MEMORANDUM & ORDER
Plaintiff Edge Group WAICCS, LLC (“Edge Group”) commenced this lawsuit to seek specific performance of a contract for the sale of an interest in a limited liability company. The anticipated transaction would have involved a payment of $20 million by defendant Sapir Group LLC (“Sapir”) in exchange for a 50 percent interest in WAICCS Las Vegas 2 LLC, a limited liability company that was the sole member of another limited liability company, WAICCS Las Vegas 3 LLC. 1 WAICCS 3 in turn holds a 20.4 percent undivided ownership interest in a parcel of undeveloped real estate in Las Vegas, Nevada.
In responding to the complaint (as amended), defendant admitted that it had not proceeded with the purchase, as required under an option that it had exercised. It contended principally, however, that plaintiff was not entitled to specific performance and was limited to the receipt of one million dollars that Sapir had previously placed in an escrow account in compliance with the requirement of the amended Option Agreement into which Sapir had entered with plaintiff.
At the conclusion of discovery, both parties have moved for summary judgment. Sapir seeks, in substance, a determination that plaintiffs relief is limited to payment of the one million dollars now held in escrow, or, possibly, no payment at all because it has not proven or mitigated its damages. Plaintiff seeks entry of judg
For the reasons that follow, plaintiffs motion is granted in part and defendant’s motion is denied in its entirety.
A. Summary Judgment Standards
Before addressing the parties’ summary-judgment motions, we summarize the pertinent standards for assessing such a motion. The court may enter summary judgment only if it concludes that there is no genuine dispute as to the material facts and that, based on the undisputed facts, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see, e.g., Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of informing the court of the basis for its motion and identifying those portions of the “pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits” that demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see, e.g., Celotex, 477
U.S. at 323,
If the moving party carries its initial burden, the opposing party must then shoulder the burden of demonstrating a genuine issue of material fact.
See, e.g., Beard v. Banks,
If both sides move for summary judgment, the court must independently assess each motion. If either movant fails to demonstrate that the material facts are undisputed and dictate judgment for that party, then that party’s motion must be denied.
See, e.g., Krauss v. Oxford Health Plans, Inc.,
B. The Record Facts
Most of the pertinent facts are undisputed, although the inferences to be drawn from those facts are the subject of extensive, and often repetitive, briefing. We first summarize the evidence presented to us, indicating those factual contentions that seem to be disputed.
Plaintiff Edge Group is a limited liability company that engages in real estate investment and development in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Decl. of Reagan Silber in Supp. of Edge Group’s Mot. for Summ. J., executed June 26, 2009, ¶ 2). Edge Group and Credit Suisse Management LLC (“Credit Suisse”) are the sole members of WAICCS 2, with each of them owning a fifty-percent share of the company. (Id. at ¶ 4). Under the operating agreement for WAICCS 2, neither member may transfer its interest to a competitor without prior written consent of the other member. (Id. at ¶¶ 5-6; Decl. of Paul M. O’Connor III, Esq. in Supp. of Edge Group’s Mot. for Summ. J., executed June 26, 2009, Ex. 3 at f 10.02). WAICCS 2 is the sole member of WAICCS 3, a Delaware limited liability company that owns a 20.4 percent undivided interest, as a tenant-in-common, in a parcel of largely undeveloped real estate in Las Vegas. (Silber Decl. at ¶¶ 7-8). The intended development plan for the site involved the construction of a “several thousand room hotel and casino.... ” (Id. at ¶ 10). Under the terms of the tenancy-in-common agreement between WAICCS 3 and the co-owners of the property, WAICCS 3 was permitted to transfer a majority of its interest in the property only upon unanimous consent of the other owners, and was permitted to transfer up to 49 percent of its interest only to a non-competitor of the other owners, with a competitor being broadly defined as an entity that “engages in, or manages or directs Persons that engage in, a business which is identical or similar to, or in direct competition with, the business conducted by any of the Owners (or their Affiliates) at the time such Transfer anywhere in the United States.” (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 7 at § 7.1(a), (c); Silber Decl. at ¶¶ 11-12). For transfers that required the consent of the other owners, those owners possessed a right of first offer. (Id., Ex. 7 at § 7.2).
On November 5, 2007 Edge Group and Credit Suisse entered into a Call Option Agreement under which plaintiff granted Credit Suisse an option to purchase Edge Group’s interest in WAICCS 2 for the price of $20 million plus any amounts that Edge Group had contributed to the compa
To exercise the option, Credit Suisse was required to deliver to Edge Group a timely “Call Exercise Notice.” (Id., Ex. 1 at § 2.04). The Agreement also gave Credit Suisse the right, subject to certain conditions, to assign the option to another party. (Id., Ex. 1 at p. 2 & § 3.08). The apparent premise for this arrangement was the understanding that Credit Suisse would in fact undertake a search for an interested buyer and would then assign the option to that buyer. (Silber Decl. at ¶¶ 15-18).
