Appellant Wallasey Tenants Association (“the Tenants”) appeals from the trial court’s order granting summary judgment to appellees Kenneth Fairbairn and Fair-bairn Properties — 2426 19th Street N.W., L.L.C. (referred to jointly as the “Fair-bairn Parties”) and denying Tenants’ motion for summary judgment in a suit arising from Mr. Fairbairn’s alleged violation of the Rental Housing Conversion and Sale Act, D.C.Code § 42-3401.01 et seq. (2001) (“the Act”). The Tenants contend that the trial court erroneously concluded that Mr. *1137 Fairbairn’s transfer of property to a limited-liability company controlled by Mr. Fairbairn himself was not a sale that triggered the Tenants’ statutory right of first refusal under § 42-3404.02(a) (2001). In a separate action, the Fairbairn Parties appeal from the trial court’s order denying their request for attorneys’ fees, pursuant to D.C.Code § 42-3405.03 (2001). We disagree, and affirm both decisions of the trial court.
I.
From April 2, 1962, until December 17, 1999, Kenneth Fairbairn was the sole owner of a seventeen-unit apartment building, the Wallasey, located at 2426 19th Street, N.W., in the District of Columbia. Fair-bairn Properties — 2426 19th St., N.W., L.L.C. (“19th St. LLC”) is a District of Columbia corporation that is 99% owned by Mr. Fairbairn. Fairbairn Properties, L.L.C., a Virginia corporation, owns the remaining 1% of the 19th St. LLC. Mr. Fairbairn is the sole member and owner of Fairbairn Properties, L.L.C.
On December 17, 1999, Mr. Fairbairn transferred ownership of the Wallasey to the 19th St. LLC. Specifically, Mr. Fair-bairn transferred a 100% fee simple interest in the Wallasey to the 19th St. LLC for “good and valuable consideration” by special warranty deed executed December 17, 1999. The transaction between Mr. Fair-bairn and the 19th St. LLC was made without notice to the Tenants and without giving them a right of first refusal. The transfer of title was recorded in the D.C. Recorder of Deeds office on December 20, 1999. Since 1999, the 19th St. LLC has been the sole owner and title holder of the Wallasey.
In autumn 2002, while searching District of Columbia land records on the internet, the Tenants discovered that the Wallasey had been transferred to the 19th St. LLC. Tenants sent notice to Mi'. Fairbairn requesting exercise of the right of first refusal pursuant to D.C.Code § 42-3404.02(a). Mr. Fairbairn, through counsel, informed the Tenants that the right of first refusal was not available because the transfer of the Wallasey was not a sale. Tenants thereafter brought suit.
Tenants allege that Mr. Fairbairn received consideration of value in exchange for the Wallasey, and thus this transfer to a distinct legal entity is appropriately characterized as a sale triggering Tenants’ opportunity of first refusal. The Fairbairn Parties admit that transfer of the Wallasey to the 19th St. LLC resulted in benefits to Mr. Fairbairn in the form of limited personal liability and ease in estate planning. The Fairbairn Parties maintain, however, that regardless of benefits received, the transfer of the Wallasey was not a sale and that Tenants’ statutory rights of first refusal were not activated.
Both the Fairbairn Parties and the Tenants filed motions for summary judgment and requested that the trial court decide the issue as a matter of law, without further discovery or trial. After extensive briefing, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the Fairbairn Parties and held the transfer was not a “sale” under the Act. In light of their victory, the Fairbairn Parties moved for attorneys’ fees pursuant to D.C.Code § 42-3405.03. The trial court denied that request. Both parties filed timely appeals.
II.
Summary judgment is appropriate if, when viewing the record in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, there are no genuine issues of material facts in dispute, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(c);
see also Abdullah
*1138
v. Roach,
The Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act, D.C.Code § 42-3404.02 et seq., provides that:
Before an owner of a housing accommodation may sell the accommodation, or issue a notice of intent to recover possession, or notice to vacate, for purposes of demolition or discontinuance for housing use, the owner shall give the tenant an opportunity to purchase the accommodation at a price and terms which represent a bona fide offer of sale.
