Moore Property Investments, LLC v. Dr. Todd Yates ( 2023 )


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  •                    RENDERED: MARCH 3, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2022-CA-0054-MR
    MOORE PROPERTY INVESTMENTS,
    LLC                                                                   APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
    v.          HONORABLE ANGELA MCCORMICK BISIG, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 11-CI-002310
    DR. LAURA FULKERSON AND
    DR. TODD YATES                                                         APPELLEES
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: CETRULO, DIXON, AND TAYLOR, JUDGES.
    CETRULO, JUDGE: This matter is before the Court to determine whether the
    Jefferson Circuit Court erred in finding a contract provision – resulting from a
    mediation agreement – was enforceable and intended by the parties to have
    permanency. After review, we affirm.
    I.     FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In 2009, veterinarians Dr. Laura Fulkerson (“Fulkerson”) and Dr.
    Todd Yates,1 entered into negotiations to rent Suite B in a shopping center (the
    “property”) owned by Appellant Moore Property Investments, LLC (“Moore
    Property”). The property contained two suites: Suite A was occupied by Moore
    Property and made up 52% of the premises; Suite B made up the remaining 48%.2
    After discussions, the parties executed both a lease and Lease to Purchase Option
    Agreement (“2009 Lease Agreement”). According to the agreed upon terms,
    Fulkerson was to be credited part of each monthly lease payment against the
    purchase price at closing; the lease term was for five years after Fulkerson opened
    the clinic for business; Moore Property could terminate the purchase option if
    Fulkerson was in default of the 2009 Lease Agreement or failed to comply with the
    terms and conditions of the 2009 Lease Agreement; and time was of the essence.
    The 2009 Lease Agreement also included a fluctuating amount of
    additional rent – on top of the set monthly amount of $5,000 – to cover a
    percentage of the common area maintenance fees and taxes (“CAM expenses”).
    Moore Property estimated those CAM expenses at $750 per month, but that total
    1
    Yates is no longer a party to this appeal.
    2
    The record did not clarify what percentage made up the common area or if the “common area”
    only included jointly used assets such as plumbing, electrical, and/or the exterior of the property.
    -2-
    was subject to adjustment based on actual expenses paid; any deficit was to be
    collected at the beginning of the year and a new amount was to be set, based on the
    prior year’s expenses. Also, if Fulkerson exercised her purchase option, the parties
    agreed to “execute a Contract for Deed in form reasonably acceptable to both
    parties for the full purchase price less any credits[.]”
    In 2010, Fulkerson pursued her purchase option, due in part to the
    significant improvements she made to Suite B. Fulkerson approached a lender
    about financing the transaction, but her request was denied because a title search
    revealed Moore Property had not subdivided the property and was currently unable
    to convey good title. Fulkerson informed Moore Property that she was ready to
    exercise her purchase option but was unable to provide a closing date until the
    property was subdivided. Soon after, Moore Property informed Fulkerson that the
    CAM expenses for 2010 were more than seven times higher than his previous
    written estimate. It is apparent from the record that negotiations between the
    parties turned contentious and litigation resulted.
    In its complaint, Moore Property requested the additional CAM
    expenses and a declaratory judgment that the notice to exercise the purchase option
    was defective and unenforceable. In her counterclaim, Fulkerson alleged fraud in
    the inducement, breach of contract and requested adjudication that the 2009 Lease
    Agreement had been properly exercised. The circuit court granted summary
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    judgment in favor of Moore Property. Fulkerson appealed and this Court reversed.
    Fulkerson v. Moore Property Investments, LLC, Nos. 2012-CA-000856-MR and
    2012-CA-000893-MR, 
    2014 WL 3714373
     (Ky. App. Jul. 25, 2014). This Court
    found that 1) summary judgment was premature, and 2) Moore Property’s failure
    to subdivide the property i.e., failure to obtain clear title – waived Fulkerson’s
    specific performance obligation – i.e., waived her failure to set a closing date as
    mandated by the 2009 Lease Agreement. This Court reversed and remanded, but
    did not address the CAM expenses argument.
    Before proceeding to trial, the parties met twice for mediation at the
    end of 2015. Mediation yielded a fully executed Settlement Agreement (“2015
    Mediation Agreement”). The 2015 Mediation Agreement included numerous
    modifications to the 2009 Lease Agreement. In relevant part, the 2015 Mediation
    Agreement stated the property would be divided pursuant to a condominium
    regime with Moore Property owning 52% and Fulkerson owning 48%. The 2015
    Mediation Agreement also included a Maintenance Provision3 that dealt with
    CAM expenses, which read as follows:
    2. For common area expenses which are $1,000 or less,
    either party may select the service provider and have the
    work performed without prior notice to the other. For
    expenses for common areas which exceed $1,000, either
    party shall provide the other with the bid for said services
    prior to hiring the service provider. If the other party does
    3
    We refer to Paragraph 2 and Paragraph 3 as the singular “Maintenance Provision” for clarity.
