Altschuler v. Cohen

471 F. Supp. 1372, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11509
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJune 25, 1979
DocketCiv. A. 75-H-1632
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 471 F. Supp. 1372 (Altschuler v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altschuler v. Cohen, 471 F. Supp. 1372, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11509 (S.D. Tex. 1979).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND FINDINGS OF FACT

COWAN, District Judge.

I.

ISSUE AND BASIC DECISION

The parties have submitted the facts and the law to the court. The central issue is: Have these plaintiffs been victimized by material misrepresentations relating to “JV — 102”? The answer is: “No.”

The essential facts are: Plaintiffs, well-educated, sophisticated, high-tax bracket investors, entered a land syndication. The principal motivation was the accurate belief that the tract had great value and appreciation potential.

The tract was an excellent one. Plaintiffs would have enjoyed a profit if they had liquidated earlier, or if they had held through the hard times (from the standpoint of the real estate market) of late 1973, 1974 and 1975.

Plaintiffs’ loss occurred because they decided to abandon their venture at an inopportune time.

Plaintiffs have not proved misrepresentations or material non-disclosure. In any event, any misrepresentations (if there were any) were not material; the really material fact was that plaintiffs accurately perceived the value and appreciation potential of the tract.

II.

DETAILED FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Defendant Cohen is a mature businessman. In the early 1970’s having retired from his furniture business, he determined to “put together” syndications to buy raw land in the burgeoning Houston real estate market. Cohen has never been personally close to any of the plaintiffs. He had met various of them because in 1965 he served as the president of Temple Emanu El.

The record is hazy concerning Charles Zeller. Zeller did not appear and testify at trial; his deposition, if taken, was not introduced in evidence. Apparently, however, Zeller is an experienced real estate man.

The Realamerica Management Corporation (hereinafter “Realamerica”) is a corporation, holding a real estate brokerage license. The stock of Realamerica was owned by Cohen and Zeller.

*1374 Real Estate Management, Inc., one of the defendants herein, is a real estate management company owned by Cohen and Zeller.

During the latter 1960’s and the early 1970’s, real estate syndication was popular among high-bracket tax payers. The concept was that a group would purchase a tract of land, hold it for at least six months in order to enjoy long-term capital gains, and sell the land after a fairly brief holding period. Considerable money was made during the latter 1960’s and the early 1970’s. All of the plaintiffs participated in a number of these syndications before becoming members of “JV-102,” the syndication which gave rise to this controversy.

The raw land purchased by JV-102 is herein called the “Roane tract.” The Roane tract is, and at all material times has been, an excellent, strategically located tract. The 100-acre tract fronts the Eastex Freeway, which proceeds out of Houston in a generally northerly direction and skirts the Houston Intercontinental Airport on the east. Since the opening of the Houston Intercontinental Airport in the late 1960’s, the entire area has grown phenomenally, and has been characterized by the development of highly successful residential subdivisions inhabited primarily by middle and upper income homeowners. A very large amount of commercial development has occurred on major traffic arteries in this area.

The Roane tract is a long, narrow tract with its long side fronting upon the freeway. The north 20 acres of the tract is close to, but does not abut, the San Jacinto River. It is undisputed that the property is well-drained. Although there was some apprehension among the plaintiffs, in the year 1975, that the property might be included “within the 100-year flood plain,” the evidence reveals with little doubt that drainage has never been a serious problem. There has never been any realistic basis for substantial fear that the property could not be developed or that the value of the property, on a permanent basis, would be impaired by any serious drainage problem.

The parties have presented only one appraisal witness, David R. Bolton, an M.A.I. appraiser, who testified to his opinion that the value of the land at the time the syndicate purchased it was $24,000 per acre. The court accepts the credibility and reliability of Mr. Bolton’s testimony. The plaintiffs purchased the property for $22,000 per acre, and at the time they abandoned the investment in 1975, were offered an accommodation which would have resulted in their acquisition of the property, had they gone forward with the investment, for approximately $17,000 per acre.

At the time of the formation of JV — 102, the Roane tract was owned by Grant Roane, a responsible attorney and real estate developer. Roane had purchased the property from a Houston developer, Fred Rizk, for cash in 1971 and paid approximately $15,000 per acre to Rizk. Roane has testified, and the court credits his testimony, that it was possible to purchase the property for $15,-000 per acre because he paid Rizk cash.

Roane financed the purchase by borrowing $1,500,000 from the Capitol National Bank. After one year, Roane “moved” this indebtedness to Center Savings Association.

The basic concept of JV — 102, from the standpoint of a participant, was that a participant would buy one or a number of 4% interests in the syndicate. A purchaser of one 4% interest in the syndicate would make an initial investment, in the first year, of $9,200. This initial investment involved no tax advantage because this was the payment of the down-payment of the purchase price.

In addition, each participant would commit himself to pay taxes on the property during a five-year period and to make an interest payment of approximately $6,200 each year. The interest payment, of course, was tax-deductible as were the taxes. The concept was that at some point during the five-year period the property would be sold at an appreciated price and the investors would enjoy capital gains on the difference between their basis and the sales price.

*1375 These plaintiffs actually made an excellent investment. Their loss was solely attributable to the fact that they either panicked or became prematurely discouraged and refused to go forward at an inopportune time. This conclusion is supported by the following facts:

1. In September of 1972, just a few months after entering their initial venture, the plaintiffs received an opportunity to realize a very handsome profit. Plaintiffs Exh. 10 is an earnest money contract which, if accepted by the joint venture, would have resulted in a very substantial gain. Although plaintiffs suggest that the earnest money contract identified by Plaintiffs Exh. 10 was not bona fide, there is absolutely no evidence to that effect.
Cohen and Zeller recommended that the earnest money contract not be accepted and that a counter-offer be made. One of the reasons why the offer identified in Plaintiffs Exh. 10 was not accepted was that many of the joint venturers, including a number of the plaintiffs, believed that the property was much more valuable than did either the offerors or Cohen, and they wished to hold out for a much larger price.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
471 F. Supp. 1372, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altschuler-v-cohen-txsd-1979.