GREENERY REHABILITATION GROUP, INC., & another vs. JACK J. ANTARAMIAN & others.
No. 92-P-1048.
36 Mass. App. Ct. 73
November 18, 1993. - February 18, 1994.
36 Mass. App. Ct. 73
Present: BROWN, KAPLAN, & LAURENCE, JJ.
Middlesex.
The explicit negotiated and agreed-to provisions of an agreement for the purchase and sale of real estate did not support a claim in a civil action brought by the buyers that the sellers made false statements upon which the buyers relied to their detriment, and the judge correctly granted summary judgment in favor of the sellers. [75-76] BROWN, J., concurring.
In a civil action the judge correctly granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ claims of fraud for the defendants’ failure to disclose the unsatisfactory financial condition of a tenant in a building the defendants sold the plaintiffs, where the plaintiffs did not demonstrate that the defendants knew the tenant would default on the lease [76-77]; moreover, the judge correctly determined that where the parties were sophisticated in real estate transactions there was no duty to disclose [77-78]. BROWN, J., concurring.
In the circumstances of a real estate transaction at arm‘s length between experienced business persons advised by counsel, summary judgment was correctly entered in favor of the defendant sellers on the buyers’ claim of violation of
The judge in a civil action correctly denied the plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend the complaint to add a count charging personally a fifty percent shareholder in a defendant corporation where there was no plausible demonstration that the individual was an alter ego of the corporation. [79]
1199-111 Chestnut Hill Avenue Corp.
2David E. Nassif and Denco Enterprises, Inc.
Motions for summary judgment and for leave to amend the complaint were heard by John J. O‘Brien, J.
Molly Cochran for the plaintiffs.
Marjory D. Robertson for David E. Nassif & another.
Michael R. Gottfried (Robert S. Halpern with him) for Jack J. Antaramian.
KAPLAN, J. On August 16, 1989, the 400 Centre Street Limited Partnership, as seller, entered into an agreement with Greenery Rehabilitation Group, Inc. (Greenery), as buyer, for the sale of an office building at 400 Centre Street, Newton. The 99-111 Chestnut Hill Avenue Corp. (Chestnut Hill) took an assignment of the rights of Greenery (its parent company) under the purchase and sale agreement, and closed the purchase of the building on September 15, 1989.
Northern Construction Corp. was a principal tenant of the building under a lease expiring by its terms on July 31, 1993. The lease was assigned to Chestnut Hill as new owner. On January 31, 1990, some four and a half months after the closing of the sale of the building, Northern Construction, stating that because of economic conditions it could no longer afford the space, defaulted under its lease by failing to make a payment when due and vacated the premises.
On April 26, 1990, Greenery and Chestnut Hill commenced the present action against Northern Construction; Denco Enterprises, Inc. (Denco), and Jack J. Antaramian, the two general partners of the 400 Centre Street Limited Partnership; and David E. Nassif, president of Denco.3 The amended complaint, filed on July 12, 1990, in count I claimed against Northern Construction for the balance due under the lease, in count II against the other defendants for damages for fraud, and in count III against them for damages pursuant to
There was an agreement for judgment against Northern Construction.
1. Regarding the “fraud” claim. a. Statements made by seller. Viewing the evidence with intendments favoring the parties opposing the summary judgment,4 we accept that, during extended negotiations leading to the sale of the property, Nassif, representing the seller, in the course of conversation with Gerard Martin or George Ferencik, representing the buyer, said that the tenants were “solid“; “good as gold,” except for the Freesia restaurant, which was in default; the other two tenants were “in good standing” with “rents paid right up to date“; Northern Construction “was there as a long term tenant.” The last three quoted phrases, which were relatively specific, were accurate. The other epithets were so general as to amount to puffery; it would be very hard, even with the intendments favoring the plaintiffs, to raise from them any implications of falsity upon which there could have been reasonable reliance.
However, regardless of how the statements are viewed, any claim based on them is eliminated by the terms of the purchase agreement itself: so the judge correctly held. It is
The provisions of subpar. 14.1 and par. 20 were not “boilerplate” but, as noted, were negotiated and agreed to and are to be respected and enforced according to their terms. We think the distinction is recognized and acknowledged in the recent case of McEvoy Travel Bureau, Inc. v. Norton Co., 408 Mass. 704, 710-712 (1990). See also Turner v. Johnson & Johnson, 809 F.2d 90, 95-98 (1st Cir. 1986); Plumer v. Luce, 310 Mass. 789, 803-805 (1942), with which compare Bates v. Southgate, 308 Mass. 170, 173 (1941), all discussed by the court in McEvoy.
b. Alleged nondisclosure. The plaintiffs charged, to quote from count II, that Antaramian and Nassif “knew in September 1989 . . . that Northern Construction was financially incapable of meeting its obligations under the Lease,” that they were under a duty to disclose this to the buyer, and
The plaintiffs attempt to build up an impression of such knowledge from an assortment of details, such as the fact that Northern Construction on occasions prior to the sale remitted rent to the then owner by means of a check of an affiliated company, that it attempted to sublet part of the premises shortly after the sale, etc. We think the details, taken together, do not make out a genuine issue for trial regarding the claimed knowledge (see note 4, supra).