The Call Option Agreement also contained a provision, in Article III, reciting that “[a]ll rights and remedies existing under this Agreement are cumulative to, and not exclusive of, any rights and remedies otherwise available.” (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 1 at § 3.10). The same article also contained an integration provision, stating that “[t]his Agreement constitutes the entire agreement of the parties hereto with respect to the subject matter hereof and supercedes all prior agreements and undertakings, both written and oral, between the parties with respect to the subject matter hereof.” (Id., Ex. 1 at § 3.07).
On December 17, 2007 Edge Group and Credit Suisse executed an Amendment of the Call Option Agreement. Under its terms, the Call Exercise Period was extended to February 15, 2008. (Id., Ex. 5 at ¶ 12 & Ex. 12 at p. 2).
Following the signing of the original Option Agreement, Credit Suisse undertook a search for a potential interested buyer, and found only one, the defendant Sapir Group. (Id., Ex. 4 at 29-31; Silber Decl. at ¶ 19). Accordingly, on February 15, 2008 — the then-current expiration date for the Option Agreement — Credit Suisse assigned its option to Sapir Group. (Silber Decl. at UK 21-22). At the same time, Edge Group, Credit Suisse and Sapir signed a Letter Amendment to Option Agreement, which extended the expiration date for exercising the option to May 1, 2008. (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 13 at 1).
This second amendment, in the form of a letter dated February 15, 2007 3 , stated that it constituted “a further amendment to the Option Agreement.” It recited that, pursuant to section 3.08 of that Option Agreement, Credit Suisse had assigned the option to Sapir. (Id., Ex. 13 at 1). It also contained language specifying that Sapir was to deposit one million dollars in an escrow account simultaneously with the execution of the Amendment. (Id., Ex. 13 at 2). The pertinent language governing the use of the escrowed funds reads as follows:
The parties acknowledge that the Escrow Fund represents a deposit toward the payment of the Purchase Price to be paid by Sapir (or its Sapir Permitted Designee) to the Edge Group as consideration for the sale of the. Edge Interest. In accordance with the terms of the Escrow Agreement, the Escrow Agent shall disburse and deliver the Escrow Fund by wire transfer of immediately available funds pursuant to joint written instructions delivered to the Escrow Agent by Sapir and the Edge Group. Each of Sapir and the Edge Group hereby agree that they shall execute anddeliver Joint Instructions to the Escrow Agent at such time, and with such instructions, so as to cause the Escrow Fund to be released to the Edge Group (i) if a Call Exercise Notice shall not have been delivered by Sapir (or its Sapir Permitted Designee) by the Expiration Date, promptly (and, in any event, within three Business Days) after the Expiration Date, (ii) if Sapir (or its Sapir Permitted Designee) shall have delivered a Call Exercise Notice, at the closing of the sale of the Edge Interest to Sapir (or its Sapir Permitted Designee) and credited towards the payment of the Purchase Price or (iii) if Sapir (or its Sapir Permitted Designee) shall have delivered a Call Exercise Notice but shall have failed to consummate the Closing, on the Business Day after the date scheduled for the Closing; provided, that if the failure by Sapir (or its Sapir Permitted Designee) to deliver a Call Exercise Notice or to consummate the Closing is as a result of the breach of the Seller’s Representations and Warranties or the agreement of the Edge Group contained in the Option Agreement or the agreement assigning the Edge Interest to Sapir (or its Sapir Permitted Designee), or the fraud, intentional misconduct or criminal conduct of Edge-Star, ELVD or the Edge Group, then Sapir and the Edge Group shall issue Joint Instructions to the Escrow Agent to provide that the Escrow Fund shall be disbursed and delivered to Sapir.
(Id, Ex. 13 at 2) (emphasis in original). The parties dispute the purpose of requiring deposit of the escrowed funds. Edge Group maintains that it required the one-million-dollar deposit as compensation for extending the option exercise period until May 1, 2008. (PL’s R. 56 Statement at ¶ 61 & O’Connor Decl., Ex. 12 at 23). On the other hand, Sapir asserts that the one-million-dollar deposit was to function as liquidated damages in the event of a default. (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 2 at 120). Finally, the Amendment specified that “[t]he provisions of Article III of the Option Agreement shall apply to, and are hereby incorporated with, this letter, mutatis mutandis. (Id, Ex. 13 at 2).
