250 Ga. App. 537 550 S.E.2d 711

A01A0774, A01A0775, A01A0776.

SUDLER et al. v. CAMPBELL et al. (three cases).

(550 SE2d 711)

Ruffin, Judge.

Appellants Howard Sudler, Mary Sudler, the Sudler Partnership, the Sudler Corporation, and Pisón Partners, L.P. sued the City of Atlanta and several city officials (“the City appellees”) for trespass, interference with contractual and business relations, violation of “federal home provisions,” equal protection violations, breach of contract, and conspiracy to defraud. The City appellees moved for summary judgment on each of appellants’ claims. In addition, they asserted that Pisón Partners (“Pisón”) was the only real party in interest and moved to dismiss the claims of Howard Sudler, Mary Sudler, the Sudler Partnership, and the Sudler Corporation.

The trial court granted the City appellees’ motions and also denied as moot appellants’ motion to set aside a foreclosure con*538ducted by the City of Atlanta. Appellants challenge each of these rulings on appeal. For reasons discussed below, we affirm.

Case No. A01A0776

1. In Case No. A01A0776, appellants attack the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to the City appellees. “In reviewing the grant or denial of summary judgment, a de novo standard of review is applied, and we view the evidence with all reasonable inferences and conclusions in favor of the party opposing the summary judgment.”1

Viewed in this manner, the record shows that Howard and Mary Sudler were partners in the Sudler Partnership, which, in turn, was the original general partner of Pisón. The Sudler Corporation later became Pison’s general partner.

In August 1994, the United States Department of Housing & Urban Development (“HUD”) auctioned an apartment complex in Fulton County (“the property”). The Sudler Partnership submitted the winning bid of $1,500,000 and planned to rehabilitate the housing development. The City of Atlanta became interested in the project, which officials thought would bring needed affordable housing to the area. After the auction, but before the Sudler Partnership acquired the property, the City’s Urban Residential Finance Authority (“URFA”) adopted an “inducement resolution” setting forth “its official commitment, to issue . . . Bonds . . . in an amount of approximately $20,000,000 prescribed by [the Sudler Partnership] and to expend or loan the proceeds thereof to finance the costs of the [property’s development].”

The Sudler Partnership scheduled the property closing for December 1994. Before the closing, URFA issued another resolution reducing the bond commitment to $15,000,000 and indicating that Pisón had replaced the Sudler Partnership as developer. The City also loaned Pisón $1,500,000 to acquire the property, which Pisón purchased on December 22, 1994. Pisón gave the City a deed to secure debt, and the loan documents required that the City and URFA approve various aspects of the renovations. In addition, Pisón agreed to repay the loan by December 1, 1995.

Apparently, the redevelopment did not proceed as planned. According to Howard Sudler, he had difficulty obtaining necessary approvals from the City and never received the bond financing discussed in URFA’s resolutions. On November 29, 1995, Pisón asked the City for a six-month extension on the $1,500,000 note. Pisón received no response and did not repay the loan by the December 1, *5391995 due date. The City’s counsel subsequently informed Pisón that it was in default.

In March 1996, the City began advertising for an April foreclosure sale on the property. Prior to the sale, the City and Pisón entered into a Forbearance Agreement, under which the City agreed not to foreclose before July 1, 1996. In addition, Pisón, Howard Sudler, the Sudler Partnership, and the Sudler Corporation signed a Covenant Not to Sue, in which they agreed not to

institute any action or otherwise assert against the CITY OF ATLANTA, its officers, directors, agents, [or] employees . . . any rights, claims, demands, actions, causes of action, or suits, whether in law, equity, or otherwise, whether in contract, tort, or otherwise, or any suit of any kind or nature whatever, now accrued or hereafter to accrue, as the result of or directly or indirectly related to any damages, known or unknown, foreseen or unforeseen, manifested or not yet manifested, arising out of or otherwise related to (a) the loan . . . made by the City of Atlanta to Pisón Partners, L.P. on December 22, 1994, in the principal amount of $1,500,000; or (b) the property

The Covenant Not to Sue was attached as an exhibit to and explicitly incorporated in the Forbearance Agreement.

Despite this compromise, problems with the project continued. In June 1996, the City scheduled a foreclosure sale for July 2, 1996. On July 1, however, Pisón filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code, automatically staying the foreclosure. The City subsequently requested relief from the stay. On May 20, 1997, the bankruptcy court lifted the stay, and the City foreclosed in July 1997. Pison’s bankruptcy petition was later dismissed.

On June 27, 1997, appellants filed this action alleging that the City appellees (1) conspired to trespass on the property, (2) interfered with appellants’ contractual and business relations regarding the redevelopment project, (3) violated the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, (4) violated appellants’ equal protection rights, (5) breached certain contracts, and (6) fraudulently induced appellants to purchase the property and enter agreements with the City.

In their motion for summary judgment, the City appellees argued that appellants’ claims were barred by res judicata and, alternatively, that appellants Pisón, Howard Sudler, the Sudler Partnership, and the Sudler Corporation had released the City appellees from all claims. The trial court agreed, granting summary judgment on both grounds. Because we find that the Covenant Not to Sue pre*540eludes the claims of each appellant except Mary Sudler,2 we need not reach the res judicata issue.

