Woodland Manor III Associates v. McCleod, 89-2477 (2000)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 2, 2000
DocketC.A. No. 89-2477
StatusPublished

This text of Woodland Manor III Associates v. McCleod, 89-2477 (2000) (Woodland Manor III Associates v. McCleod, 89-2477 (2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodland Manor III Associates v. McCleod, 89-2477 (2000), (R.I. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

DECISION
This matter is before the Court on the September 28, 1994 Amended Complaint of Woodland Manor III Associates, L.P. (plaintiff). The plaintiff seeks monetary damages from Andrew McCleod, in his capacity as Director of the Department of Environmental Management (defendant),1 pursuant to the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution for the alleged temporary inverse condemnation of real property (property) arising from the defendant's actions regarding requirements for the issuance of a freshwater wetlands permit.

In 1974, Mapleroot Development Corporation (Mapleroot), a Rhode Island corporation, was the owner of an eighty-nine acre parcel of land located in the Town of Coventry, Rhode Island.2 Rocchio, Assalone, and Confreda entered into an agreement with Antonio L. Giordano (Giordano), a real estate developer and the principal of Consultants, Inc., a consulting business, to develop the real estate utilizing financing avenues associated with mortgage insurance programs from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Rocchio, Assalone, and Confreda also engaged the services of C.E. Maguire, an engineering firm, and Mast Construction, Inc., a general building contractor and a Giordano business entity, to assist in developing the real estate.3

In February 1974, Mapleroot filed with the defendant a Request for Freshwater Wetlands Applicability Determination (Request) proposing a Planned Unit Development (PUD), which was to include buildings of various uses to be combined as an integrated, cohesive whole [and] [a]lthough conceived ultimately to work together as a whole or unit, the buildings were to be constructed not concurrently but in phases. WoodlandManor III Associates v. Durfee, C.A. 89-2447, February 10, 1994, Gibney, J. The four phases were as follows: phase one, Woodland Manor I, an apartment complex; phase two, Woodland Manor II, a housing facility for the elderly; phase three, Coventry Health Center, a nursing home; and phase four, Woodland Manor III, a condominium complex. For financial and tax purposes many business entities were used in implementing each phase of the project. However, these various entities comprised the same individual persons and operated as coadunate components of the larger business enterprise. Id. Giordano testified that at the time relevant to this action the general partners of the plaintiff were Giordano, Rocchio, Assalone, and Confreda (collectively principals).4

In response to the Request and as part of the preliminary determination, Robert Rocchio, a project manager with C.E. Maguire, and Michael Pickering (Pickering), a wetland biologist with the defendant, conducted an on-site inspection of the real estate and flagged the wetland area in accordance with applicable regulations. In recording the measurements of the wetland line, as established by the flags, on a contour map of the area, Robert Rocchio and Pickering concluded that the wetland line was mostly located along the 247.5 foot contour line, with some flagged points above and some flagged points below this contour line. Robert Rocchio and Pickering agreed that the 247.5 foot contour line would delineate the wetland area and establish the limit of disturbance for construction of the PUD. Attached to this Request [and] filed in accordance with this procedure was a site plan prepared by C.E. Maguire. . . . In response to this [R]equest the [defendant] sent [Mapleroot] a letter dated June 17, 1974 (the 1974 letter) which stated in part that:

Provided there is no construction or regrading below the [2]47.5 foot contour line as shown on the above-referenced plan and that final grading and drainage plans and computations are submitted for review and approval of the Department prior to start of construction, it is our conclusion that the Fresh Water Wetlands Act does not, at this time, appear applicable to this proposal.

Id. This 1974 site plan was not proffered at the instant trial as neither Giordano nor the defendant had a copy in their records. However, a 1975 site plan was submitted and Robert Rocchio identified the 247.5 contour line on this site plan as the wetland line that he and Pickering had delineated.

After receiving this letter from the defendant, Giordano, as the primary developer and as a representative of the other principals via Consultants, Inc. and Mast Construction, Inc., presented the project to the various state and town regulatory agencies whose approval would be needed for the project to move forward with the finalizing of architectural designs and financing proposals.5 For example, Giordano received approval from the Department of Health for the construction and operation of a 3.5 mile forced main sewer line and a sewerage pumping station to transport the sewerage generated from the PUD to the Town of West Warwick sewerage treatment facility.6 Giordano also petitioned the Town of Coventry Town Council, which voted to amend the zoning ordinance and approve the PUT) design.

For phases one, two and three of the PUD, the defendant did not require Mapleroot to obtain a freshwater wetland permit by making a formal application. In arranging the financing and HUD mortgage insurance, Giordano and the other principals, under the trade name Woodland Manor Associates, would apply to HUD for mortgage financing insurance under the appropriate loan program associated with each phase.7 Giordano testified that after Woodland Manor Associates received the final commitment letter from HUD, the principals would form a limited partnership, comprised of the general partners Giordano, Rocchio, Assalone, and Confreda, to own, develop, and operate that particular phase of the PUD. Giordano testified that he would form this limited partnership at the HUD real estate closing wherein Mapleroot would transfer title of the requisite real property and assign all contract rights and liabilities related to the development of that particular phase of the PUD to this limited partnership. Giordano also testified that the principals utilized the limited partnership business form to generate personal income from the selling of certain tax benefits, such as the tax losses generated by the use of accelerated depreciation, available to real estate owners at that time pursuant to the federal tax code. Giordano testified that the limited partnership would sell, or syndicate, these tax benefits to investors seeking to purchase tax losses and that the proceeds from this syndication would go directly in [the general partners] bank accounts. Another benefit of the limited partnership form is that the principals could syndicate the tax losses without losing majority ownership in the real estate or operational control of the development, as the limited partners were required to maintain passive involvement in the business operations of the limited partnership in order to receive the tax benefits. After the closing, the limited partnership would own the real property and would maintain responsibility for constructing and operating the phase. As required by the HUD approval, Mast Construction, Inc. would then construct each phase.

In addition to the individual development cost of each phase, Giordano testified that each limited partnership was apportioned a share of the total sunk infrastructure cost associated with the entire PUD.

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Bluebook (online)
Woodland Manor III Associates v. McCleod, 89-2477 (2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodland-manor-iii-associates-v-mccleod-89-2477-2000-risuperct-2000.