most favorable to Turner, construed the agreement as a single, integrated agreement providing for an option to purchase “contingent upon compliance” with the terms of the lease, determined that the agreement for judgment entered in the Housing Court precluded Turner from litigating in the present action the issue of any breach by her of any binding agreement,8 and concluded that, because Turner was in breach of any agreement with Community that could be found to exist, Community was entitled to judgment on its motion.

4. The arguments on appeal. Turner argues that in ruling on the cross motions for summary judgment, the judge disregarded evidence showing that she had attempted to exercise her option to purchase prior to the events which gave rise to the summary process action, see note 9, infra, and failed to consider whether [324]*324Community had improperly rejected her exercise of her option to purchase.

Pointing to the fact that neither version of the agreement was signed by Turner, Community’s position is that there is nothing to show the existence of a mutually assented to agreement as an operative instrument9 or that Turner had timely attempted to exercise any option to purchase the property pursuant to the terms of those “inoperative” agreements.10

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Bluebook (online)
816 N.E.2d 537, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-community-homeowners-assn-massappct-2004.