COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND FILED July 20, 2010 A.
John Voelker Acting Clerk of Court of Appeals |
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NOTICE |
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This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See Wis. Stat. § 808.10 and Rule 809.62. |
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APPEALS
from a judgment of the circuit courts for Brown and
Before
¶1 PER CURIAM. Ashwaubenon Boardwalk, LLC, (Boardwalk) appeals a judgment (1) awarding Eugene Rosenthal, Rosenthal Industries, Inc., and Riverplace Marina and Yacht Club, Inc., (Rosenthal) damages for Boardwalk’s breach of a land contract, (2) reforming the contract, and (3) denying Boardwalk’s request for foreclosure. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶2 In February 2005, Rosenthal purchased a marina from Boardwalk for $1,000,000. He paid $300,000 at closing and contracted to pay Boardwalk the remaining amount in two installments, along with an additional $156,000 for improvements Boardwalk agreed to make to the property. Boardwalk agreed to “repair all utilities to the boat slips,” and promised it would obtain and transfer adjacent land for additional parking.
¶3 Rosenthal paid the first installment, but refused to pay the final installment or the $156,000 because Boardwalk neither repaired the utilities to the boat slips nor obtained land for parking. When Boardwalk notified Rosenthal he was in default, Rosenthal sued Boardwalk alleging, as relevant here, breach of contract and intentional misrepresentation. Boardwalk responded by initiating two foreclosure actions against Rosenthal—one each in two different counties—alleging it was entitled to either payment in full or foreclosure on the property.
¶4 The circuit court consolidated the three suits. It submitted the breach of contract and misrepresentation claims to a jury. It independently decided the foreclosure claims. The jury rejected Rosenthal’s misrepresentation claims, but agreed Boardwalk breached the contract by not repairing the utilities and awarded Rosenthal $185,000 in damages.
¶5 The court did not ask the jury to determine whether Boardwalk had any obligation to provide additional parking. Instead, it considered the issue when evaluating Boardwalk’s foreclosure claims. It found that Boardwalk’s failure to obtain the promised parking was an act of bad faith, which, when coupled with its contract breach, permitted Rosenthal to withhold payment. It therefore denied Boardwalk’s request for foreclosure. Instead, it reformed the contract to provide that Rosenthal’s payments were due only after Boardwalk provided the promised parking and paid Rosenthal his contract damages.
DISCUSSION
¶6 The primary issue Boardwalk presents on appeal is whether the circuit court erred when it reformed the contract instead of granting foreclosure. The essence of Boardwalk’s argument is that the court had no choice but to grant foreclosure because Rosenthal failed to make payments required under the contract. It contends the court had no authority to instead reform the contract to condition Rosenthal’s payments on Boardwalk rectifying its breach and act of bad faith.[1]
¶7 We reject Boardwalk’s argument, however, because Boardwalk fails
to provide any legal authority for what a circuit court may do in a foreclosure
proceeding. Boardwalk contends that
“foreclosure is a statutory right,” but nowhere identifies what statute
provides that right or explains how that statute applies to this case. We decline Boardwalk’s implicit invitation to
ferret out statutory, or any other, authority to support its argument. See
M.C.I.,
Inc. v. Elbin, 146
OTHER ISSUES
¶8 Boardwalk argues the circuit court made three additional errors during the foreclosure proceeding. It contends the court erred when it: (1) concluded Rosenthal’s misrepresentation claims were not barred by the economic loss doctrine; (2) permitted evidence Boardwalk breached another contract; and (3) rejected Boardwalk’s request to offset the damages it owed Rosenthal against the payments Rosenthal owed it. We reject all three arguments.
¶9 Boardwalk argues Rosenthal’s misrepresentation claims were
tort claims and therefore barred by the economic loss doctrine. The
economic loss doctrine requires transacting parties “to pursue only their
contractual remedies when asserting an economic loss claim ….” Digicorp, Inc. v. Ameritech Corp.,
2003 WI 54, ¶34, 262
¶10 We likewise reject Boardwalk’s argument the circuit court improperly permitted evidence it breached another contract. Boardwalk concedes that Rosenthal offered the testimony to support its tort claims, not to prove Boardwalk’s prior breach was evidence it breached the contract here. As discussed above, Rosenthal did not prevail on his tort claims. The issue of whether evidence offered to support those claims was properly admitted is also moot.
¶11 Finally, Boardwalk argues that the court should have permitted it to offset the $185,000 judgment it owes Rosenthal against the contract payments Rosenthal owes Boardwalk. Boardwalk contends it is entitled to an offset, because “it is the Supreme Court of Wisconsin’s longstanding policy to offset mutual judgments against each other.” The very language of Boardwalk’s argument belies the merit of its claim. Boardwalk did not receive any judgment against Rosenthal; therefore, there were no “mutual judgments against each other” to offset.
By the Court.—Judgment affirmed.
This opinion will not be published. See Wis. Stat. Rule 809.23(1)(b)5.
[1] Boardwalk also argues the circuit court erred by reforming the contract because Rosenthal elected to pursue contract damages, which, it contends, precluded Rosenthal from also seeking contract reformation. This argument, however, conflates the breach of contract and foreclosure suits. In the former suit, Rosenthal sought damages for Boardwalk’s contract breach. In the latter suit, Boardwalk sought foreclosure as a result of Rosenthal’s failure to make payments. Rosenthal argued he properly withheld the payments because Boardwalk breached the contract and acted in bad faith. The court agreed and concluded Boardwalk was not entitled to payment until it remedied its breach and act of bad faith. This judgment, however, required the contract be reformed.