William J. Davis, Inc. v. The Tuxedo LLC and Tuxedo Tenants Association, Inc.

124 A.3d 612
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 23, 2015
Docket14-CV-59
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 124 A.3d 612 (William J. Davis, Inc. v. The Tuxedo LLC and Tuxedo Tenants Association, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William J. Davis, Inc. v. The Tuxedo LLC and Tuxedo Tenants Association, Inc., 124 A.3d 612 (D.C. 2015).

Opinion

FERREN, Senior Judge:

This appeal invites us to interpret and apply the Tenants’ Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA), 1 which authorizes an organization of tenants, under prescribed conditions, to purchase their building even though another party, such as a land developer, had already contracted to do so. In this case, a developer, appellant William J. Davis, Inc. (Davis), seeks reversal of the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the appellee, Tuxedo Tenants Association, Inc. (TA) — a judgment allowing TA, instead of Davis, to purchase the apartment building where TA’s members live. Davis contends that the trial court erred in several respects when it concluded that the purchase agreement between TA and The Tuxedo LLC (Seller), hereafter the, “tenant contract,” 2 satisfied TOPA, and thus enjoyed priority over an earlier “third-party contract” entered into between Davis and the Seller for purchase of ‘ the same building. 3 ' Contrary to the trial court, we agree with Davis that TA and the Seller failed to settle — or extend negotiations, as required by TOPA — before expiration of the settlement date contained in the tenant contract.. Accordingly, the tenant contract lapsed. The trial court therefore erred in granting summary judgment for TA and denying summary judgment for Davis. We must reverse;

I. Facts and Proceedings

This dispute concerns the intended sale of a forty-two unit residential property on T Street, Northwest. On July 15, 2011, Davis entered into-the third-party contract .with the Seller to purchase the property for $7,650,000. On July 26, 2011, as re *615 quired by TOPA, 4 the Seller mailed materials to all the tenants describing the third-party contract with Davis and explaining the tenants’ opportunity under TOPA to nullify the Davis deal and purchase the apartment building themselves. Next, as a prerequisite to the exercise of tenant rights under TOPA, the tenants formed TA, a nonprofit corporation, to negotiate and accomplish their acquisition. The Seller learned of TA’s interest in purchas- ■ ing the property on August 30, 2011.

The record does not document the ensuing negotiations. However, on January 8, 2012, TA submitted a contract to the Seller that matched the material terms of the third-party contract, 5 including price, and established a settlement date “as provided in”. TOPA. 6 The Seller, signed the tenant contract on January 12, 2012. TA then proceeded to engage EagleBank in an effort to finance the purchase. On May 8, 2012, EagleBank informed TA that ■ its mortgage application was under consideration, and that the bank would render a decision “no- later than September 10, 2012.” TA forwarded this letter to the Seller, which had the effect, of extending the time-before settlement an additional 120 days, 7 and setting the settlement date for September 10, 2012, or 240 days after the tenant contract was executed. The record does not reflect any further activity between TA and the Seller between May 8 and September 6, 2012, four days before the schéduled settlement.

On September 6,' Eric Rome, TA’s counsel, emailed Richard Luchs, counsel for the Seller, to convey TA’s refusal to close under the terms of the tenant contract. Specifically, Rome wrote “that the TA cannot and will not close under its contract.” Rome alleged that the Seller had “violated TOPA in at least (but not limited to)” four respects, including a purchase price that “far exceeded] the market value of the property” 8 and a seller-financing option with terms that were'“not reasonably acceptable” to TA. 9 The email went on *616 to state that TA was willing to “discuss the Seller’s needs in good faith and to attempt to arrive at an accommodation” but reiterated that TA would not close under the contract. Rome ended by stating that TA remained hopeful that it would hear from the Seller “on a more productive note.”

The following day, September 7, Luchs responded by email and denied Rome’s allegations, asserting that “the seller has operated in good faith throughout this transaction.” Luchs informed Rome that the contents of Rome’s message would be passed along to the Seller and would be discussed. 10 Luchs closed by stating that, as Rome was aware, Luchs would be away for the next week, and that he would “get back to [Rome] promptly following [his] return with a more formal response.” If Rome “fel[t] compelled to file suit before [he] retumfed],” added Luchs, “so be it.” Rome replied the same day that “[o]f course” TA would wait for the seller’s counsel to return, because “dialogue” is preferable to litigation. The September 10 settlement date came and passed without any further communication between the parties.

On October 1, 2012, Davis informed the Seller of its intent to exercise its rights as the third-party purchaser under the July 15, 2011, contract. Davis asserted that TA had failed to close on the property within the 240 days authorized by TOPA, and insisted that Davis’s contract had therefore been restored to its priority position. No further communication between Davis and the Seller can be found in the record, but the record contains additional correspondence between TA and the Seller evidencing continued negotiation over the property.

The first communication after the missed settlement date was an email from the Seller on September 21, 2012, asking TA to “put everything on hold” because the Seller “need[ed] to further consult with others before going forward.” Almost a month later, on October 17, 2012, Luchs emailed Rome with a proposal by the Seller “to move forward on this transaction.” The revised proposal included a new price of $4,350,000, reflecting a reduction of $3,300,000 from the price agreed to in the January tenant contract. TA accepted the Seller’s proposal with minor revisions on November 2, 2012. The revised agreement was characterized as a “contract amendment” that would “be made effective nunc pro tunc to the date before the TOPA period expired.” Settlement was to be deferred, however, until the trial court resolved a declaratory judgment action, to be filed promptly by the Seller, to determine whether TA or Davis had the right to purchase the T Street property.

After the Seller filed suit, TA counterclaimed against the Seller and cross-claimed against Davis. Davis responded in kind, counterclaiming against the Seller and cross-claiming against TA. In dueling motions for summary judgment, both Davis and TA sought declarations of their contractual priority and specific performance on their respective contracts.

The trial court granted TA’s motion for summary judgment based on the following findings and conclusions: (1) TA had standing to sue and be sued even though its corporate registration had been admin *617

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 A.3d 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-j-davis-inc-v-the-tuxedo-llc-and-tuxedo-tenants-association-dc-2015.