Angotti & Reilly v. Rincon Residential Towers CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 2015
DocketA140648
StatusUnpublished

This text of Angotti & Reilly v. Rincon Residential Towers CA1/1 (Angotti & Reilly v. Rincon Residential Towers CA1/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angotti & Reilly v. Rincon Residential Towers CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 11/19/15 Angotti & Reilly v. Rincon Residential Towers CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

ANGOTTI & REILLY, INC., Plaintiff and Appellant, A140648 v. RINCON RESIDENTIAL TOWERS LLC, (San Francisco County Super. Ct. No. CPF-10-510383) Defendant and Respondent.

Appellant Angotti & Reilly, Inc. (A&R) is a general contractor that provided construction services for respondent Rincon Residential Towers LLC (Rincon). After Rincon refused to pay A&R’s last few invoices, A&R pursued and prevailed in an arbitration, winning an award of over $700,000, plus attorney fees and penalties. The trial court confirmed the arbitration award, but Rincon could not satisfy the judgment. A&R then moved to join Rincon’s primary member, Richard Cohen, as a judgment debtor under an alter-ego theory. The trial court denied the motion. We affirm. BACKGROUND In January 2008, A&R partially renovated Rincon Center (the Center), a commercial and residential building in San Francisco, under a contract with Rincon. By the time work was finished, A&R had submitted invoices for $7.3 million. Rincon paid all of the invoices except the final three, leaving an unpaid balance of $766,420. An arbitrator awarded that amount, along with attorney fees and penalties, to A&R, and this award was confirmed by the trial court. After A&R was unable to obtain satisfaction of

1 the award from Rincon, it moved to join Cohen as a judgment debtor on the theory that, under Code of Civil Procedure section 187, he was an alter ego of Rincon. Whether the two were alter egos depends, of course, on their relationship, and we therefore turn to describe it in some detail. Cohen is the founder and president of Capital Properties, a real estate investment company that, in 2008, owned four million square feet of commercial space and 18,000 apartments. Rincon is a Delaware limited-liability company, of which Cohen and a family trust are its only members.1 The Center was purchased in June 2007 by two limited-liability companies owned by Cohen and entities under his control. Cohen contributed over $34 million to the purchase, while the remainder was financed with a $110 million secured loan from Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage, Inc. (the loan).2 The loan had a two-year term, with an option to extend for an additional year. Rincon was characterized as a “borrower” in the loan agreement, but it was not the building’s owner. The building was owned by the two limited-liability companies, which leased the Center to Rincon. Rincon, in turn, retained another Cohen-controlled entity to provide management services. Rincon and the two limited-liability companies are “single[-]purpose entities,” which are commonly used in real estate transactions. These entities are structured to insulate the repayment of a loan from other debts of the equitable owner of real estate, thereby enhancing the security and marketability of the loan. Cohen was required by the loan agreement to use single-purpose entities for the Center’s purchase. Under the loan agreement, the lender, not Cohen, controlled the income generated by the Center. Rincon was required to establish in trust a “lockbox account” that was

1 The owners of limited-liability companies are technically referred to as members, not shareholders. But we will periodically refer to them as shareholders since the term is more common and the distinction between the two terms makes no difference under the law of alter ego. 2 Bear Stearns was an early victim of the Great Recession, and the loan was eventually controlled by successors in interest. We will refer to Bear Stearns, entities operating on behalf of Bear Stearns, and Bear Stearns’s successors in interest collectively as the “lender.”

2 under the exclusive control of the lender. The Center’s tenants were required to make rent payments to the lockbox account, rather than to Cohen. The funds in the lockbox account were then released, at the direction of the lender, to pay project expenses according to a hierarchy established by the loan agreement, with taxes and insurance at the top, operating expenses in the middle, and distributions to Cohen at the bottom. When funds were released to Rincon to pay expenses, the funds were transferred to a “controlled disbursement account” held in the name of Capital Properties Services LLC, yet another Cohen-controlled entity, on which payment checks were written. According to Rincon’s treasurer, “[o]ther than the use of this cash management procedure at the time checks were written for the Property, all of the revenue from the Property was kept in segregated accounts and was not commingled with other funds.” In 2007, the Center produced rental income of $2.8 million. At the time the property was purchased, Cohen believed that the Center’s tenant occupancy was below its potential, and his plan was to renovate the building, which had 320 apartment units, into a luxury residential complex. In addition to his purchase money, he contributed over $3.5 million for initial debt service and $5.8 million for anticipated renovations. Subsequently, Rincon contracted with A&R for the sum of $5.9 million for the renovations, which it planned to pay for from Cohen’s contributions and from income produced by the Center. By 2008, the Center’s income had grown to $5.4 million. This increase was enough to cover the Center’s operating expenses, but it was inadequate to also cover debt service. Between 2007 and 2010, Cohen contributed an additional $13 million to the project. In a trial brief filed in connection with subsequent litigation, Rincon stated that a “shortfall was anticipated for the beginning of Rincon’s ownership of the Property—this was a value-add property, and [Cohen] had expected that it would be necessary to invest money to make the Property profitable.” As explained by Rincon’s treasurer, between January and March 2009, the lender failed to release funds that would have paid for the Center’s operating expenses, even though sufficient funds were available in the lockbox account. Cohen provided about

3 $700,000 to cover the shortfall. In April, the lender disbursed sufficient funds to cover the operating expenses accrued during the first part of the year, and Rincon used some of these funds to reimburse Cohen the money he had provided.3 In the end, there was insufficient money to pay all the bills. Rincon attributed the shortfall to the Great Recession, which began shortly after Cohen bought the Center.4 Within nine months of buying the Center, Cohen concluded that its value was considerably diminished, and he began having conflicts with the lender about releasing funds to pay expenses. By the time the loan came due in June 2009, Cohen was in default. During subsequent negotiations, he was unable to reach agreement with the lender, and he eventually lost the property through a foreclosure on the loan. The record generally shows that the Cohen-controlled entities directly involved in the Center were more legal constructs than operating businesses and that Cohen treated them as part of his larger real estate investment business, rather than as separate and independent businesses.5 Rincon, for example, had no employees, despite being the putative lessee of the Center. The people who dealt with A&R on behalf of Rincon were all employees of Capital Properties. And, as A&R points out, Capital Properties claimed in public relations documents to be the owner and manager of the Center, although as an entity it was actually neither.

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Angotti & Reilly v. Rincon Residential Towers CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angotti-reilly-v-rincon-residential-towers-ca11-calctapp-2015.