Compound Property Management LLC, et al. v. Build Realty, Inc., et al.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 27, 2026
Docket1:19-cv-00133
StatusUnknown

This text of Compound Property Management LLC, et al. v. Build Realty, Inc., et al. (Compound Property Management LLC, et al. v. Build Realty, Inc., et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compound Property Management LLC, et al. v. Build Realty, Inc., et al., (S.D. Ohio 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

COMPOUND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC, et al.,

Plaintiffs, Case No. 1:19-cv-133

v. JUDGE DOUGLAS R. COLE

BUILD REALTY, INC., et al.,

Defendants. OPINION AND ORDER The named Plaintiffs in this class action have filed an unopposed motion in which they seek final court approval of a proposed class action settlement. (Doc. 261). Separately, Plaintiffs seek an order awarding attorneys’ fees, litigation expenses, and service awards. (Doc. 260). For the reasons discussed below, the Court GRANTS Plaintiffs’ Motion for Final Approval of Class Action Settlement (Doc. 261), and APPROVES the class action settlement. The Court further GRANTS Plaintiffs’ Motion for Attorneys’ Fees, Expenses, and Class Representative Service Awards (Doc. 260). Specifically, it AWARDS class counsel attorneys’ fees in the amount of one- third of the common fund (as further described below), alongside any potential later fees collected from Gary Bailey. Beyond that, the Court also AWARDS $163,940.77 in litigation costs and expenses, and AWARDS each named Plaintiff $10,000 as a service award. BACKGROUND A. Nature of the Suit and Procedural Background In its previous Opinions and Orders, the Court has described in detail the real- estate investment scheme at issue in this case. (See Doc. 131, #2232–37; Doc. 223,

#10480–93; Doc. 259, #10900–05). Considering that the factual background of the case has not changed since those Opinions and Orders, the Court will only briefly summarize the facts here. Plaintiffs, a “collection of small real-estate investor LLCs,” worked with Defendants, several interrelated businesses, to “flip” homes. (Doc. 223, #10480–81). The Court has previously described the transactions as follows: (1) investors [such as Plaintiffs] paid $10,000 to [Defendants] to receive a loan to “purchase” and remodel a house; (2) during the duration of the loan, investors paid only interest and fronted rehab expenses to be reimbursed by [Defendants] from the loan; and (3) investors then marketed and sold the property, reaping any profits above their accrued obligations under the loan and other fees. But [the investor never] held legal title to the property. Rather, during the entire process, an investor’s only interest in the property was as a beneficiary … to a trust in which [one of the Defendants] served as trustee. (Id. at #10486–87). On one hand, this scheme benefitted Plaintiffs; they only had to pay limited expenses towards “flipping” the home. (Id. at #10487). And, on the other hand, Defendants held legal title the whole time, so they also benefitted in the form of facing less risk in the event a given investor “walked away or defaulted.” (Id.). That said, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants were less than honest in disclosing this arrangement. Particularly, they claim that Defendants failed to adequately inform investors that “the deal structure would make the investors into the beneficiaries of a trust that owned the property at issue, rather than outright owners, depriving the investors of certain important rights they otherwise would have had as owners.” (Doc. 259, #10901 (citing Doc. 223, #10487–91)). So the Plaintiffs first sued Defendants in state court, (see Doc. 260, #10932

n.1), before moving the case to federal court on February 20, 2019, (Doc. 1). While they initially brought a slew of claims, after several procedural twists and turns, the Court certified a class under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 only for Plaintiffs’ civil RICO claim and breach of fiduciary duties claim. (Doc. 223, #10542). At the same time, the Court designated the named Plaintiffs as class representatives and their counsel as class counsel. (Id. at #10540–42). From there, the parties continued with discovery and simultaneously pursued

mediation with Magistrate Judge Bowman. (10/18/23 Min. Entry; Doc. 240). While the first settlement conference did not result in an agreement, (see 4/10/24 Min. Entry), the parties attempted mediation a second time, this time with the undersigned acting as the mediator. (7/16/24 Min. Entry; 8/23/24 Min. Entry). This did not resolve the matter either. But, several months later, the parties reached a settlement in principle. (11/7/24 Min. Entry).

B. Terms of the Proposed Class Action Settlement On January 14, 2025, Plaintiffs filed an unopposed motion for preliminary approval, (Doc. 257), attaching the proposed Settlement Agreement, (Doc. 257-1). While the Court preliminarily approved the Agreement, it did so with a few modifications. (See Doc. 258 (supplemental memorandum); Doc. 259, #10927–28 (summary of modifications)). Accordingly, the Plaintiffs submit with their present motion for approval an Amendment to the Settlement Agreement (Doc. 261-1, #11023–35), which seeks to address the Court’s concerns. So the Court considers the two documents together (the original Agreement and the Amendment) as the

Agreement for final approval purposes. In the Agreement, the parties agree to settle the claims of the Settlement Class in exchange for Defendants paying a total sum of $1,300,000 (the common fund). (Doc. 257-1, #10819–21; Doc. 261-1, #11024). The Agreement contemplates funding and distributing that common fund in several steps. To start, three subgroups of Defendants will contribute funding for the non- reversionary common fund. (Doc. 257-1, #10819–21; Doc. 261-1, #11024–25). The first

two groups’ obligations are straightforward: one group will pay $366,670 and the other $658,330, with those amounts to be paid in specific installments following the Court’s final approval of the Agreement. (Doc. 257-1, #10819–21; Doc. 261-1, #11024– 25). But the Agreement contemplates a different structure for the third group. That is due to that group’s potential difficulties in obtaining funds to make the requisite $275,000 payment. Technically, this third group is comprised of several different

entities (collectively, the Build Defendants). At the end of the day, though, Gary Bailey will be responsible for paying the amount. (Doc. 257-1, #10820). The Court pauses to detail this third arrangement a little more fully, as it affects the Court’s analysis of the appropriateness of the proposed attorneys’ fees. See infra Part B.1. Under the Agreement, there are two potential tracks to Bailey’s payment plan: (i) Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000) upon Final Approval from monies contingent upon the refinancing of Defendant Gary Bailey of his residence, which he in good faith will attempt to accomplish before Final Approval and will begin to seek no later than the execution of this Agreement; (ii) One Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($1,500) per month for sixty (60) months beginning 90 days after Final Approval; and (iii) Two Thousand Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($2,250) per month beginning on the 61st month until the balance is paid (subtracting from this final payment the portion of the initial $10,000 paid by the Build Defendants). Should the anticipated refinancing identified in (i) not occur, upon Final Approval the Build Defendants will begin the periodic payments set forth in (ii) and (iii). If any of the payments above by the Build Defendants are missed, and upon notice the failure to pay is not corrected within ten business days, the entire balance for the Build Defendants shall become due and payable immediately. (Id.; Doc. 261-1, #11025). So, in the worst-case scenario, i.e., if Bailey is unable to obtain refinancing, he would be in repayment for almost twelve years. Initially, the Agreement stated that Bailey’s later payments would be paid to class counsel directly, specifically the Finney Law Firm, rather than flowing to the common fund. (Doc. 257- 1, #10821).

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Compound Property Management LLC, et al. v. Build Realty, Inc., et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compound-property-management-llc-et-al-v-build-realty-inc-et-al-ohsd-2026.