At the time of the execution of these documents, Sapir delivered the required escrow funds to the Escrow Agent. (Def.’s Answer at ¶ 9; PL’s R. 56.1 Statement at ¶ 62. See also Silber Decl. at ¶ 33). On May 1, 2008, the last day on which the option was in effect, Sapir delivered a Call Exercise Notice to Edge Group and scheduled the closing for May 30, 2008. (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 12 at pp. 5-6 & Ex. 15). The effect of that act was to create a binding contract for the sale to Sapir of Edge Group’s interest in WAICCS 2. 4
The closing was scheduled for May 30, 2008. Before the scheduled closing, plaintiff delivered to Sapir all required documents for the transaction to close. (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 12 at pp. 6-7; Silber Decl. at ¶ 30). On May 29, 2008, however, Sapir notified Edge Group that it had decided not to go through with the closing and purchase. (Decl. of Alex Sapir in Supp. of Def.’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J., ¶ 2; Silber Decl. at ¶ 32). The decision by Sapir was not based on any failure of Edge Group to perform.
(See
O’Connor Decl., Ex. 2 at 134
&
Ex. 12 at p. 5). Instead, defendant stated that it had decided to abandon the transaction because of the
Plaintiff commenced suit on June 4, 2008, seeking principally specific performance. It amended its complaint a few days later, and Sapir filed an answer, including several affirmative defenses, on September 16, 2008. The principal thrust of the answer is that, under the Amended Option Agreement, plaintiffs only remedy for the breach is payment of the escrow funds.
C. Assessment of the Motions
Viewing the record through the prism of the summary-judgment criteria that we have summarized, we first address the question of whether either party has demonstrated, as a matter of law, that specific performance either is or is not appropriate in this case, based on traditional equitable considerations. We then consider whether — as defendant contends — this analysis should be altered by the inclusion in the Option Agreement, as amended, of what Sapir describes as a liquidated-damages provision capped at one million dollars that was intended to preclude any other form of relief.
1. The Availability of Specific Performance
Both sides seek summary judgment on the question of whether Edge Group should be awarded specific performance. That form of relief involves an exercise of the court’s equitable powers.
See generally
E. Allan Farnsworth, “Legal Remedies for Breach of Contract”, 70 Colum. L.Rev. 1145, 1152-56 (1970). For Edge Group to justify its entitlement to such a remedy, it must first establish the existence of a contract with Sapir, Sapir’s breach of that contract by non-performance, Edge Group’s substantial performance of its obligations under the Option Agreement and its ability and willingness to undertake any additional steps required of it under the contract.
See, e.g., Alba v. Kaufmann,
There is no dispute in this case that a valid and binding contract providing an option to Sapir was entered into by way of the assignment of the original option from Credit Suisse to Sapir in conjunction with amendments to the Option Agreement. There is also no real dispute that, pursuant to the terms of that amended Agreement, defendant gave notice of its exercise of the option on May 1, 2008, within the contractual period for doing so, and that this step created a binding contract for the sale to Sapir of Edge Group’s interest in WAICCS 2. The record also reflects that Edge Group fulfilled all of its pre-closing obligations under the contract, that Sapir communicated on May 29 — one day before the scheduled closing — its refusal to go ahead with the purchase, and that that decision was not a consequence of any
In sum, there is no question that the parties entered into a valid contract for the sale of plaintiffs interest in WAICCS 2 and that defendant breached its contractual obligation to purchase that interest. The remaining question is whether, in these circumstances, it is appropriate for the court to order specific performance of that contract by Sapir because of the inability of legal damages to compensate plaintiff fully.
In assessing this question, we note that the guiding consideration is “ ‘the difficulty of proving damages with reasonable certainty.’ ”
Van Wagner Adver. Corp.,
The point at which breach of a contract will be redressable by specific performance thus must lie not in any inherent physical uniqueness of the property but instead in the uncertainty of valuing it. “What matters, in measuring money damages, is the volume, refinement, and reliability of the available information about substitutes for the subject matter of the breached contract. When the relevant information is thin and unreliable, there is a substantial risk that an award of money damages will either exceed or fall short of the promisee’s actual loss. Of course this risk can always be reduced — but only at great cost when reliable information is difficult to obtain. Conversely, when there is a great deal of consumer behavior generating abundant and highly dependable information about substitutes, the risk of error in measuring the promisee’s loss may be reduced at much smaller cost. In asserting that the subject matter of a particular contract is unique and has no established market value, a court is really saying that it cannot obtain, at reasonable cost, enough information about substitutes to permit it to calculate an award of money damages without imposing an unacceptably high risk of under-compensation on the injured promisee.”
Id.
at 193,
In applying this test, the trial court has broad discretion,
Van Wagner Adver. Corp.,
In this case, Sapir argues that measuring damages from its breach is not so inherently imprecise as to justify specific performance. It also argues that specific performance should be denied here based on two other equitable principles. It first cites plaintiff s obligation to mitigate its damages, and then asserts that specific performance should not be granted because it does not currently have the cash in hand to perform its end of the bargain, that is, to pay the $19 million owed for the purchase over and above the escrowed funds, an argument premised on the notion that specific performance will not be ordered if performance is impossible. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 357 cmt. C (1981). We address these arguments separately.
