Williams Real Estate Co. v. CC&F Lincoln Street LLC

797 N.E.2d 496, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 714, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1122
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 22, 2003
DocketNo. 01-P-1724
StatusPublished

This text of 797 N.E.2d 496 (Williams Real Estate Co. v. CC&F Lincoln Street LLC) 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
Williams Real Estate Co. v. CC&F Lincoln Street LLC, 797 N.E.2d 496, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 714, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1122 (Mass. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Cohen, J.

Before us is a dispute between the plaintiff, Williams Real Estate Co., Inc. (Williams), a real estate brokerage firm, and the defendant CC&F Lincoln Street LLC (CC&F), a commercial landowner, over a commission due under a written agreement. A judge of the Superior Court accepted Williams’s interpretation of the agreement and granted its motion for summary judgment. Judgment entered for Williams, and CC&F [715]*715appealed. We reverse and remand the case for further proceedings.

Background. We summarize the evidence contained in the summary judgment record, viewing it, as we must, in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See Augat, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 410 Mass. 117, 120 (1991).

Williams was one of three brokers involved in facilitating a deal between CC&F, as landlord, and Globix Coiporation (Globix), as tenant, for the rental of a large commercial building located at 176 Lincoln Street in the Brighton section of Boston. Globix, a New York-based company, had retained Williams to locate rental space for its Internet hosting and connectivity business. Williams was based in New York but also maintained a corporate real estate license in Massachusetts.

Williams contacted a Massachusetts brokerage firm, Meredith & Grew, Inc., and the two companies reviewed available opportunities with Globix. When Globix became interested in CC&F’s Lincoln Street property, Meredith & Grew contacted CC&F’s broker, CB Richard Ellis — N.E. Partners, L.P. (Ellis). Negotiations in which all three brokers participated culminated in Globix and CC&F executing a lease on May 10, 2000.

Meanwhile, the brokers came to an understanding about their respective commissions. These arrangements were formalized when CC&F entered into separate, direct agreements with both Williams and Meredith & Grew, in addition to its “listing broker” agreement with Ellis.

The agreement between Williams and CC&F was signed on May 31, 2000, twenty-one days after CC&F and Globix executed the lease. This agreement provided that CC&F would pay Williams a commission on the following terms:

“The brokerage commission will be calculated and payable as follows if the Lease is executed by both the Landlord and Tenant thereunder, but not otherwise (regardless of the reason why any such Lease is not executed):
[$4.66 for each of the approximately 443,917 gross square feet of leased space.]

[716]*716“Timing for payments:

“Upon full execution and delivery of a Lease which is unconditionally binding on and enforceable against Landlord and Tenant: 50%
“Upon Tenant commencing rental payments for the First Floor of the Building: 16 2/s%
“Upon Tenant commencing rental payments for the Second Floor of the Building: 16 2/s%
“Upon Tenant commencing rental payments for the Third Floor of the Building: 16 2/s%”

On June 7, 2000, the lease already having been signed, CC&F paid Williams $1,034,326.60, which was fifty percent of the total amount of Williams’s commission. At that time, Williams employee Glenn Roberts signed a receipt prepared by CC&F that stated that “[t]he remaining payments will be due and payable upon occupancy of each floor by the tenant, Globix Corporation.”

In the summer and fall of 2000, as CC&F worked on the extensive build-out required of it under the lease, the financial outlook for Internet-related businesses deteriorated suddenly, and Globix found it necessary to scale back its expansion plans. What was to be a lucrative arrangement for CC&F (Globix was to pay rent of over $14 million per year for fifteen years) never came to pass. Fearing that Globix would resort to bankruptcy unless it was relieved of its leasehold obligations, CC&F agreed to a termination agreement, pursuant to which Globix used its security deposit to make a payment of approximately $14 million to CC&F in return for the termination of the lease.2 This occurred only seven months after the lease was signed. Globix never took possession of any part of the Lincoln Street building and never paid any rent.

Notwithstanding this turn of events, Williams maintained that it was entitled to the remaining fifty percent of its commission, interpreting its agreement with CC&F to mean that it had an unconditional right to receive its entire commission once the [717]*717parties executed the lease. According to Williams, the provisions under the heading “Timing for Payments” merely established the dates that CC&F would be required to transmit portions of the commission and did not make those payments conditional.3

Accepting this construction of the agreement, and concluding, too, that there was no impediment to Williams suing for its commission even though the Williams employee involved in the Globix deal, Glenn Roberts, was not personally licensed in Massachusetts, a Superior Court judge granted Williams’s motian for summary judgment.

Discussion. We begin with the threshold question of Wilhams’s right to sue.

General Laws c. 112, § 87RR, as inserted by St. 1957, c. 726, § 2, provides, in relevant part:

“[N]o person shall recover in any suit or action in the courts of the commonwealth for compensation for services as a broker performed within the commonwealth unless he was a duly licensed broker at the time such services were performed . . . .”

CC&F argues that this section bars Williams from recovering in a Massachusetts court a commission generated by the services of Roberts, who was not licensed in Massachusetts.4

The Superior Court judge rejected this argument, because Williams was acting solely on behalf of New York-based Globix and was “working through” a cooperating Massachusetts broker, Meredith & Grew. The judge therefore determined that Williams was not “practicing real estate” in Massachusetts and that neither Williams nor Roberts was required to be licensed in Massachusetts in order to share in the commission.

Even if we were inclined to conclude, as have some courts,5 that an out-of-State broker need not comply with local real estate licensure requirements as long as the out-of-State broker [718]*718works through a cooperating local broker, the facts do not support the application of such a rule to this case as matter of law. There is evidence in the summary judgment record that Roberts played a pivotal role in the negotiations. He was described in deposition testimony as “a substantial architect of the lease,” involved “in all key meetings and negotiations.” At many of these meetings, which were held in Massachusetts, Meredith & Grew’s representative was not even in attendance. Thus, even if it were appropriate for us to recognize a cooperating broker exception to the Massachusetts licensing statutes,6 Williams would not be entitled to summary judgment on the licensing issue on the ground that it had not independently practiced real estate in the Commonwealth.

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Bluebook (online)
797 N.E.2d 496, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 714, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-real-estate-co-v-ccf-lincoln-street-llc-massappct-2003.