    -4-
    not object, the proposed service provider may perform the
    work. If the other party objects to the bid, he or she shall
    provide an alternative bid within 15 days. If the parties
    cannot agree on the work to be performed, they shall
    submit their differences to Ann O’Malley Shake. If she is
    not available for any reason, the disputed issue shall be
    submitted to a mutually agreeable mediator. The paint
    color of the exterior will not be changed absent the
    agreement of the parties or submission to the mediator.
    3. The provisions of paragraph 2 do not apply to contracts
    with vendors, including without limitation the snow
    removal company, until such time that the current contract
    term expires.
    The 2015 Mediation Agreement also stated, “[t]he parties will work in
    good faith to memorialize the terms of this settlement and the sale in subsequent
    documents which will be prepared by [Moore Property’s] counsel and subject to
    approval by [Fulkerson’s] counsel. However, the [2015 Mediation Agreement] is
    enforceable according to its terms.” Unfortunately, the parties were unable to
    agree on the language for the sale documents.4 Specifically, Fulkerson did not
    agree to Moore Property’s attempt to add language that would terminate the
    Maintenance Provision upon a future sale of Suite B (Fulkerson viewed the
    Maintenance Provision as running with the land).
    In 2018, Moore Property returned to circuit court and asked the court
    to find the 2015 Mediation Agreement unenforceable because it violated the statute
    4
    An additional mediation in 2016 was also unsuccessful in completing the sale documents.
    -5-
    of frauds for failing to set forth all the essential terms. The circuit court did not
    accept Moore Property’s argument and held the 2015 Mediation Agreement was
    enforceable because that agreement was not intended as a stand-alone real estate
    purchase contract, but rather it was intended to resolve disputed terms under the
    2009 Lease Agreement. The circuit court did not address whether the Maintenance
    Provision of the 2015 Mediation Agreement was to become part of the
    condominium governing documents, thereby running with the land. Moore
    Property appealed to this Court.
    In 2020, this Court affirmed the circuit court finding that the 2015
    Mediation Agreement was a settlement agreement – not a contract conveying real
    property – and it was intended to relate back to the 2009 Lease Agreement;
    therefore, the statute of frauds did not apply, and the 2015 Mediation Agreement
    was enforceable. Moore Property Investments, LLC v. Fulkerson, Nos. 2018-CA-
    000577-MR and 2018-CA-001435-MR, 
    2020 WL 4515418
     (Ky. App. Jul. 2,
    2020). This Court did not determine whether the Maintenance Provision ran with
    the land because the argument was not properly before the Court.5
    5
    The circuit court ruled on whether the Maintenance Provision ran with the land after Moore
    Property filed a notice of appeal. However, a notice of appeal transfers jurisdiction from the
    circuit court to the appellate court. Watkins v. Fannin, 
    278 S.W.3d 637
    , 639-40 (Ky. App. 2009)
    (quoting City of Devondale v. Stallings, 
    795 S.W.2d 954
    , 957 (Ky. 1990)). Without jurisdiction,
    the circuit court’s order was void. Moore Prop. Invs., 
    2020 WL 4515418
     at *4-5. The circuit
    court refiled its order after jurisdiction was returned; that order is the basis of this appeal.
    -6-
    In 2021, Fulkerson asked the circuit court to answer the most pressing
    remaining issue between the parties: whether the Maintenance Provision of the
    2015 Mediation Agreement ran with the land. In December 2021, the circuit court
    agreed with Fulkerson and found the Maintenance Provision was intended to run
    with the land. The order stated, “To the extent the parties have not been able to
    work in good faith to resolve this issue, the Court [] finds that because the [2015
    Mediation Agreement] states the subject property will be divided pursuant to a
    condominium regime, that the [Maintenance Provision] run[s] with the land.” The
    order did not state reasons why the agreement being subject to a condominium
    agreement meant the maintenance provision ran with the land.6 Moore Property
    again appealed to this Court.
    II.    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A settlement agreement is a contract, governed by contract law.
