Abell v. Potomac Insurance

858 F.2d 1104, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 14715, 1988 WL 106947
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 2, 1988
DocketNo. 87-4260
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 858 F.2d 1104 (Abell v. Potomac Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abell v. Potomac Insurance, 858 F.2d 1104, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 14715, 1988 WL 106947 (5th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

This is a civil case involving securities fraud, racketeering, and pendent state law claims. The plaintiffs, a class of investors who own bonds issued by the Westside Rehabilitation Center (“Westside”), allege that Joe Fryar, Westside’s developer, and Wright, Lindsey & Jennings (“WLJ”), a Little Rock, Arkansas, law firm representing the bond issue’s underwriters, fraudulently caused Westside to default on its bond interest payments, ultimately causing the bondholders to lose millions of dollars. After a two-month trial, the jury returned a multi-million-dollar verdict in favor of the plaintiffs and against Fryar, WU, and their two co-defendants, All American Services, Inc. (“All American”), and Valley Forge Insurance Company (“Valley Forge”). The district court, which rejected all of the defendants’ motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, entered judgment upon this verdict and awarded plaintiffs damages totaling approximately $15 million. All of the defendants appealed from this judgment, but we dismissed All American’s appeal for failure to prosecute. We now reverse and render the judgment against WLJ and Valley Forge, and affirm in part the judgment of liability against Fryar, and remand for redetermination of damages, interest, and attorneys’ fees.

I. Facts as to the Merits.1

Westside, a non-profit corporation based in Cheneyville, Louisiana, was masterminded by its developer, Joe Fryar. Fryar originally conceived of Westside as a home for the mentally retarded, but he eventually changed Westside’s targeted clientele to severely mentally and emotionally-disturbed patients. Fryar then prepared to translate his ideas into reality.

First, Fryar purchased 6.47 acres of land and a thirty-year-old vacant school building in Cheneyville (the “Cheneyville property”) from the Rapides Parish School Board on January 3,1978, for the sum of $100,000, its appraised value. Fryar then incorporated Westside in 1979. At its inception, West-side had no capital assets; rather, its sole source of revenue and assets initially was to be the sale of bonds. Thereafter, Westside would rely on revenues paid by the State of Louisiana Medicaid program, which revenues would be used to retire the bonds.

Fryar hired his attorney, William Skye, to prepare the incorporation papers. Although a five-member board of directors was appointed, the board never collectively made any decisions on behalf of Westside. Rather, Fryar continued to control West-side and make all its decisions, including the purchase price for the Cheneyville property and the fees to be paid Fryar. Throughout the period relevant to this appeal, Fryar continued to run Westside.

Fryar’s initial problems involved obtain[1110]*1110ing a certificate of need for Westside2 and the capital funds necessary to launch the project. Ultimately, Westside succeeded in obtaining its certificate of need, despite some opposition from officials in the Louisiana Department of Health and Human Resources. Fryar, however, found it considerably more difficult to procure capital funding for Westside.

Fryar knew that building the Westside facility and starting up its operations would cost millions of dollars. To raise the needed capital, he decided to market bonds. Initially, Fryar hired the nationally-known financial feasibility firm of Booz, Allen & Hamilton, Inc. (“Booz, Allen”), to evaluate the Westside project.

Booz, Allen dealt the Westside project its first blow. In a report dated July 23, 1979, the firm concluded that Westside was not financially feasible. Booz, Allen found several areas of concern, including (1) the possibility that the state medicaid program would impose ceilings on medicaid reimbursements; (2) the difficulties Westside would encounter in retiring its debt, since it depended entirely upon medicaid reimbursements and lacked adequate sources of working capital; and (3) the inherent faults of the Westside concept in a state whose prevailing policies required placing West-side’s potential patients in group homes.

The study caused Fryar to change his targeted clientele to emotionally-disturbed and mentally-retarded patients, but even this change did not alter Booz, Allen’s decision. After Fryar threatened Booz, Allen with suit because of its adverse conclusions, Booz, Allen agreed to sign a letter drafted by WLJ’s predecessor as bond counsel, the Boston law firm of Mintz, Lev-in, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky & Popeo (“Mintz, Levin”). That epistle noted only the change in clientele and stated that Booz, Allen’s conclusions may not necessarily still be applicable. The letter from Booz, Allen did not solve Fryar’s problems, because he still did not have a favorable feasibility study.

Undeterred, Fryar retained Real Estate Research Corporation (“RERC”), experienced primarily in appraising real estate, to conduct a feasibility study. RERC ultimately delivered a favorable report. Meanwhile, Fryar encountered other difficulties in effecting a bond issue to fund Westside. He initially asked the Louisiana State Bond Commission for permission to finance the project through the Louisiana Public Facilities Authority; citing a variety of concerns, the Commission declined to approve financing for Westside bonds. Shortly thereafter, Westside’s bond counsel, the New York law firm of Mudge, Rose, Guthrie & Alexander, resigned. Some time later, Westside retained John W. Peck of Peck, Shaffer & Williams as the new bond counsel.

Ultimately, Fryar convinced the Town of Cheneyville to back a $12,850,000 municipal bond issue. Later, and somewhat mysteriously, the bond authorization was increased to $13,550,000. Having described Fryar’s long and successful struggle to obtain backing for the bond issue, we turn to how Fryar arranged Westside’s finances.

Fryar had determined that he needed to receive over $5,000,000 to renovate, construct, and operate the Westside facility for an estimated seven months until it became self-sufficient. Westside’s final offering statement for the bonds indicates that Westside also planned to expend over $3,200,000 in interest payments on the bonds, over $2,100,000 for debt service, more than $1,000,000 as an underwriter’s discount, and $2,459,700 for “acquisition of center.” The offering statement does not reveal in explicit detail how Westside actually acquired its facilities, and the failure of the offering statement to explain that transaction more thoroughly is at the heart of this multi-million-dollar litigation.

Fryar planned to issue the revenue bonds in the following denominations and maturities:

[1111]*1111No. of Bonds Face Total Amount Amount Due Date Interest Rate

$5,000 8,950,000 Oct. 1, 2013 16.50% o

5,000 400,000 Oct. 1, 2002 16.25% o

5,000 200,000 Oct. 1, 1998 16.00% o

5,000 4,000,000 Oct. 1, 2013 14.00% QO o

2,710 $13,550,000

Until late 1981, Fryar owned the property eventually used to establish Westside. In 1981, he either contacted or helped create All American, a Bermuda corporation. Frequently using the mails and the wires to communicate messages and transmit documents, Fryar and All American eventually devised a complicated transaction to dispose of Fryar’s interest in the land. Fryar, who had bought the land in 1978 for $100,000, agreed to sell this land to All American for $150,000.

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Abell v. Potomac Insurance Company
858 F.2d 1104 (Fifth Circuit, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
858 F.2d 1104, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 14715, 1988 WL 106947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abell-v-potomac-insurance-ca5-1988.