Denkewalter v. Freedom Development Group, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMay 16, 2023
Docket1:20-cv-05013
StatusUnknown

This text of Denkewalter v. Freedom Development Group, LLC (Denkewalter v. Freedom Development Group, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denkewalter v. Freedom Development Group, LLC, (N.D. Ill. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

KIM DENKEWALTER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) 20 C 5013 ) JOHN THOMAS, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION CHARLES P. KOCORAS, District Judge: Before the Court is Defendants JET Park, LLC (“JET Park”), Freedom Development Group, LLC – 87th Street, Freedom Development Group LLC – Aurora, Freedom Development Group, LLC – North Avenue, Freedom Development Group, LLC – Waukegan, 901 Center Street Holdings, LLC (“901 Center”), JET Hospitals, LLC (“JET Hospitals”), TOT Holdings II, LLC, Star Real Estate, LLC (“Star Real Estate”), Jet Foods, LLC (“JET Foods”), Jet Foods Bishop, LLC, Jet Foods Carol Stream, LLC, Jet Foods Harvey, LLC, Jet Foods Naperville, LLC, Jet Foods Park Forest, LLC (“JET Foods Park Forest”), Jet Foods Rockford, LLC, and Jet Structures, LLC (“JET Structures”) (together, “Entity Defendants”), Freedom Development Group, LLC (“FDG”), John Thomas, and Daniel Olswang’s Motions to Strike and Dismiss the Plaintiff Kim Denkewalter’s Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”). Dkt. # 47. For the following reasons, Defendants’ Motion to Strike is denied and their Motion to Dismiss is granted-in-part and denied-in-part.

BACKGROUND On February 3, 2021, Denkewalter filed his three-count SAC alleging breach of contract (Count I), breach of fiduciary duty and fraud (Count II), and violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. § 1962

(Count III). Defendants move to strike portions of the SAC, to dismiss the RICO claim and the fraud claim, and to dismiss the remainder of the action (upon dismissal of the RICO claim) for lack of jurisdiction. Defendants also move to dismiss the Entity Defendants from the entire action, arguing that Denkewalter has not sufficiently

pleaded that they are “alter egos” of Thomas, Olswang, and FDG. For the purposes of these motion, the Court accepts as true the following facts from the SAC. Alam v. Miller Brewing Co., 709 F.3d 662, 665–66 (7th Cir. 2013). All reasonable inferences are drawn in Denkewalter’s favor. League of Women Voters of

Chi. v. City of Chi., 757 F.3d 722, 724 (7th Cir. 2014). Defendants Thomas and Olswang have been the sole managers of FDG since March 29, 2019. Since its inception, FDG has been the flagship through which Thomas and Olswang operated and promoted their businesses in real estate acquisition and development, real estate brokerage, grocery stores, and construction.

JET Park was formed by FDG’s owners as FDG’s designated vehicle for the purchase and resale of real estate formerly used as a commercial parking structure in St. Paul, Minnesota. FDG’s website shows the parking structure, known as the RiverCentre Parking Ramp (“Parking Ramp”), as part of FDG’s portfolio. The

$250,000 down payment/earnest money for JET Park’s intended purchase of the Parking Ramp came from funds loaned to FDG. 901 Center was formed by FDG’s owners as FDG’s designated vehicle for the purchase and operation of Illinois real estate which was previously the site of Sherman

Hospital in Elgin, Illinois, which FDG’s website shows as part of FDG’s portfolio. The State of Illinois designated the site for use as a COVID-19 treatment center, but the State dropped that intention after investing significant sums on property improvements. Eminent domain litigation to obtain compensation owed to 901 Center for the State’s

temporary “taking” of the property resulted in a payout order, which directed over $1 million to TOT Holdings I, another Entity Defendant, which was not a party to the eminent domain case. JET Hospitals was formed by FDG’s owners as FDG’s designated vehicle for

the purchase and operation of Illinois real estate which had previously been the site of Westlake Hospital in Melrose Park, Illinois. The site was designated for use as a COVID-19 treatment center by the State of Illinois. On April 28, 2020, JET Hospitals contracted to purchase the site and lease it to the State, by way of a Court-ordered sale in the Northern District of Illinois Bankruptcy Court, for the sum of $12 million.

Thomas signed the contract as managing member of JET Hospitals, and directed notices to be sent to Thomas “c/o [FDG]”. Star Real Estate was formed by FDG’s owners for the purpose of brokering commercial real estate sales. The FDG website listed Star Real Estate, along with JET

Structures (a construction company) and JET Foods (a grocery chain), as FDG’s “subsidiaries”. FDG’s website listed virtually every property for which a separate Entity Defendant company is named as part of the “[FDG] Portfolio”, and listed Thomas as “CEO – Managing Principal” and Olswang as “President – Principal” for

the entire, overarching FDG operation. Thomas was the founder and majority owner of all the Defendant companies. With the exception of JET Foods Park Forest, at all relevant times, all the Defendant companies have had the same principal office, and all have had Olswang as their

registered agent. From the formation of FDG on May 22, 2017, until about August 2, 2018 (and formalized in writing on or about September 13, 2018), Denkewalter was a manager and minority-owning member of FDG. On or about September 13, 2018, pursuant to a

written agreement with FDG, Denkewalter formally resigned as manager of FDG and relinquished all but a 2% membership interest in FDG, a 30% membership interest in Star Real Estate, and 2.5% of FDG’s interest in Questar, Inc. The written agreement was signed by Thomas on FDG’s behalf. In January of 2018, Denkewalter and his business associate, Michael Ziegler,

met with Thomas and a sometimes fundraiser for Thomas and his projects, Rick DiMaria, at Hackney’s restaurant in Glenview, Illinois. They met to discuss the possibility of Ziegler loaning FDG $250,000 to be used as the earnest money for FDG’s planned purchase, directly or through JET Park, of the Parking Ramp. At the meeting,

Thomas described his past development experience and his plan for the purchase of the Parking Ramp, and told Ziegler that Thomas already had buyers lined up to purchase the Parking Ramp from FDG on a resale or “flip” after FDG procured the property. Ziegler and Thomas agreed that Ziegler would loan FDG the $250,000, to be used solely

for earnest money on FDG’s procurement of the Parking Ramp, in exchange for repayment when the “flip” was completed, along with interest at the rate of 2.4% per year (payable every February), a preferred right to receive the first $250,000 as an additional return on his loan, and 10% of any profit received by FDG in excess of $4

million through the purchase and resale or flip of the Parking Ramp. On January 25, 2018, the terms of the loan were memorialized in a document entitled “Unsecured Promissory Note”, which Denkewalter signed on FDG’s behalf, pursuant to Thomas’s direction as majority owner. The same day, Ziegler transferred

the $250,000 to Denkewalter’s attorney trust account (“IOLTA Account”), and Denkewalter promptly thereafter transferred the funds to an account held by Old Republic National Title Insurance Company (“Old Republic”) as the escrow agent for FDG’s purchase of the Parking Ramp from its owner, the Port Authority of the City of St. Paul (“Port Authority”).

The Parking Ramp purchase was aborted after the Minnesota Court of Appeals held, on October 28, 2019, that another party had a right of first refusal to buy the Parking Ramp in place of FDG or its proxy, JET Park.

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