Brumbaugh v. Princeton Partners

985 F.2d 157, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 1907
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 1993
DocketNos. 91-1682, 92-1909
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 985 F.2d 157 (Brumbaugh v. Princeton Partners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brumbaugh v. Princeton Partners, 985 F.2d 157, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 1907 (4th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:

This securities fraud suit poses the question of when a plaintiff is put on inquiry notice of alleged misrepresentations for purposes of starting a statutory limitations period. In 1982, Richard Brumbaugh purchased one unit in a limited partnership from Princeton Partners. The partnership was to own and operate commercial properties while creating tax losses to shelter the income of the limited partners. The IRS audited the partnership, however, and disallowed the tax deductions in a summary report dated October 28, 1988. Brum-baugh then filed this action on November 23, 1990, alleging common law fraud and violations of state and federal securities laws by Princeton Partners. The district court dismissed the complaint on statute of limitations grounds, 766 F.Supp. 497. Because the prospectus sufficiently disclosed the risks that subsequently led the IRS to disallow the deductions, we believe that the investor was on inquiry notice and that the statutory limitations period began to run on the date of the sale of the limited partnership unit. In so ruling, we affirm the judgment of the district court that plaintiffs claims were time barred.

I.

Princeton Partners was formed in 1982 to own and operate commercial properties leased to Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. in Joplin, Missouri and Princeton, Kentucky. The General Partner is Pennvest Company; thirty limited partnerships were sold to investors. Princeton Partners acquired the properties from Video Investments, Ltd. (“Video") for $2.3 million. Princeton Partners did not pay cash for the properties; instead, it signed a non-recourse note, secured by notes from the investors, for the purchase price. The interest rate on the note averaged twenty-six and a half percent. The note provided for additional borrowing by Princeton Partners during each year of the note to meet the debt obligations to Video and other partnership expenses. In addition, Video loaned the partnership $460,000 cash, which was evidenced by a separate note. Video retained the right to approximately thirty-two percent of the rentals through 1985 and fifty percent of all rents that exceeded a forecasted schedule through 1992; its share of the rental income was over $300,000 through 1985. Video also retained the right to relet any terminated or defaulted leases.

Thomas Ledbetter, Joseph Egan, Marc Zaid, Ralph Feaver, Daniel Litwin, Howard Morris, and Gregory Russell were partners of Pennvest Company and the promoter-organizers of Princeton Partners. Litwin, Morris.and Russell were also equal shareholders in Video. In a separate agreement, Video assigned fifty percent of its profits from the transaction to Pennvest Corporation, which was jointly owned by Ledbetter, Egan, Zaid and Feaver.

Princeton Partners’ debt to Video was scheduled to come due in 1993. Under the agreement, the total principal due at that time was approximately $4.4 million. In order to repay this obligation, Princeton Partners could (1) repay the loan in full or (2) exercise the Refinancing Option and sell a thirty-seven percent interest in the property to Video in exchange for $300,000 cash and a $2 million reduction in principal, with the remainder of the debt to be refinanced by a thirty-year mortgage.

Princeton Partners marketed the limited partnership units via a Private Placement Memorandum (“PPM”) which was received by all prospective investors. The PPM begins with the warning: “THIS OFFERING INVOLVES A SUBSTANTIAL DEGREE OF RISK (INCLUDING RISKS RELATING TO BENEFITS DERIVED FROM TAX ADVANTAGED INVESTMENTS), SUBSTANTIAL PROFITS TO THE PRO[160]*160MOTERS, SUBSTANTIAL LIMITATIONS ON ECONOMIC RETURN AND SUBSTANTIAL RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFERABILITY OF THE UNITS.” On the second page investors are further cautioned that “EACH INVESTOR SHOULD CONSULT HIS OWN PERSONAL COUNSEL, ACCOUNTANT AND OTHER AD-VISORS AS TO LEGAL, TAX, ECONOMIC, AND RELATED MATTERS CONCERNING THE INVESTMENT DESCRIBED HEREIN AND ITS SUITABILITY FOR HIM.” The introduction also advises that the investment is suitable only for investors in high marginal tax brackets who can afford to risk a “NON-LIQUID, SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT.”

The specific risks discussed in the “Risk Factors” section of the prospectus add detail to the warnings included in the introduction. Under “Tax Risks,” the PPM lists thirteen separate risks that could jeopardize the tax deductions expected from the investment. Included in these risks, among others, are the possibilities that the IRS may find that (1) Video and the partnership are not separate entities, (2) the interest deductions lacked “substantial economic effect,” and (3) there was no profit objective in the transaction. The result of these findings would be that the deductions claimed by the partnership would be disallowed. The Risk Factors section also included subsections detailing “Operating Risks” and “Investment Risks.” The Operating Risks included “Limitation on Economic Return” for the limited partners which would result from Video’s retention of a share of the rental income and other rights in the properties. Investment Risks included “No Participation in Management” by the limited partners, “Limited Transfer and Illiquidity of Units,” and the “Risk of Balloon Note” being beyond the ability of the partnership to repay. A separate seventeen-page section, “Summary of Federal Income Tax Consequences,” provided even more details about possible adverse treatment of the transaction by the IRS. Finally, the PPM was accompanied by the forty-five page opinion of tax counsel assessing the tax issues raised by the transaction.

The PPM’s warnings of adverse treatment by the IRS eventually came to pass. In a summary report dated October 28, 1988, the IRS disallowed the losses claimed by the partnership on the grounds that the transaction lacked “economic reality” and was not entered into for profit, but for tax advantage. The IRS listed ten factors that led it to this conclusion:

1. Lack of Partner Expertise and Experience
2. Timing of Transactions and Relation of the Parties Involved
3. “Front End Write-Offs”
4. Unrealistic Debt
5. Lack of Equity Build-Up
6. Limited Transferability and Illiquidity of Partner’s Interest’s [sic]
7. Use of Tenant Rentals to Service Underlying Debt
8. Substantial Economic Risks
9. Questionable Residuary Value
10. Loss of Revenue to the United States Government

The combination of these factors persuaded the IRS that it was unlikely that Princeton Partners would ever be able to repay the debt to Video or ever show a profit from the transaction. The tax deductions claimed by the limited partners, however, would provide a tax savings that approximated their initial investments within six years. The IRS also surmised that the investors were likely to walk away from the property without repaying the note or ever having received income. Thus, the partners would never pay taxes on the investment. Accordingly, the IRS concluded that the transaction was an “abusive tax shelter” and disallowed the partnership deductions.

Disgruntled by this turn of events, Brumbaugh, a West Virginia attorney, filed this lawsuit on November 23, 1990 to recover his investment in the limited partnership and other related damages.

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Bluebook (online)
985 F.2d 157, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 1907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brumbaugh-v-princeton-partners-ca4-1993.