    Frear v. P.T.A. Indus., Inc., 
    103 S.W.3d 99
    , 105 (Ky. 2003). The construction and
    interpretation of a contract is a matter of law and is reviewed de novo without
    deference to the trial court’s interpretation. Spot-A-Pot, Inc. v. State Res. Corp.,
    
    278 S.W.3d 158
    , 161 (Ky. App. 2009) (citations omitted).
    6
    Although the circuit court did not explain its factual finding as to the provision running with the
    land, Moore Property did not move for additional factual findings under Kentucky Rule of Civil
    Procedure (“CR”) 52.04.
    -7-
    III.    ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Moore Property argues that the Maintenance Provision (in
    the 2015 Mediation Settlement) should not be enforceable because it is not a
    properly recorded restrictive covenant and does not meet the necessary
    requirements to be enforceable. Moore Property argued the “restrictive covenant”
    does not run with the land, does not touch and concern the land, privity of estate
    does not exist between the parties, and public policy would prevent this Court from
    enforcing an unrecorded restrictive covenant. To support its argument, Moore
    Property cites to precedent, each with duly recorded property instruments (deed,
    declaration of covenants, deed of restrictions, etc.).7 However, that is not
    consistent with the facts before us.
    7
    Hensley v. Gadd, 
    560 S.W.3d 516
     (Ky. 2018), enforced a restrictive covenant recorded in the
    Deed of Restrictions and reversed this Court’s “free use of property” finding; Triple Crown
    Subdivision Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Oberst, 
    279 S.W.3d 138
     (Ky. 2008), determined
    the property was bound by the restrictive covenants in the original developer’s Declaration of
    Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (despite being included by reference only in a
    subsequent chain of title); Colliver v. Stonewall Equestrian Estates Assiation, 
    139 S.W.3d 521
    (Ky. App. 2003), upheld a recorded restrictive covenant that was drafted and recorded by a later-
    dissolved developer (and despite previous inconsistent enforcement of the covenants by the
    homeowners’ association); KL & JL Investments, Inc. v. Lynch, 
    472 S.W.3d 540
     (Ky. App.
    2015), found a property owner was bound by a restrictive covenant contained in the original,
    recorded development plan (despite receiving zoning approval to subdivide and a release of the
    covenant from the surviving grantor); Oliver v. Shultz, 
    885 S.W.2d 699
     (Ky. 1994), (the only
    case Moore Property cited that did not enforce the restrictive covenant) found a restrictive
    covenant was not enforceable due, in part, because the restriction was not written in a recorded
    instrument for the property in question and therefore no notice was provided to subsequent
    purchasers.
    -8-
    The Maintenance Provision is not a recorded restrictive covenant; it is
    a contract provision from a mediation agreement about a possible, future restrictive
    covenant. Analysis of restrictive covenants and mediation agreements have
    consistencies: both fall within contract law and the intent of the parties is
    tantamount. See Hensley, 560 S.W.3d at 521-22; see also Spot-A-Pot, 
    278 S.W.3d at 161
    . However, recorded restrictive covenants and mediation agreements vary in
    their practical legal creation. Stated another way, mediation agreements are
    intended to plug holes in a sinking ship; recorded restrictive covenants are ships
    unto themselves that occasionally require judicial navigation. As legal
    practitioners know quite well, a mediation agreement does not contain every term
    of a contract with the exact, specific language intended.
    [I]t is noteworthy that frequently it is impossible to
    generate a formal settlement document at the mediation
    conference. While such is desirable and would avoid
    controversies such as that now before this Court, reason
    dictates that the final formal settlement agreement must be
    drafted upon the oral terms reached and informal notations
    made at the conclusion of the mediation conference.
    However, an oral settlement agreement is nevertheless
    binding and enforceable.
    Spot-A-Pot, 
    278 S.W.3d at 161
     (citation omitted).
    As the Kentucky Supreme Court noted in a similar case concerning a
    settlement or mediation agreement, this case raises concerns of considerable
    significance for all practitioners, as to what constitutes a binding settlement
    -9-
    agreement. See United States Liability Ins. Co. v. Watson, 
    626 S.W.3d 569
     (Ky.
    2021). Against that backdrop, we turn to the Agreement herein.
    While restrictive covenants often do not require extrinsic evidence for
    proper interpretation, mediation agreements, by their very nature, are meant to
    build upon previous agreements and result in subsequent agreements. This
    distinction does not always matter, but here, the distinction is useful on our hunt
    for the intention of the parties.
    [W]e first must determine whether the terms of the parties’
    settlement agreement are ambiguous because our
    resolution of the ambiguity question will dictate how our
    interpretive analysis will proceed. If an ambiguity exists,
    the court will gather, if possible, the intention of the parties
    from the contract as a whole, and in doing so will consider
    the subject matter of the contract, the situation of the
    parties and the conditions under which the contract was
    written, by evaluating extrinsic evidence as to the parties’
    intentions.
