Flat Stone Development Co. v. Jay Cohen

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 2020
Docket19-20152
StatusPublished

This text of Flat Stone Development Co. v. Jay Cohen (Flat Stone Development Co. v. Jay Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flat Stone Development Co. v. Jay Cohen, (5th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

Case: 19-20152 Document: 00515673592 Page: 1 Date Filed: 12/15/2020

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED December 15, 2020 No. 19-20152 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk

In the Matter of: Alabama & Dunlavy, Limited; Flat Stone II, Limited; Flat Stone, Limited;

Debtors,

Jay H. Cohen, Individually and as Trustee of the JHC Trusts I and II,

Appellant,

versus

John Gilmore, Administrator of the Estate of Robert Haden Abercrombie; Texas Abercrombie Family Interests, Limited,

Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas USDC No. 4:16-CV-283

Before Graves, Costa, and Engelhardt, Circuit Judges. James E. Graves, Jr., Circuit Judge, Appellant Jay Cohen contends that Appellee Robert Abercrombie played a key role as a strawman purchaser in a fraudulent land transfer where Case: 19-20152 Document: 00515673592 Page: 2 Date Filed: 12/15/2020

No. 19-20152

valuable property passed from a limited partnership named Alabama & Dunlavy (“A&D”) to another limited partnership in Abercrombie’s control named Texas Abercrombie Family Interests, Ltd. (“TAFI”). An associate of Cohen named Matthew Dilick controlled A&D’s general partner while Cohen controlled A&D’s largest limited partner. Cohen claims that Dilick and Abercrombie made millions from the transaction and that Abercrombie’s actions helped conceal Dilick’s involvement in the self-dealing sale and helped Dilick breach his fiduciary duties and commit fraud. Before the suit was removed to federal court under bankruptcy jurisdiction, a Texas state trial court granted several evidentiary objections to Cohen’s detriment, dismissed Cohen’s claims against Abercrombie and TAFI on summary judgment, and expunged a notice of lis pendens that Cohen had placed on the property. This appeal concerns the grant of those orders. We find that the state trial court abused its discretion in granting the evidentiary objections and granted summary judgment despite there being issues of material fact with respect to all of Cohen’s claims. We also find that the controversy surrounding the state court’s expungement of the notice of lis pendens is moot because the property at issue was sold to a third party months after the trial court’s expungement. We therefore affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. I. This suit involves a seven-and-a-half-acre tract located at the corner of Alabama and Dunlavy inside Loop 610 in Houston, Texas. In 2005, the limited partnership A&D, was formed and the Alabama property transferred into it. The Cohen-controlled JHC II Trust was an eighty percent limited partner in A&D. Rock Hill Development was a ten percent limited partner, Matthew Dilick was a nine-and-a-half percent limited partner, and a Dilick-

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controlled company named Commerce Equities II held the remaining half percent as the general partner. Over the years, Dilick, on behalf of A&D, borrowed approximately $13.5 million against the Alabama property. At the end of 2008, the recession began, and the debt, which was then held by Wedge Real Estate Finance, matured. Wedge refused an extension and threatened foreclosure. But Dilick succeeded in postponing the foreclosure just long enough to sell the property to TAFI in early 2009. Abercrombie had previously tried to develop the property by securing ground leases with CVS and Kroger, but those deals had fallen through. In fall 2009, Dilick learned from Abercrombie that HEB wanted to put a grocery on the Alabama property through a long-term ground lease. Dilick had experience with such leases and knew from an estimate provided by QuadCapital Advisors, LLC, that the Alabama property with the HEB lease would be enough collateral for a loan of over $18 million. In December 2009, Abercrombie and Dilick approached Howard Herbert, trustee of JHC Trust II, about selling the Alabama property. The parties initially agreed to a $16.7 million purchase price, which Herbert accepted because he thought it would result in around $3 million in profit for the partnership. The only other offer at the time was from Wal-Mart for about $9 million. But Dilick and Abercrombie concealed details from A&D, including Abercrombie’s negotiations with HEB and Dilick’s emails with a HEB representative, wherein he answered questions about the property. Dilick also concealed the QuadCapital report stating that the property coupled with a long-term ground lease could be worth over $18 million. On February 4, 2010, HEB agreed to the terms of a lucrative long- term lease of the Alabama property with TAFI (an entity not formed until

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February 9, 2020). Abercrombie signed the term sheet for the HEB lease on behalf of TAFI. He also signed TAFI’s limited partnership agreement as a representative of its general partner, as a limited partner, as the manager of a different corporation and limited partner called European Capital Fund (“ECF”), and as the manager of two other non-existent, never-formed companies listed as limited partners. Though the terms were in place, Abercrombie and Dilick still had problems. HEB could back out of the lease. TAFI did not yet own the property. And Wedge had scheduled foreclosure. This meant that Dilick and Abercrombie had to move quickly to transfer the property from A&D to TAFI. To do so, Dilick sought a bridge loan from Adam Acquisition Company to pay off Wedge. Although Adam Acquisition lent the money to TAFI, it was Dilick, not Abercrombie who made the arrangements. On February 11, 2010, Dilick emailed Adam Acquisition seeking a “personal bridge loan” for $15 million. The next day, counsel for Adam Acquisition emailed Dilick about the prospects of a loan to him or to an entity he owned. Dilick then provided documentation to Adam Acquisition including an undated, notarized statement in which both he and Abercrombie certified that “any and all investments, loans, legal and organization documents with Mr. Don Adams are 100% in the sole control and sole decision-making authority of Matthew G. Dilick.” Adam Acquisition’s counsel testified that he thought this meant Dilick oversaw Abercrombie and TAFI. After all, Dilick’s CPA and his in- house counsel produced TAFI’s financial statement and provided an opinion of counsel for Adam Acquisition. On February 26, 2010, Dilick, acting on behalf of the A&D partnership, sold the Alabama property to TAFI. Dilick provided TAFI the $2 million that it needed to close the $15 million bridge loan. And Dilick, not

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Abercrombie, personally guaranteed the loan. But the sale was not for the agreed upon price of $16.7 million. Instead, Dilick sold the property for the lesser amount of $13.5 million, which was just enough to pay off Wedge. A&D also received an unsecured, non-recourse note from Abercrombie for $334,837. It appears that Abercrombie was unable to contribute financially to the deal’s closing as he had recently asked Dilick for a loan to help him avoid returning to jail for a failure to pay child support. Abercrombie could, however, contribute his signature. On June 17, 2010, following the sale from A&D to TAFI and with the HEB lease in place, TAFI closed a $19.9 million loan secured by the Alabama property. At the closing, Abercrombie testified that “[he] signed a bunch of blank documents, . . . just signature pages” and that “[he] didn’t look at any of it. [He] just signed them.” These blank pages sent money to multiple entities. From the disbursements at closing, TAFI received $2.94 million.

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Flat Stone Development Co. v. Jay Cohen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flat-stone-development-co-v-jay-cohen-ca5-2020.