(a) Adequacy of Legal Remedy
In support of the contention that, as a matter of law, a legal remedy is adequate here, defendant notes that contract damages are normally measured by the difference between the value to the injured party of the performance that should have been provided by the breaching party and what the plaintiff was left with in the wake of the breach. Applying this principle, defendant contends that the difference between the $20 million purchase price and the value of Edge Group’s interest in WAICCS 2 at the time of defendant’s breach may be reliably determined. (Def.’s Mem. of Law in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J. (“Def.’s Mem. in Supp.”), 7; Def.’s Mem. of Law in Opp’n to Pl.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (“Def.’s Mem. in Opp’n”), 9-10). For this proposition, Sapir relies principally on the fact that an appraisal of the real estate parcel owned in common by WAICCS 3 and other parties was performed shortly after defendant’s breach, and resulted in a valuation of $788 million. (Def.’s Mem. in Supp. at 7; Decl. of Douglas Segal, Esq. in Supp. of Def.’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J., executed June 19, 2009, Ex. 7). Defendant further asserts that this valuation should be binding on plaintiff because the appraisal was prepared on behalf of the property owners, including Edge Group, outside of the context of this litigation, and was later used to extend the payment schedule for a loan secured by the property. (Def.’s Mem. in Supp. at 7 & n. 4; Def.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 10 & n. 7; Def.’s Reply Mem. of Law in Further Supp. of its Mot. for Partial Summ. J. (“Def.’s Reply Mem.”), 17-18). As further evidence of value, defendant also mentions, albeit without documentation, that Sapir itself paid approximately $21 million at about the same time for a
The appraisal of the property owned in part by WAICCS 3 — which Sapir cites to establish the value of Edge Group’s interest in WAICCS 2 — was undertaken in June 2008 at the request of Credit Suisse, not Edge Group (Supplemental Decl. of Paul M. O’Connor III, Esq. in Opp’n to Def.’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J., executed July 30, 2009, Exs. 2 at 7, 18, 21 & 4), although that fact is not crucial for present purposes. 5 More relevant, however, are certain details about both the context of the appraisal, the substance of the appraisal report, and the testimony of the person who prepared it.
The appraisal was of the Las Vegas parcel itself, not of the value of an interest in WAICCS 2, which was the asset to be sold under the Option Agreement. This distinction is important for several reasons.
Edge Group’s ownership interest was in WAICCS 2, which in turn had an ownership interest in WAICCS 3, which in turn had an interest, in the form of an undivided tenancy-in-common with several other entities, in the undeveloped real property that was appraised. Moreover, the terms that governed the tenancy-in-common of the parcel sharply limited the ability of WAICCS 3 — in which Edge Group held an interest through WAICCS 2 — to sell its interest in the property. Thus, WAICCS 3 was precluded from selling a majority of its interest absent the unanimous consent of the other co-tenants in the Las Vegas parcel, and it could not sell even a minority of its interest to any broadly-defined competitor of those co-tenants. (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 7 at Art. VII, Ex. 2 at 75 & Ex. 4 at 18-19, 27-28). It is not surprising, then, that the sale of the Edge Group interest in WAICCS 2 was characterized by Credit Suisse as “very complicated to say the least”. {Id., Ex. 4 at 27-28).
The June 2008 appraisal of the parcel, cited by Sapir, did not consider the impact of these restrictions since it was looking only to the prospects for sale of the real estate rather than of the encumbered Edge Group interest in one of the two LLCs in the ownership chain. {See generally Segal Decl., Ex. 7). Necessarily, then, that appraisal would not reflect a valuation of the Edge Group’s interest, much less an assessment of the viability of valuing that interest. (O’Connor Supplemental Deck, Ex. 1 at 27).
Apart from the general irrelevance of the June 2008 appraisal to the question of the adequacy of a legal remedy in this case, the substance of the appraisal report — viewed in light of the testimony of the appraiser — reflects that it has no probative weight even as an assessment of the value of the parcel at the time of defendant’s breach, much less as an indicator that one could reliably value the LCC interest of plaintiff. The same appraiser
The market conditions at that time only underscore the absence of a basis for the June 2008 appraisal. As all parties concede, the appraisal was made during the period of the recent financial and real-estate bubble collapse and accompanying major economic downturn, including a collapse in the market for commercial real estate on the Strip in Las Vegas. (E.g., id., Ex. 1 at 103-05). Indeed, as the appraiser testified, there was a major downturn in business during this period, including in the gaming industry, and there were no sales of comparable properties from late 2007 to April 2009. (Id., Ex. 1 at 22-23, 103-05). Indeed, it was apparently at least in part because of these conditions (1) that Edge was very anxious to sell its interest, (O’Connor Deck, Ex. 4 at 26-27) (2) that Sapir was the only potential buyer that Credit Suisse could locate, (O’Connor Supplemental Deck, Ex. 2 at 34-85) (3) that Sapir decided at the last minute to repudiate its contractual obligation to purchase because the investment was too “speculative” (O’Connor Deck, Ex. 4 at 55), and (4) that Alex Sapir testified that “[i]t wouldn’t be a good deal to put any new money in this deal in the current environment.” (Id., Ex. 2 at 171).