D.C.Code § 42-3404.02(a) (2001). This provision of the D.C.Code creates a statutory right of first refusal similar to that which exists in contract law. Cf. 17 C.J.S. Contracts § 56 (2004) (“A right of first refusal is a conditional option empowering its holder with a preferential right to purchase a property on the same terms offered by or to a bona fide purchaser.”). It is undisputed that the Wallasey is a rental accommodation generally subject to the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act. It is also undisputed that the Wallasey. was transferred by Mr. Fairbairn to a separate legal entity — Fairbairn Properties — 2426 19th St. N.W., L.L.C. The issue in contention, however, is whether the transfer of the Wallasey by Mr. Fairbairn to a corporation wholly-controlled, and effectively wholly-owned, by Mr. Fairbairn himself, is a sale that triggers Tenants’ right of first refusal under D.C.Code § 42-3404.02 et seq.
Both parties cite to the definition of “sale” stated in
West End Tenants Ass’n v. George Washington Univ.,
The Master Lease in addition to giving GWU control over all equipment on the premises, supplies, and transferable permits, as well as the right to challenge any real estate assessments, obligated the university to pay all real property taxes and utilities, to perform all maintenance and repairs, and to obtain all nontransferable permits and purchase liability insurance. The owners, besides holding record title, reserved the right to prevent the university from making any alterations, improvements, or additions to the apartment, to reenter the premises in the event of noncompliance with the lease provisions, and to veto any assignment of rights by the university under the lease.
Id. at 724. At issue in West End was whether the Master Lease qualified as a sale under the Act. We held that the Master Lease entered into did not consti *1139 tute a “sale” within the meaning of § 42-3404.02(b) of the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act because the owners neither conveyed their entire interest nor relinquished their complete control of the apartment to the university. Id. at 728. The current case involves a conveyance of property to a closely related party, not the entering into of a lease between an owner and a third party. The two situations are clearly distinguishable.
The unique factual circumstances of the case sub judice present us with the question of whether the right of first refusal is triggered by the conveyance of property between two closely related parties such as the Fairbairn Parties. This is a question of first impression in the District of Columbia. Other jurisdictions, however, have faced this very issue, and the rationale employed by those courts to determine whether a sale that triggers a right of first refusal has occurred is very persuasive.
The two most analogous cases are
Kroehnke v. Zimmerman,
The same analysis was applied by the Supreme Court of Wyoming in the more recent case of
McGuire v. Lowery.
In
McGuire,
as in
Kroehnke
before, individual owners of real property conveyed land subject to a right of first refusal to a wholly-owned corporation. The Supreme Court of Wyoming similarly held that such a conveyance was not a sale that triggered the right of first refusal. The court held that “for a transaction to constitute a ‘sale’ and trigger a first right of refusal, it must involve an arms-length transaction resulting in an actual change in control of the burdened property rather than simply moving it from the individual owners to an entity controlled by them.”
McGuire, supra,
Both
Kroehnke
and
McGuire
derive their reasoning from
Sand v. London & Co.,
Isaacson v. First Sec. Bank,
The Supreme Court of Rhode Island was confronted with similar questions of law in
Belliveau v. O’Coin,
The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit is the latest court to have dealt with these issues. In
Creque v. Texaco Antilles Ltd.,
We agree with the preceding analyses, and apply the previous courts’ rationale to our jurisdiction’s statutory, right of first refusal. Specifically, we adopt the following “general principles”:
First, the absence of-arms’ length dealing between commercially related parties generally precludes the exercise of a right of first refusal. Second, and significant for the present case, a right of first refusal is not triggered, “where the evidence indicates that motives of business convenience prompted the transfer of the leased property to the grantor’s wholly owned corporation, or the transfer from one corporation to another corporation owned and controlled by the same interests.” In each of these situations, the conveyance does not result in *1141 a change in ownership or control and therefore does not invoke a right of first refusal on the property.
Id.
at 154 (citations omitted and original emphasis removed) (new emphasis added);
see McGuire, supra,
Applying these principles, we hold that the conveyance between Mr. Fair-bairn and the 19th St. LLC did not constitute a sale that triggered the Tenants’ statutory rights of first refusal. Although Tenants are correct in stating that the conveyance took the appearance of a sale and was presumably reported as such on, inter alia, the deed and various tax filings, we must look at the true nature of the conveyance in this case. See Isaacson, supra, 511 P.2d at 272.