    Frear, 103 S.W.3d at 105-06 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Here, a panel of this Court previously determined that the 2015
    Mediation Agreement was not intended as a stand-alone document and did not
    include the entire agreement of the parties – i.e., alone, it is ambiguous. Moore
    Prop. Invs., 
    2020 WL 4515418
    , at *3. Therefore, we must look beyond the four
    corners of the document and consider – through extrinsic evidence – “the subject
    matter of the contract, the situation of the parties and the conditions under which
    the contract was written[.]” Frear, 103 S.W.3d at 106. In fact, our primary
    -10-
    objective is to effectuate the intentions of the parties. Cantrell Supply, Inc. v.
    Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    94 S.W.3d 381
    , 384 (Ky. App. 2002) (citation omitted).
    Both parties argue that the value of their property is negatively
    affected if the Maintenance Provision is not interpreted their way. Fulkerson
    argues, “if these protective provisions were not to run with the land, any person or
    entity taking ownership of the property from Dr. Fulkerson would have 0% control
    over any of the common area expenses or the color of the building.” She claims
    that failure to bind the Maintenance Provision to the land would make her unit
    “unmarketable.” Conversely, Moore Property argues, “[i]f a restrictive covenant
    were placed on the property altering the larger unit’s control, as does the
    maintenance provision contemplated by Fulkerson, the value of Moore Property’s
    unit would diminish.”
    Additionally, the 2015 Mediation Agreement does not state explicitly
    if the Maintenance Provision runs with the land or if it terminates at Fulkerson’s
    sale of Suite B. Moore Property argues the lack of language shows the parties’
    intent;8 while Fulkerson argues the totality of the circumstances and actions of the
    parties show their intentions. On this point, we agree with Fulkerson.
    8
    Moore Property argues 1) The 2009 Lease Agreement intentionally contained no reference to a
    restrictive covenant as to the common area elements; and 2) the 2015 Mediation Agreement
    contained no language to bind the Maintenance Provision to heirs, assigns, and/or subsequent
    purchasers.
    -11-
    In 2009, the parties negotiated a lease and Fulkerson retained an
    option to purchase Suite B. The original plan and/or understanding was that the
    property was or would be subdivided.9 When Fulkerson initially tried to exercise
    her right to purchase, Moore Property was unable to provide clear title. A
    contentious relationship quickly ensued. After litigation, the parties moved toward
    the sale, but were unable to complete the sale documents. Moore Property wanted
    the property recorded as a condominium regime, but such a regime would
    effectively eliminate Fulkerson’s control over the common areas. Fulkerson
    wanted to retain some control over the common areas.
    Fulkerson argues that she only agreed to the change from subdividing
    the property to a condominium regime if the Maintenance Provision was included
    and her common area rights were tied to her unit (in order to maintain the value of
    the unit and prevent future buyers from being at the whim of Moore Property’s
    unilateral common area decisions). Fulkerson argues she had no intention of
    giving up her rights to the common areas, especially considering Moore Property
    had threatened to abuse its control of the common areas if left unfettered.10 Moore
    Property admits in its appellate brief, “[t]he division of the property pursuant to a
    9
    The 2009 Lease Agreement does not include the word “condominium.”
    10
    Fulkerson argues that she was charged more than seven times the estimated expenses for the
    common area in 2010 and Moore Property threatened to paint “the entire property pink” if it
    chose to.
    -12-
    condominium regime was intended to settle a dispute between the parties and the
    maintenance provision was a compromise between them.” Moore Property simply
    insists it was not binding on future purchasers. We do not agree.
    As a matter of law, the Maintenance Provision is enforceable
    according to the agreed upon terms. The Maintenance Provision must be given
    permanency because the record reflects the parties intended a compromise: Moore
    Property could proceed with the condominium regime if Fulkerson received a unit
    with permanent voting rights (i.e., some control over the common area). The
    parties recognized that subsequent documents would need to be prepared, but they
    were intending to reach a compromise in an effort to end this long and tortuous
    litigation. Sadly, it did not bring an end to the litigation, and we recognize that this
    ruling may not either. However, we conclude the Maintenance Provision runs with
    the land.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, the order of the Jefferson Circuit Court is AFFIRMED.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE LAURA
    FULKERSON:
    Jason C. Vaughn                            Harold W. Thomas
    Louisville, Kentucky                       Louisville, Kentucky
    -13-