Under all of these circumstances, and consistent with
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
As for defendant’s brief allusion to its asserted purchase of an interest in another entity, which purportedly had an interest in the parcel at issue, it offers no details or documentation, and relies solely on a passing reference by Alex Sapir. (Sapir Supplemental Deck at ¶ 2). That brief and conclusory testimony is plainly not sufficient to establish that the value of plaintiffs interest in WAICCS 2 can be reliably determined. 6
(b) Other Grounds Asserted by Sapir to Deny Relief
To the extent that defendant may be relying on two other arguments targeting the propriety of specific performance under traditional equitable principles, we review them briefly. First, Sapir has asserted in its answer that all relief should be denied because plaintiff failed adequately to mitigate its loss. (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 6 at p. 5). Additionally, Sapir contends that it would be impossible for it to perform its obligations under the contract to purchase Edge Group’s interest. We review these claims in turn.
Insofar as Sapir asserts that plaintiff failed to mitigate its damages, the argument fails first and foremost because mitigation is not required in order to justify specific performance.
E.g., Mayer v. Mfrs. Trust Co.,
Additionally, Sapir argues that specific performance may not be awarded because it is incapable of performing. In support of that contention, it proffers a declaration by Alex Sapir, asserting in entirely conclusory terms and without the benefit of any documentation, that defendant currently— or at least when Alex Sapir executed his declaration — has only $4,000.00 in cash and cash equivalents on hand and is more than $250,000,000.00 in debt. (Sapir Supplemental Decl. at ¶ 3). This skeletal assertion is plainly inadequate to demonstrate as a matter of law that defendant cannot perform even if ordered by a court to do so.
Both sides concur that impossibility may bar specific performance, but they differ on the precise scope of this rule. Plaintiff asserts that the test is whether the defendant was capable of performing at the time of the breach, not later on, and in support of this contention it notes that otherwise a breaching party may manipulate the outcome by deliberately divesting itself of the capacity to perform after its breach. (PL Edge Group WAICCS LLC’s Reply Mem. of Law in Further Supp. of its Mot. for Summ. J. (“PL’s Reply Mem.”), 12-13). Applying this standard, Edge Group asserts that Sapir was plainly capable of performing at the time of the breach, for which proposition it cites the deposition testimony of Alex Sapir that Sapir had the $20 million dollar purchase price available on the closing date. (PL’s Reply Mem. at 13 (citing O’Connor Decl., Ex. 2 at 134-35)). It also cites testimony to the effect that Alex Sapir and his company had available to them essentially limitless financing from Alex’s father, Tamir Sapir, who was to provide the funds to purchase Edge Group’s interest on the original closing date. (Id. (citing, inter alia, O’Connor Decl., Ex. 8 at 58-60)). It further offers facts from which one could draw the inference that defendant’s finances have been deliberately manipulated to permit it to claim financial incapacity to pay for the option that it contracted to purchase less than two years ago. (Id.).
Defendant does not meaningfully dispute that it had the capacity at the time of the breach to pay for Edge Group’s interest in WAICCS 2. Indeed, Alex Sapir admitted at his deposition that it could have done so, saying that “[a]t the time we decided we had better uses for our funds” and that it could have closed had it wanted to do so. (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 2 at 134-35). As noted, it even represents that it purchased an interest in another entity for more than $21 million only days before the cancellation of the closing with the Edge Group. (Sapir Supplemental Decl. at ¶ 2). In its opposition papers it asserts, however, that it has since lost the ability to perform — although it does not even attempt to document this assertion — and it presses the notion that this incapacity precludes equitable relief for the plaintiff. (Sapir Supplemental Decl. at ¶ 3; Def.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 27-28).
We conclude that specific performance may be precluded by impossibility of performance either at the time of breach or at the time that court relief is sought. The courts have long recognized that impossibility (or even impracticability) of performance at the time that performance was due may excuse enforcement of a contract if the impossibility was brought about by
force majeure,
or circumstances that were not caused by the party.
E.g., Restatement (Second) of Contracts
§ 261
It is equally the case, however, that if a party cannot perform at the time of the application for specific performance, that fact will preclude the grant of specific performance.
See Restatement (Second) of Contracts
§ 357 cmt. c (1981) (“[A] court will not order a performance that is impossible.”) As the New York Court of Appeals has made plain, a court should not order specific performance, or other equitable relief, unless the defendant is capable of complying: “The court will not make what may prove to be a futile order.”