But at all events the judge was right to say there was no duty to disclose. This was not a case of a partial disclosure that is deceptive unless the whole story is told. See Maxwell v. Ratcliffe, 356 Mass. 560, 562-563 (1969). For purposes of argument only, we may assume a case where a seller knows of a weakness in the subject of the sale and does not notify the buyer of it. Such nondisclosure does not amount to fraud and is not a conventional tort of any kind. The classic expression of this view is by Justice Qua in Swinton v. Whitinsville Sav. Bank, 311 Mass. 677 (1942); the nub of his opinion (at 678-679) is quoted in the margin.5 See also Kannavos v. Annino, 356 Mass. 42, 48 (1969); Nei v. Burley, 388 Mass. 307, 310 (1983);
2. Chapter 93A claim. One can violate
More generally, in the circumstances of a transaction at arm‘s length between experienced, worldly-wise businessmen advised by counsel, we find nothing chargeable to the defendants that sank to the level of “rascality” made actionable by
3. Further amendment of the complaint. The plaintiffs moved for leave to amend the complaint to add a count charging Antaramian personally for damages for breach of the lease of which Northern Construction was the named and responsible lessee. Such disregard of the separate corporate identity is reserved for “rare particular situations to prevent gross inequity.” My Bread Baking Co. v. Cumberland Farms, Inc., 353 Mass. 614, 620 (1968). The plaintiffs made no credible showing that this could be the rare case. See Evans v. Multicon Constr. Corp., 30 Mass. App. Ct. 728, 732-737 (1991). The plaintiffs knew that as buyers they were succeeding to a lease with a corporation and no other. They were short of any plausible demonstration that the individual as a fifty percent shareholder was an alter ego of the corporation. As regards “inequity,” the absence of actionable fraud or unfair or deceptive conduct as charged under counts II and III foreshadowed a similar result under the proposed new count.6 Also bearing on a claim of “inequity” was the fact that the plaintiffs took no pains to investigate the corporation and were conspicuously unconcerned about it. On the whole we think the judge did not abuse his discretion in denying the amendment, which appears to have had no role except to threaten to complicate and extend the litigation and thus to exert practical pressure on the opposition.7
Judgment affirmed.
APPENDIX TO THE OPINION OF THE COURT.
“14.1 . . . Seller shall not be liable or bound in any way for any verbal or written statements, representations, or information pertaining to the Premises furnished by any real estate broker or agent or any agent or employee of Seller, or any other person. It is understood and agreed that all prior and contemporaneous representations, statements, understandings and agreements, oral or written, between the parties are merged in this Agreement, which alone fully and completely expresses their agreement, and that the same is entered into after full investigation, neither party relying on any statement or representation not embodied in this Agreement made by the other.”
“20. The acceptance of the Deed by Buyer on the Closing Date shall be deemed full performance and discharge of each and every agreement and obligation on the part of Seller hereunder to be performed. Any and all representations and warranties of Seller contained in this Agreement shall not survive the Closing Date and the delivery of the Deed, and shall be merged in the delivery of the Deed, unless otherwise expressly and specifically provided in this Agreement.”
BROWN, J. (concurring). I am in total accord with the result. The analysis of the merits, with which I have no substantive quarrel, perhaps manifests too much concern for these “worldly-wise businessmen advised by counsel.” The buyers may have been careless, indifferent, or merely overeager to close the deal during the negotiating process, but any such manifestation of lack of business acumen does not entitle them to seek relief through the judicial process. The defendants’ conduct, such as it was, did not sink to the level of rascality made actionable by c. 93A, § 11. Succinctly put, the curtain was up; the stage and the actors were amply lit; if the plaintiffs failed to see the play, it was because their eyes were not open.
Notes
“If this defendant is liable on this declaration every seller is liable who fails to disclose any nonapparent defect known to him in the subject of the sale which materially reduces its value and which the buyer fails to discover. Similarly it would seem that every buyer would be liable who fails to disclose any nonapparent virtue known to him in the subject of the purchase which materially enhances its value and of which the seller is ignorant. See Goodwin v. Agassiz, 283 Mass. 358 [1933]. The law has not
yet, we believe, reached the point of imposing upon the frailties of human nature a standard so idealistic as this.”