Veeral Bhoot, D.O. v. 701-709 NE Woods Chapel Road, LLC

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 2024
DocketWD86805
StatusPublished

This text of Veeral Bhoot, D.O. v. 701-709 NE Woods Chapel Road, LLC (Veeral Bhoot, D.O. v. 701-709 NE Woods Chapel Road, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veeral Bhoot, D.O. v. 701-709 NE Woods Chapel Road, LLC, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

VEERAL BHOOT, D.O., ET AL., ) ) Appellants/Appellant-Respondent, ) WD86805 consolidated with ) WD86825 and WD86860 V. ) ) OPINION FILED: 701-709 NE WOODS CHAPEL ) DECEMBER 17, 2024 ROAD, LLC, ET AL., ) ) Respondent/Respondents-Appellants. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri The Honorable James F. Kanatzar, Judge

Before Division One: Lisa White Hardwick, Presiding Judge, Cynthia L. Martin, Judge and Janet Sutton, Judge

Veeral Bhoot ("Bhoot"), VSUJ Woods Chapel, LLC ("VSUJ"), and Diamond

Diagnostic Center, LLC ("Diamond Diagnostic") (collectively "Appellants") appeal, and

701-709 NE Woods Chapel Road, LLC ("701-709 Woods Chapel") and Paramjeet

Sabharwal ("Sabharwal") (collectively "Cross-Appellants") cross-appeal, from the trial

court's final judgment following two bench trials and one jury trial that collectively

resolved five claims that the Appellants alleged against the Cross-Appellants relating to

contracts for the sale of real estate and medical equipment. The Appellants assert that the

trial court committed error in finding that the Appellants were not entitled to specific

performance of the contracts and in awarding damages to one of the Appellants for lost rental revenues from only two of four leases entered into in anticipation of purchasing

real estate owned by the Cross-Appellants. The Cross-Appellants challenge the trial

court's award of attorney fees and expenses to one of the Appellants. Finding no error,

we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background1

In early 2021, Bhoot, a licensed interventional radiologist and experienced

commercial real estate investor, identified a building located at 701-709 Northeast Woods

Chapel Road in Lee's Summit, Missouri ("Property") that he believed would be an ideal

location to establish a medical practice along with eleven other partners. At the time, the

Property was owned by 701-709 Woods Chapel, a limited liability company of which

Sabharwal is a member. The Property was not listed for sale, so Bhoot contacted

Sabharwal to inquire whether 701-709 Woods Chapel would be willing to sell the

Property. Bhoot and 701-709 Woods Chapel, via Sabharwal, began negotiations for the

sale of the Property and the used medical equipment located therein.

On April 21, 2021, 701-709 Woods Chapel and Bhoot entered a commercial real

estate sales contract ("Real Estate Contract") where 701-709 Woods Chapel agreed to sell

the Property to Bhoot for $1.621 million. The Real Estate Contract provided that Bhoot

would have forty-five days to inspect the physical condition of the Property and allowed

for a sixty-day period for Bhoot to perform "due diligence . . . for the purpose of

1 We view the facts in the light most favorable to the fact-finder's decision, whether the case was tried by the court or by a jury. See Coleman v. Hartman, 626 S.W.3d 289, 292 n.1 (Mo. App. W.D. 2021) (bench trial); Wynn v. BNSF Ry. Co., 588 S.W.3d 907, 909 n.2 (Mo. App. W.D. 2019) (jury trial). 2 exploring and obtaining approval of a [c]orporate [p]artner for the intended purpose of

the Property." The Real Estate Contract provided that "time and exact performance are of

the essence under this Contract." The Real Estate Contract further provided that, if either

Bhoot or 701-709 Woods Chapel were in default, the non-defaulting party may choose to

"specifically enforce this Contract and recover damages suffered . . . as a result of the

delay in the sale [or acquisition] of the Property." The Real Estate Contract provided that

closing would occur on July 15, 2021, unless Bhoot and 701-709 Woods Chapel agreed

to close earlier.

The Real Estate Contract acknowledged that 701-709 Woods Chapel would also

be selling an x-ray machine and CT scanner to Bhoot but that those pieces of equipment

would be the subject of the used medical equipment purchase agreement contract, and

that, "[i]f for some reason [Bhoot] elects not to purchase the medical equipment in the

contract, then that will cancel this real estate contract." On the same day the Real Estate

Contract was executed, 701-709 Woods Chapel and Veeral Bhoot DO, LLC ("Bhoot

LLC") entered into a used medical equipment purchase agreement ("Medical Equipment

Contract"). The Medical Equipment Contract provided that 701-709 Woods Chapel

would sell a CT scanner and an x-ray machine located at the Property ("medical

equipment") to Bhoot LLC for $500,000. Like the Real Estate Contract, the Medical

Equipment Contract provided a sixty-day due diligence period for Bhoot LLC to

"perform any tests or operational procedures necessary to assure . . . that the Equipment

is in working condition at the time of purchase."

3 During the course of inspections of the Property and the medical equipment,

several deficiencies were discovered. Inspections of the Property revealed the presence

of mold and the absence of a sprinkler system, the installation of which was necessary for

the Property to be functional for Bhoot's intended use. Inspections of the medical

equipment revealed that the x-ray machine was missing plates necessary for its

operations. On June 14, 2021, before the due diligence period ended, Bhoot sent

Sabharwal an email outlining the deficiencies found during the inspections of the

Property and the medical equipment and then closed the email as follows: "We cannot

take on financial burdens on these matters solely--and if the reply is not collaborative--

then unfortunately, we will need to terminate this argument this week. Hopefully that

doesn't happen, but there are too many red-flags." Sabharwal responded via email later

that day as follows:

1. The x-ray equipment comes with one . . . plate which will be provided at the time of closing.

2. CT scan doesn't come with the injector[, and] it has to be purchased separately. We never bought that.

3. The contract is for the building to be as is. [The c]ity doesn't require a sprinkler system for the purposes occupancy was given or currently present. If you need the sprinkler system for your needs th[e]n you will have to get it installed.

4. Mold I can give the discount even though the contract says as is.

As is building means I am not fixing anything. Equipment has been tested and is functional except [x-]ray which we will get it functional prior to closing.

The parties amended the Real Estate Contract on June 18, 2021 ("Amendment to the Real

Estate Contract"). The Amendment to the Real Estate Contract provided that 701-709

4 Woods Chapel agreed to provide one plate for the x-ray machine in order for the machine

to be functional at the time of closing and agreed to give Bhoot a $100,000 credit at

closing in consideration of defects found in the Property, including the presence of mold

and the absence of a sprinkler system.

On June 19, 2021, Bhoot LLC assigned its rights, interests, and obligations set

forth in the Medical Equipment Contract to Diamond Diagnostic. Bhoot testified that

Diamond Diagnostic was formed to operate the imaging aspect of the medical practice

Bhoot sought to establish on the Property with his business partners.

On June 21, 2021, Bhoot sent a series of emails to Sabharwal, the real estate

broker representing 701-709 Woods Chapel, an employee of the bank providing

financing for the purchase of the Property, and an attorney representing the interests of

Bhoot.

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