S.E.S. Imps., Inc. v. Pappalardo,
As we have observed, there is no question on the current record that defendant was able to perform as of May 30, 2008. As for whether it is now unable to do so, its bare proffer to that effect plainly does not justify a determination, as a matter of law, that specific performance is unwarranted. Indeed, defendant’s financial status is likely to be a fairly complex matter to unearth, and it makes no effort whatsoever to justify its bare contention other than by allusion to cash or equivalents on hand and the amount of its debt, and the conclusory assertion by Mr. Sapir that the company cannot perform. Moreover, and most strikingly, Mr. Sapir’s representation is seemingly in direct conflict with testimony that he gave at his deposition less than two months prior to his execution of his July 30, 2009 supplemental declaration; at that deposition, he testified that Sapir could still close the sale if it wanted to do so. (O’Connor Deck, Ex. 2 at 135-36). In short, the record does not remotely justify Rule 56 relief for defendant on this aspect of plaintiffs case based on impossibility or impracticability.
See, e.g., Meisels v. 1295 Union Equities Corp.,
There remains for consideration whether plaintiff has itself adequately justified, as a matter of law, the appropriateness of equitable relief. For the reasons that we have noted, the record reflects that a remedy at law, in the form of damages, is not likely to be adequate because of the undisputed circumstances that render any attempt to value Edge Group’s interest at the time of defendant’s breach mere speculation. That interest was in an unlisted limited-liability company for which there was no apparent market at the time. Moreover, it appears that valuation of plaintiffs interest was in any event likely to be highly chancy since the company was restricted in its ability to sell its interest in the LLC, and the ability to
Defendant’s showing on impossibility of performance is at best thin to evanescent. Moreover, insofar as it relies solely on the declaration of Alex Sapir, it runs into the well-established rule in this circuit that a party may not evade summary judgment by proffering an affidavit (or declaration) that directly contradicts the affiant’s prior deposition testimony.
Gorzynski v. Jetblue Airways Corp.,
Because that question is not answered on the current record, we are prepared to conduct a brief evidentiary hearing on that narrow issue in the event that Sapir can offer competent evidence in support of the notion that its financial status materially changed between June 4 and July 30, 2009 so as preclude its ability to perform its obligations under the Option Agreement as amended. Absent Sapir’s ability to make such a showing — and subject to our ruling below regarding the purported preclusive effect of the escrow provision of the Option Agreement — we conclude that Edge Group has established the appropriateness of the equitable remedy of specific performance for Sapir’s breach.
We next turn to the question of whether — as defendant contends in its summary-judgment motion — Edge Group’s entitlement to specific performance under general equitable principles is precluded by the existence of a liquidated-damages clause in the amended Option Agreement. We conclude that even if the amended Agreement is interpreted to include a liquidated-damages provision, it does not prevent Edge Group from obtaining equitable relief in the form of specific performance of the contract.
As the New York Court of Appeals has long held, “when parties set down their agreement in a clear, complete document, their writing should ... be enforced according to its terms.”
TAG 380, LLC v. ComMet 380, Inc.,
In support of its motion, Sapir argues that the provision in the amended Agreement that requires an escrow deposit and then specifies what disposition is to be made of that deposit in four different scenarios amounts to a liquidated-damage provision insofar as it specifies that the deposit is to be paid to Edge Group in the event of a breach by Sapir. Defendant further argues that this provision also precludes any other remedy by Edge Group for such a breach, including specific performance. Even if we assumed arguendo that the cited language amounts to a liquidated-damages provision, defendant’s ultimate argument that this provision represents the full extent of plaintiffs available relief would be indefensible.
As the Second Circuit recently observed, the New York courts “appear willing, at least in some circumstances, to recognize limitations on available remedies, but they do so only when the contract ‘contains a clause specifically setting forth the remedies available to the buyer if the seller is unable to satisfy a stated condition.’ ”
Vacold LLC v. Cerami,
Vacold
is particularly instructive in this respect. In the course of defending against a securities fraud claim, defendant Cerami (“CCC”) asserted that an agreement that it had made with Vacold’s predecessor (Immunotherapy) to purchase certain shares of stock was binding on the
[T]o the extent that paragraph 7 ... has any effect at all on the remedies available to either party, it is no more than a provision that would liquidate damages if Immunotherapy refused to tender its shares. It cannot, however, be a limitation of liability that would preclude specific performance or create a unilateral option for Immunotherapy. Although a liquidated damages provision precludes a party from recovering lost profits and other measures of damages, ... it does not prevent a party from seeking specific performance, absent an express provision to this effect.
