Kaufmann v. Corporate Realty, Inc.

759 So. 2d 969, 99 La.App. 5 Cir. 1104, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 857, 2000 WL 374610
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 2000
DocketNo. 99-CA-1104
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 759 So. 2d 969 (Kaufmann v. Corporate Realty, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaufmann v. Corporate Realty, Inc., 759 So. 2d 969, 99 La.App. 5 Cir. 1104, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 857, 2000 WL 374610 (La. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

| jiDALEY, Judge.

Plaintiff, Shirley Kaufmann, appeals a trial court judgment dated May 12, 1999, denying her claim for reimbursement against Corporate Realty, Inc., for monies she alleged defendant owed to her. The court found that plaintiff had advanced the funds to defendant, but also found that plaintiffs claim for repayment was conditional. The trial court found that plaintiff failed to put on any evidence that the condition was satisfied, and granted judgment in favor of defendant and against plaintiff. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

In 1992, plaintiff, Shirley Kaufman, filed suit against defendant, Corporate Realty, Inc., seeking repayment of funds she alleged she advanced to Westminster Management Corporation (WMC), a predecessor to Corporate Realty, via a line of credit in her name with Citybank, N.A. WMC [971]*971was a real estate management company that principally managed buildings owned by Mrs. Kaufmann and members of her family, the Latter/Schlesinger family. The individual buildings were each |aowned by various partnerships whose memberships consisted of different combinations of family members. Mrs. Kaufmann was a shareholder in most of these partnerships and hence was a part owner of the buildings managed by WMC/Corporate Realty. WMC, in early 1990, was owned 82% by Lee Schlesinger and 18% by Lisa Schlesinger Herman, both children of Mrs. Kauf-mann. In April of 1990, facing a serious financial crisis, WMC merged with a company owned by Sidney Lassen, Sizeler Asset Management, to become Westminster Sizeler Asset Management, later Corporate Realty. Immediately prior to the merger, Herman tendered her shares to Schlesinger, making him 100% owner of WMC. Several months after the merger, Schlesinger filed suit to have the merger “unwound,” which the federal court denied.1

Mrs. Kaufmann filed suit against Corporate Realty in May of 1992, seeking repayment of the $200,000.00 she alleged was outstanding on her advance. In 1994, Mrs. Kaufman filed a Motion for Summary Judgment; Corporate Realty opposed the motion on the grounds of failure of consideration and compromise and settlement. On May 9, 1994, the trial court rendered summary judgment in Kaufman’s favor, finding that Corporate Realty judicially confessed, in the federal court proceeding, liability to Mrs. Kaufman for the debt. This court vacated the summary judgment because discovery was not complete.2

Following the remand, Corporate Realty filed third party demands against various buildings and their owners3, alleging that if Corporate Realty were found pliable to Kaufmann, these parties owed indemnity to Corporate Realty. The suit proceeded until early 1999 with plaintiff filing motions for summary judgment, which were denied. Trial on the merits was held on April 12, 1999, resulting in a judgment against Kaufmann, denying her claim for reimbursement. The trial court in its Judgment with Reasons found that:

“Plaintiffs claim for payment was one conditioned upon the collection of funds from the buildings managed by Defendant. Plaintiff was therefore obligated to present evidence to support that such funds were collected by Defendant and not paid to Plaintiff. Plaintiff failed to offer any evidence to support the collection of these funds during the presentation of its case in chief. Thus, Defendant Corporate Realty, Inc. is entitled to have a judgment in its favor.”

Kaufmann appeals the trial court judgment, arguing that the trial court erred in three respects: 1) Failure to carry out the mandate of the appellate court on remand; 2) failure to apply the rules of estoppel to both the main demand and the third party demands; and 3) failure to consider and/or misapplied the law to the matters set forth in Kaufmann’s Memorandum of Authorities Regarding Anticipated Issues, filed January 12, 1999, claiming that the memo effectuated an amendment to plaintiffs petition.

Both Corporate Realty and the third party -defendants answered Kaufmann’s appeal. Corporate Realty’s answer asked for specific detailed relief in the event this [972]*972court reversed the judgment. The third party defendants filed no brief in support of their requests for relief. We deem the third party defendants’ answer abandoned under URCA Rule 2-12.4. We affirm the trial court’s judgment, hence we need not reach the issues raised in Corporate Realty’s answer.

J¿FACTS

The following background is taken from the federal court proceeding between these parties:

Lee H. Schlesinger and his sister Lisa Herman were wealthy. As third-generation members of the Latter real estate family of New Orleans, they owned partial shares in several central business district buildings and in Westminster Management Company. Westminster managed the family’s downtown office properties, including three large Poy-dras Street buildings across from the Superdome. By 1986, Schlesinger had purchased all other family members’ shares in Westminster except Herman’s. He owned eighty-two percent and was the only shareholder active in the management of the corporation. Herman owned the remaining stock. The family gave Westminster complete control in managing its properties. Westminster also managed the personal business, including the establishment of credit lines, for several members of the family. Income generated by rental properties, together with borrowings, provided the wherewithal for many of the family members to live in the style to which they had become accustomed.
In 1989, however, the family’s lifestyle collided with the collapse of the New Orleans real estate market to create a cash flow crisis. By the end of 1989, credit lines had been exhausted and the family had insufficient resources to pay ad valorem taxes due. Schlesinger and Herman had drawn on the family’s credit lines in amounts disproportionate to their interest in the properties. Things were particularly bad for Schlesinger. In December 1989, Westminster reported an annual loss for the fourth time in five years, and the company’s books showed a negative net worth of nearly $1.2 million.4

At trial on the merits in this case on April 12, 1999, Kirk Stirton, the former chief financial officer of WMC, testified that he worked for WMC from 1982 to 1990. While he was CFO, WMC handled the personal accounts of the Latter/Schlesinger family, including those of Mrs. Kauf-mann. WMC collected income from buildings, made deposits in business partners’ personal bank accounts, paid their bills, and gave them draw checks to cover expenses not paid by WMC directly. Each building had its own cheeking account; WMC did not pay the buildings’ bills out of its (WMC) operating funds. WMC also had expenses, such as salaries, overhead, and bonuses, |Bthat were not particular to any one building. WMC was paid a management fee for its services.

When, as it sometimes happened, a building could not pay its bills, each partner would be requested to advance funds, which counsel compared to a “margin” call. When, as it sometimes also happened, a partner could not meet the margin call, WMC had a line of credit that it could use. The first credit lines were at Hibernia and First NBC banks; when those were exhausted, they were augmented by the Citiline, a line of credit formed by Mrs. Kaufmann in February of 1990. Mrs. Kaufmann pledged her art collection as collateral for the Citiline line of credit.

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Bluebook (online)
759 So. 2d 969, 99 La.App. 5 Cir. 1104, 2000 La. App. LEXIS 857, 2000 WL 374610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaufmann-v-corporate-realty-inc-lactapp-2000.