The conveyance directed by Mr. Fair-bairn to a
de facto
wholly owned corporation
2
was effectuated for no purpose other than to legitimately limit Mr. Fairbairn’s liability and to simplify his future estate planning. Furthermore, there is no evidence in the record to indicate any sort of negotiation between the Fairbairn Parties to suggest “arms’ length dealing between an owner willing (but not forced) to sell, and a buyer willing (but not forced) to buy, which customarily characterizes a sale in the open market.”
Kroehnke, supra,
*1142 Although our analysis differs in key respects from that of the trial court’s, the Fairbairn Parties’ motion for summary judgment was properly granted and Tenants’ motion properly dismissed. 4
III.
In a separate action, the Fairbairn Parties appeal claiming that the trial court erred when it determined that they were not “aggrieved” and, thus, were not entitled to attorneys’ fees. The decision to award attorneys’ fees is reserved to the sound discretion of the trial court and will be reversed only upon a showing of abuse.
See Andrews v. District of Columbia,
The trial court was correct in determining that the Fairbairn Parties were not “aggrieved” parties, and were thus outside of the Act’s allowance of attorneys’ fees. The Act states that, “[a]n aggrieved owner, tenant, or tenant organization may seek enforcement of any right or provision under this chapter through a civil action in law or equity, and, upon prevailing, may seek an award of costs and reasonable attorney fees.” D.C.Code § 42-3405.03. A plain reading of the statute indicates that the right to collect attorneys’ fees is only available to the party that brought the suit. If the Council intended to allow defending parties to recover attorneys’ fees simply by prevailing in the suit, then they would have done so. Compare D.C.Code § 42-3405.03, with D.C.Code § 16-4603.12 (2001) (“The court shall allow the prevailing party ... necessary and reasonable expenses incurred by or on behalf of the party, including ... attorney’s fees ....”) (emphasis added), and D.C.Code § 45-2592 (2001) (“The Rent Administrator, Rental Housing Commission, or a court of competent jurisdiction may award reasonable attorney’s fees to the prevailing party in any action under this chapter_”) (emphasis added).
In this case, the Fairbairn Parties’ were not seeking to enforce their own rights; rather, they were defending against an action brought by the Tenants. As such, the Fairbairn Parties had no basis to request attorneys’ fees and the trial court did not err in denying the request;
For the foregoing reasons, the judgments of the trial court are
Affirmed.
Notes
. The court in
McGuire
distinguished the decision of the Supreme Court of Utah in
Prince v. Elm Inv. Co.,
. As discussed supra, Mr. Fairbairn owned a 99% interest in the 19th St. LLC. The remaining 1% interest was owned by Fairbairn Properties LLC, another corporation wholly owned by Mr. Fairbairn. Mr. Fairbairn, therefore, has 100% de facto ownership of the 19th St. LLC.
. Tenants, through their repeated assertions that the conveyance of the Wallasey from Mr. Fairbairn to the 19th St. LLC was a transfer between two legally distinct entities, imply that one would need to disregard the corporation’s corporate identity to find the conveyance not a sale. We disagree.
Our holding today does not disregard the 19th St. LLC’s
de jure
status as a legal entity separate and distinct from Mr. Fairbairn. The conveyance of the Wallasey to the 19 th St. LLC was a transaction between two separate legal entities. Our decision simply holds that based on the historical applications of the contractual right of first refusal, which has been wholly incorporated and codified in the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act, such a right is simply not available when closely related parties who do not engage in arms’ length dealings convey property for the purposes of estate planning, tax restructuring, limiting liability, or general property management.
See Belliveau, supra,
. Tenants also allege the trial court erred in relying on the affidavit of Linda Harried, a housing regulation specialist at the Condominium and Cooperative Conversion and Sales Branch (''CCCSB") of the District of Columbia’s Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (''DCRA"). Characterizing her opinion of a "sale" as an "administrative agency determination,” the Tenants claim that such a determination is in violation of the D.C. Administrative Procedure Act (DCAPA) which establishes the rulemaking procedures — including notice-and-comment requirements — for all administrative agencies in the District. D.C.Code § 2-501 et seq. (20Ó1). Ms. Harried's ex parte determination as to what the agency defines a sale to be is, the Tenants claim, either a violation of the DCA-PA or not the official interpretation of the DCRA. In either event, Tenants claim that Ms. Harried’s opinion should not have been relied on by the trial court.
Our de novo review of the grant and denial of the motions for summary judgment did not rely on this affidavit. Therefore, we need not reach the merits of this issue.