Id.
at 130 (citing cases) (emphasis in original). To similar effect,
see Rubinstein,
In the present case, defendant’s contention that plaintiff is barred by the amended Option Agreement from seeking specific performance plainly fails because the contract contains not a shred of language that might suggest, much less ex-
The provision that Sapir cites is, on its face, addressed solely to the handling of the deposit in a variety of scenarios, including in the case of a breach by the buyer. It does not otherwise address remedies. Moreover, Sapir’s reading of this provision would have an obviously perverse effect. Under its terms, if Sapir did not exercise the option, Edge Group was to receive the deposit. If, however, Sapir exercised the option and then breached, the result would be the same — plaintiff would receive only the deposit. In short, under this reading, plaintiff would have no remedy for a breach since there would be no consequence for Sapir’s disavowal of its contractual obligations beyond what would happen if Sapir simply had not exercised the option and thus had never breached. That result, in effect an option on an option (or, as the court in
Vacold
described it, a “unilateral option”,
Apart from the evident implausibility of a seller unilaterally binding itself not to offer the property for a period of time beyond the election date in exchange for no consideration, this reading runs afoul of the well-recognized principle that contracts are to be interpreted to give meaning to all of their terms.
See, e.g., Mionis v. Bank Julius Baer & Co.,
Sapir’s reading fails for still another reason. The original Call Option Agreement between Edge Group and Credit Suisse provided in Article III that “[a]ll rights and remedies existing under this Agreement are cumulative to, and not exclusive of, any rights or remedies otherwise available.” (O’Connor Decl., Ex. 1 at § 3.10). This provision plainly contemplated that any remedies specified in the Agreement were not exclusive, that is, they would not preclude the availability of any other remedies offered under governing contract or otherwise applicable law. Notably, when the parties entered into the amendment that required the deposit by Sapir — the provision on which defendant relies to claim an exclusivity of remedy — they provided explicitly that the terms of Article III of the Option Agreement “shall apply to, and are hereby incorporated with, this
In seeking to avoid this result, defendant invokes the deposition testimony of two witnesses, both from Credit Suisse, who apparently served as intermediaries between Edge Group and Sapir in negotiating the assignment of the option and the terms of the amended Agreement. According to defendant, their testimony reflects the substance of negotiations concerning the role of the required deposit and supposedly supports defendant’s interpretation. Sapir’s argument is meritless.
Putting to one side what the testimony actually shows, it is not admissible. to vary the contract, which is, for reasons noted, unambiguous with regard to whether Edge Group is limited to recovery of the deposit as its sole remedy for a breach by Sapir. A contract is ambiguous only if reasonable triers of fact could disagree about the meaning of the pertinent language.
Capital Dist. Enters., LLC v. Windsor Dev. of Albany, Inc.,
As for the testimony of the other witness, Mr. Orso, it offers no meaningful support for defendant’s contentions in this case. He does not specify any communications that he received from either side to pass on to the other; rather, in substance all that he says is (1) that he told Sapir’s representative, Alex Sapir, that if defendant breached, the only remedy would be payment of the million dollars, and (2) that it was his “understanding, based on [his] conversations with Reagan [the Edge Group representative] and with Alex, that the million dollars would be the only form of compensation should Sapir not close.” (O’Connor Supplemental Decl., Ex. 7 at 89).
Whatever may have been Mr. Orso’s understanding or assumption, unless Edge Group communicated its agreement to that position, Orso’s view — -which is plainly inconsistent with the actual terms of the contract that was ultimately agreed to — is irrelevant. As for Orso’s discussion with Sapir, whatever may have been its substance, Sapir ultimately signed an agreement that does not accord with Orso’s stated assumption; hence, even if Alex Sapir thought this item was “very important” (O’Connor Supplemental Decl., Ex. 7 at 89) — an observation by Orso that is inadmissible since it is incompetent testimony — he ultimately signed an agreement that does not reflect what he supposedly thought was “very important”, and he is bound by the unambiguous terms of the document that he ultimately signed.
See Angelino v. Freedus,
In sum, there is no basis for defendant’s contention that the Option Agreement as amended precluded a resort by Edge Group to specific performance. Hence this
CONCLUSION
For the reasons noted, we grant in part plaintiffs motion for summary judgment, leaving for trial solely the questions of whether defendant is able to perform and, if not, whether that inability is attributable to defendant’s own deliberate conduct. As to those issues, we will schedule a hearing. To do so, we direct that counsel appear for a pre-trial conference on April 8, 2010 at 10:00 a.m. in Courtroom 17D, 500 Pearl Street, New York, New York 10007.
Notes
. In this Memorandum and Order, we refer to these two LLCs as "WAICCS 2" and “WAICCS 3”, respectively.
. Plaintiff also seeks prompt release to it of the escrowed funds. (PL Edge Group WAICCS LLC's Mem. of Law in Supp. of its Mot. for Summ. J. ("PL’s Mem. in Supp.”), 24-25).
. The letter Amendment of February 15, 2008 was erroneously dated as February 15, 2007. (Id., Ex. 13 at 1).
