West Lansing Retail Development LLC v. Kris Krstovski

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 2023
Docket365181
StatusUnpublished

This text of West Lansing Retail Development LLC v. Kris Krstovski (West Lansing Retail Development LLC v. Kris Krstovski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Lansing Retail Development LLC v. Kris Krstovski, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

WEST LANSING RETAIL DEVELOPMENT, LLC, UNPUBLISHED November 9, 2023 Plaintiff-Counterdefendant-Appellant,

v No. 365181 Eaton Circuit Court KRIS KRSTOVSKI and K2 RETAIL LC No. 2022-000906-CB CONSTRUCTION SERVICES, INC.,

Defendants-Cross-Defendants- Appellees, and

UNIFIED GROUP, LLC,

Defendant-Counterplaintiff-Cross- Plaintiff-Appellee.

K2 RETAIL CONSTRUCTION SERVICES, INC.,

Plaintiff-Counterdefendant-Appellee,

v No. 365183 Eaton Circuit Court WEST LANSING RETAIL DEVELOPMENT, LLC, LC No. 2022-000907-CB

Defendant-Cross-Defendant- Appellant and

Defendant-Counterplaintiff-Cross- Plaintiff-Third-Party Plaintiff- Appellee,

-1- and

ROHR GASOLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.,

Defendant-Third-Party Defendant, and

KRIS KRSTOVSKI,

Third-Party Defendant-Appellee.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and JANSEN and RICK, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

The dissolution of business relationships can be complicated. This is especially true in large construction and development projects that involve interwoven corporations, investors, contractors, and subcontractors. Here, the entity formed to hold the real property for a large multi- use development stopped paying the general contractor, which was also the entity that initiated the project. No payment meant that the general contractor lacked liquid assets to purchase the real property in a receivership action and lost out to the property holder. The general contractor eventually won its battle, however, by filing a construction lien and securing a court order of subrogation after the property holder breached the purchase agreement with the landowner.

We are asked to overturn the subrogation order and order summary disposition in the land holder’s favor. However, we discern no error on the circuit court’s part and affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2019, Kris Krstovski, as “manager” of West Lansing Retail Development, LLC (WLRD), signed a purchase agreement with Unified Group, LLC (UG) to purchase a total of 207 acres in six phases through August 2023, on which he would develop Delta Crossings, a mixed- use development. Krstovski is also the managing partner of K2 Retail Construction Services, LLC (K2), which served as the general contractor for the development. Krstovski invited a handful of investors to join the project and the individuals created a hodgepodge of corporate entities connected to the development. WLRD remained the entity tasked with purchasing the property phases by dates set within the purchasing agreement. WLRD timely purchased Phases I and II and development of those phases was nearly complete when disputes arose among the investors. Although WLRD had yet to purchase the remaining phases, K2 had already made improvements that crossed parts of Phases III and IV, including installing a road, underground utilities, and a retention pond.

Between late 2021 and mid-2022, the individual investors, corporate entities, and subcontractors filed several lawsuits against each other in Oakland Circuit Court, some of which are still ongoing. In relevant part, the other investors accused Krstovski of mismanaging finances.

-2- Krstovski accused the others of wrongfully withholding payments for completed and ongoing construction and development. Only one of the Oakland County cases has made its way into the current record. In LIP West Lansing, LLC v Krstovski, Oakland Circuit Court Docket No. 2022- 193988-CB, the court appointed a receiver “to take possession, custody, and control of” K2-LIP JV West Lansing, LLC, West Lansing Retail Phase I, LLC, and West Lansing Retail Phase II, LLC “including their property and affairs,” which included the real property of Phases I and II but not Phases III through VI. Krstovski was ordered to “turn over” “all documents, books, records and computer files, computer equipment, software, management files, . . . and all passwords” “pertaining to the Receivership Property.” Krstovski complied.

The receiver auctioned off the receivership property. Krstovski (through K2) competed with WL Acquisitions (the successor of WLRD without Krstovski as a member) for the right to purchase. WL/WLRD entered the winning bid of $1,050,000; Krstovski offered $1 million plus an additional $1,200,000 credit bid that was rejected. The order of sale entered September 8, 2022. Three days later, K2 filed a claim of lien for $1,028,793.62 “for work relating to Phases III, IV and V of Delta Crossings,” to cover improvements that had been made to the land without remuneration. K2 cited September 9 as the its last day of work.

WL/WLRD was required to purchase an additional phase of the property by August 17, 2022. It missed that window. The purchase agreement created a 30-day grace period, but WL/WLRD missed that deadline as well. WL/WLRD indicated that it would not purchase the next phase with K2’s cloud on the title and demanded that UG clear it. UG refused and terminated the purchase agreement.

In the meantime, both WLRD and K2 filed the current lawsuits in the Eaton Circuit Court. In the case underlying Docket No. 365181, WLRD accused K2 of wrongfully inflating the amount of the construction lien to interfere with WLRD’s ability to perform under the purchase agreement. In the case underlying Docket No. 365183, K2 originally sought foreclosure of its construction lien against WLRD, UG, and a third defendant that is not party to this appeal. After UG terminated the purchase agreement with WLRD for nonpayment, K2 filed a motion “to subrogate WLRD and perform the Purchase Agreement with” UG pursuant to MCL 570.1107(4) of the Construction Lien Act, MCL 570.1101 et seq. (CLA). If granted, this would allow K2 an additional 30 days to purchase the next phase of the Delta Crossings development from UG.

MCL 570.1101(1) of the CLA grants contractors, subcontractors, suppliers, and laborers a construction lien against real property to which they have made improvements to secure payment for their work. The general method of recovery for nonpayment is foreclosure as provided in MCL 570.1101(3). The alternative remedy of subrogation and performance is provided in MCL 570.1101(4) as follows:

If the rights of a person contracting for an improvement as a land contract vendee or a lessee are forfeited, surrendered, or otherwise terminated, any lien claimant who has provided a notice of furnishing or is excused from providing a notice of furnishing under [MCL 570.1108, MCL 570.1108a, or MCL 570.1109] and who performs the covenants contained in the land contract or lease within 30 days after receiving actual notice of the forfeiture, surrender, or termination is subrogated to

-3- the rights of the contracting vendee or lessee as those rights existed immediately before the forfeiture, surrender, or termination. [Emphasis added.]

The Eaton Circuit Court took argument on the subrogation issue in November 2022. The court summarized the issues then before it as whether K2’s lien was valid and whether the purchase agreement was actually terminated. WLRD’s counsel agreed with this statement. The court determined that there remained a question of fact regarding when K2 actually stopped working— when a stop work order entered in May 2022 or on September 9, 2022 as claimed in the lien. The validity of the lien was “such a critical fact” that the questions of subrogation and WLRD’s responsive motion for summary disposition could not be decided without an evidentiary hearing. UG then argued that before the court could permit K2’s subrogation under the contract, it had to determine that the purchase agreement had been terminated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
West Lansing Retail Development LLC v. Kris Krstovski, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-lansing-retail-development-llc-v-kris-krstovski-michctapp-2023.