Cramer v. Palm Avenue Partners, LLC (In re Palm Avenue Partners, LLC)

576 B.R. 239
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedAugust 15, 2017
DocketCase No. 8:12-bk-09808-MGW; Adv. No. 8:12-ap-00999-MGW
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 576 B.R. 239 (Cramer v. Palm Avenue Partners, LLC (In re Palm Avenue Partners, LLC)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cramer v. Palm Avenue Partners, LLC (In re Palm Avenue Partners, LLC), 576 B.R. 239 (Fla. 2017).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

Michael G. Williamson, Chief United States Bankruptcy Judge

Tom Leiter induced the Plaintiffs— friends and others familiar with his development experience—to invest $1.1 million in Palm Avenue Partners to develop a high-rise condominium project. But the evidence at trial showed that Leiter failed to disclose to the Plaintiffs that he was using the $1.1 million he raised from them (and another $1.4 million he raised from others) to pay $1 million to a company he owned to serve as a “strawman” in the transaction to acquire the land for the condominium project. He also failed to disclose that he was using the Plaintiffs’ investment to pay $220,000 to his development company and $160,000 to his law firm for work they supposedly did on the project. In all, Leiter paid himself nearly $1.4 million—more than half—of the $2.5 million he raised for the condominium project, which ultimately failed.

After hearing four days of testimony in this proceeding, the Court must now decide whether Letter’s failure to disclose that he would be paying himself nearly $1.4 million from the investments he solicited gives rise to liability for breach of fiduciary duty and fraudulent concealment. The fact that Letter was secretly paying himself nearly $1.4 million was plainly material to the Plaintiffs’ decision to invest in Palm Avenue Partners. They would not have invested in the project had they known about the payments. And given his [243]*243prior personal relationships with most of the Plaintiffs, as well as his partial disclosure of material facts and superior knowledge regarding the transactions at issue, Leiter had a duty to disclose the $1.4 million in payments. Because the evidence at trial showed Leiter failed to disclose material facts when he had a duty to do so, the Court concludes the Plaintiffs met their burden of proof on their fraudulent concealment claim.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Sometime in 2005, Tom Leiter, an Illinois attorney, decided to develop a condominium project in Sarasota known as The DeMarcay on Palm, which was located at 33 Palm Avenue, Sarasota, Florida. At the time, the property, which consisted of two parcels originally owned by the Floyd C. Johnson Trust and the Floyd C. Johnson and Flo Singer Johnson Foundation, housed the historic DeMarcay Hotel and an old cigar factory.1 Although the property was zoned Downtown Bayfront, it was part of the Downtown Residential Overlay District,2 which meant it could be redeveloped into an 18-story high-rise condominium comprising 39 units.

In April 2005, Howard Rooks contracted to buy the DeMarcay property from the Johnson Trust and Johnson Foundation for $2.2 million.3 Although the property had not been listed, the purchase price was based on a market analysis done by the realtor for the Johnson Trust and Johnson Foundation.4 Before he could close on the sale of the property, however, Rooks was approached by a number of investors interested in buying the DeMarcay property, including Leiter.5 One potential investor had offered Rooks $300,000 for the right to buy the DeMarcay property.6 Because Leiter was an attorney and a “sharp guy” interested in other development projects in Sarasota, Rooks offered to assign the $2.2 million contract to him for $300,000.7

Leiter saw this as an opportunity to ensure that he walked away with some money from the project, even if it failed. Rather than assign the $2.2 million contract to Palm Avenue Partners, LLC, the entity he formed to acquire and develop the DeMarcay on Palm condominium project,8 Leiter instead first assigned the contract to another recently formed entity that he owned, Beacon Homes of Florida, LLC, on June 15, 20Q5.9 A week later, Leiter, as Palm Avenue Partners’ managing member, then agreed to buy the contract rights from Beacon Homes for $1 million.10 By first assigning the contract to a straw buyer that he owned (Beacon Homes), Leiter ensured he would able to skim $1 million of the top of the project. But to do so, Leiter had to raise enough money to pay the $2.2 million purchase price and the $300,000 assignment fee, as [244]*244well as the $1 million fee to Beacon Homes.

So Letter decided to raise $4 million through a private placement memorandum, which sought to sell 40 preferred equity units in Palm Avenue Partners for $100,000 per unit.11 Under the private placement memorandum, which is dated July 1, 2005, investors were offered one percent of the net profits from the condominium project as a return on each preferred equity unit.12 According to the private placement memorandum, the project was expected to generate $7,422,500 in net profits, which meant an investor who bought one investment unit for $100,000 would receive $174,225 in return.13

The private placement memorandum represented that the $4 million in capital would 'be used for “land acquisition, engineering, marketing and related expenses.”14 The private placement memorandum’s financial pro forma for the project listed the “Land Acquisition and Related Costs” at $3,725,000.15 But the $1 million payment to Beacon Homes was not disclosed as part of the “Land Acquisition and Related Costs,”16 or anywhere else in the private placement memorandum.

After preparing the private placement memorandum, Letter then set out to raise the $4 million, mostly from friends, as well as investors who had invested in or were familiar with his work on another development project known as Hacienda del Mar.17 Four of Letter’s friends—James Grant; Joe and Janet O’Neill; and Doug Olson—invested a total of $600,000. One of Letter's friends (Joe O’Neill) convinced another friend (Michael Mahoney) to invest another $200,000. And two people—Mark Cramer and William Tompkins—invested a total of $300,000 based on Letter's work on the Hacienda del Mar project. In all, Letter raised $1.1 million from the Plaintiffs (and another $1.4 million from others).18 But Letter never disclosed to any of the Plaintiffs that he had arranged for Beacon Homes to receive $1 million from the $2.5 million he had raised.

By the end of July 2005, Letter had not raised énough capital to close on the De-Marcay property. Letter had only raised $400,000, almost $300,000 short of the $671,000 in cash needed at closing.19 But Letter anticipated receiving another $400,000 in investments shortly.20 So Letter loaned Palm Avenue Partners $300,000,21 which he immediately repaid to himself when he received additional investments from the Plaintiffs.22 On July 27, 2005, Palm Avenue Partners was able to close on the sale of the DeMarcay property, paying $671,000 down and taking out [245]*245$1.54 million in seller financing.23

According to the private placement memorandum, construction was set to begin on June 1, 2006 and be completed by February 1, 2008. Because of delays in the site plan approval process, however, construction was not able to begin in June 2006.24

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
576 B.R. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramer-v-palm-avenue-partners-llc-in-re-palm-avenue-partners-llc-flmb-2017.