On appeal, appellants do not question the scope of the Covenant or its application to all claims against the City appellees. They argue instead that “they were fraudulently induced into entering the [Forbearance Agreement] (and the [Covenant Not to Sue] therein),” raising factual questions as to the validity of the release. Specifically, Howard Sudler testified that appellants entered the Covenant Not to Sue based on assurances from the City’s counsel that the City would work with appellants in developing the property and securing bond financing and that appellants “would have a clear legal claim against the City if the City or URFA impeded [their] financing in any way or failed to cooperate with any reasonable proposal.”3

The trial court rejected appellants’ fraudulent inducement argument, finding summary judgment appropriate because the Covenant provided “that ‘[t]he Covenantors ... do not rely on any inducements, promises or representations made by the Covenantee, or its counsel not hereinabove expressly set forth in writing.’ ” We agree with the trial court.

Parties claiming fraudulent inducement have two remedies: rescind the contract as voidable or affirm the contract and sue for damages.4 A party that rescinds is not limited by the contract terms.5 If, however, the party decides to affirm and sue on the contract, the contract terms control, and the party is bound by any merger clause or disclaimer.6

Appellants have cited no evidence that they rescinded any agreement in this case. Furthermore, although the claims in appellants’ exceedingly lengthy complaint are not completely clear, their appel*541late brief clarifies their intent to sue in contract for breach of the Forbearance Agreement, which explicitly incorporates the Covenant Not to Sue. All appellants except Mary Sudler apparently claim a right to sue for this alleged breach. According to appellants, “[i]t is the breach of [an] implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in the [Forbearance Agreement] that the [a]ppellants maintain serve as the proof of . . . one of the breaches of contract between the City [a]ppellees and the [a]ppellants.” Thus, by appellants’ own admission, they are suing for breach of the Forbearance Agreement.7

By alleging that the City appellees breached the Forbearance Agreement, which specifically incorporates the Covenant Not to Sue, appellants elected their remedy — they chose to affirm the contract. They are now bound by its terms, including their explicit agreement that they would not file suit against the City or its officers or employees. Appellants are further bound by their statement in the Covenant that, in entering the agreement, they did not “rely on any inducements, promises, or representations . . . not hereinabove expressly set forth in writing.” The presence of this merger clause is determinative and “precludes any reliance on oral representations.”8 Accordingly, the trial court properly awarded the City appellees summary judgment as to claims brought by Pisón, Howard Sudler, the Sudler Partnership, and the Sudler Corporation.

Case No. A01A0774

2. Given our decision in Division 1, the only possible claims remaining against the City appellees are those brought by Mary Sudler. The trial court, however, dismissed Mary Sudler’s claims, finding that she was not a real party in interest under OCGA § 9-11-17.

Although Mary Sudler challenges that ruling in Case No. A01A0774, her brief does not, in any way, establish that she is a real party in interest in this case. It outlines the interest that Howard Sudler, the Sudler Partnership, and the Sudler Corporation allegedly have, but barely mentions Mary Sudler in her individual capacity. Similarly, appellants’ lengthy complaint merely identifies Mary *542Sudler as a partner in the Sudler Partnership, notes her Delaware residence, and asserts that she and Howard Sudler “won the [HUD] auction bid” for the subject property.

Decided June 21, 2001

Reconsideration denied July 13, 2001

Meriwether & Tharp, Patrick L. Meriwether, Robert L. Tharp, for appellants.

Weinstock & Scavo, Michael Weinstock, Thomas, Kennedy, Sampson & Patterson, Thomas G. Sampson, Monica E. Ewing, Lemuel H. Ward, for appellees.

Mary Sudler’s involvement in this suit stems from her partnership interest in the Sudler Partnership. As we have previously held, however, “[f]or the suit to survive as to [her], there must be a relationship between [her] and the tortfeasor or contract-breacher independent of that derived as a partner.”9 No such relationship is alleged in the complaint or asserted on appeal. Accordingly, the trial court properly dismissed Mary Sudler’s claims against the City appellees.10

Case No. A01A0775

3. In their final case on appeal, appellants challenge the trial court’s denial of their motion — filed against the City — to set aside the foreclosure on the subject property. The trial court dismissed this motion as moot after granting summary judgment to the City. In Division 1, we affirmed that summary judgment award as to claims brought by Pisón, Howard Sudler, the Sudler Partnership, and the Sudler Corporation. In Division 2, we affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of Mary Sudler’s claims against the City. Consequently, no claims involving the City remain, and the trial court properly dismissed appellants’ pending motion to set aside the foreclosure as moot.11

Judgments affirmed.

Johnson, P. J., and Ellington, J., concur.

Sudler v. Campbell
250 Ga. App. 537 550 S.E.2d 711

Case Details

Name
Sudler v. Campbell
Decision Date
Jun 21, 2001
Citations

250 Ga. App. 537

550 S.E.2d 711

Jurisdiction
Georgia

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