. We note that Sapir has declined plaintiff’s request to admit this fact. (O'Connor Decl., Ex. 12 at p. 6). However, as Sapir appears to concede Edge Group's entitlement to liquidated damages, which presumes the existence and breach of a contract, we take it that the parties are in fact in agreement on this point.
. The potential import of this fact, as well as the uncontradicted testimony of plaintiff's principal that Edge Group was not even aware of the appraisal until some time during the pendency of the lawsuit, {Id., Ex. 2 at 39) is that the appraisal cannot be deemed an admission by Edge Group as to either the feasibility of a valuation of its interest in WAICCS 2 or of the actual value of that interest.
. In addition to the lack of evidentiary sufficiency, we note that there may be relevant factual differences between the interests of Edge Group and the entity from which Sapir purchased an interest in the Las Vegas parcel that would affect their respective values, in-
. We note that defendant’s repeated contention that Edge Group is not entitled to specific performance because it was selling, instead of purchasing, an asset is misguided. (Def.'s Mem. in Supp. at 5-6; Def.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 7-9; Def.'s Reply Mem. at 16-17). Sapir notes that when a "party’s contractual obligation is simply to pay a specified sum, a legal remedy [for that party’s breach] ... is readily available." (Def.'s Mem. in Supp. at 5 (quoting
Morgan Stanley High Yield Sec. v. Seven Circle Gaming Corp.,
. Defendant argues that this aborted transaction should not be taken into consideration based on the preclusive effect of Fed.R.Evid. 408. (Def.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 5). This is misguided, since that rule precludes the use of settlement communications only as evidence of liability or the amount of damages. Fed.R.Evid. 408.
See PRL USA Holdings, Inc. v. U.S. Polo Ass'n, Inc.,
. As with all equitable remedies the court is required to balance the harm to the plaintiff from denying relief against any notable harm to the defendant from granting relief.
See, e.g., Nemer Jeep-Eagle, Inc. v. Jeep-Eagle Sales Corp.,
. The cited provision in paragraph 7 of the contract stated that ''[CCC] and Immunotherapy] agree to split the use of the Virtual Lymph Node technology in- humans in the event and only in the event [CCC] or its affiliate does not purchase the AVT shares from Immunotherapy] as provided in this letter, unless such failure to purchase is caused by Immunotherapy’s] refusal to comply with the provisions of this letter.” Id. at 129 (emphasis in original).
. Defendant seeks to distinguish Vacold and Rubinstein, and virtually all other decisions cited by plaintiff. {E.g., Def.'s Memo in Opp'n at 12-16). It fails to do so because it cannot demonstrate that any of the factual differences that it cites were material to the various courts' legal analyses.
. We reject Sapir’s suggestion that the one-million-dollar escrow deposit could not have functioned as compensation for the extension of the option-exercise period, as Edge Group contends, because (1) the escrowed funds were to be deducted from the $20 million purchase price at closing, (2) the escrowed funds were not available to Edge Group as of February 15, 2008, the date on which the option exercise period was extended, and (3) the funds were deposited into escrow instead of being paid directly to Edge Group. (Def.’s Reply Mem. at 9 n. 9). As Sapir itself acknowledges, none of these terms are inconsistent with the notion that the deposit was made to induce Edge Group to extend the duration of the option period. (Id.). Moreover, even if Sapir establishes that the deposit was intended to function as liquidated damages, that fact does not establish that Edge Group was precluded from seeking additional remedies for Sapir's breach, as Sapir must show to establish that Edge Group is not entitled to specific performance.
. In arguing the contrary, Sapir asserts that the quoted language about remedies was meaningless in the context of the original Agreement, because that version of the contract did not itself specify any remedies. (Def.'s Mem. in Opp'n at 26). This argument, fails in its assessment of the original contract and is irrelevant in light of the terms of the amendment. In the original Agreement, the clause served to assure that plaintiff would have available to it the full range of remedies — legal and equitable — offered under governing law. Whether that provision was needed to accomplish such a result is inconsequential. In any event, the later amendment of the contract added the provision requiring a security deposit and went on to reaffirm the continuing effect of Article III of the original Agreement, including the provision explicitly precluding any limitation of remedies. In that circumstance, the absence of any specification of remedies in the pre-existing contract is simply immaterial.
. To the extent that Sapir relies on the
Rubinstein
court’s consideration of the "surrounding circumstances” to determine the preclusive effect of the liquidated-damages clause at issue in that case to support consideration of the cited deposition testimony, we reject its argument.
(E.g.,
Def.’s Mem. in Opp’n at 19-22). We note that the
Rubinstein
court was following an 1887 Court of Appeals case which stated that the parties' intention as to the preclusive effect of such a clause was to be determined by " 'the whole instrument and the circumstances.’ ”
Rubinstein,
