Le v. Nguyen

379 S.W.3d 573, 2010 Ark. App. 712, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 750
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 27, 2010
DocketNo. CA 10-264
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 379 S.W.3d 573 (Le v. Nguyen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Le v. Nguyen, 379 S.W.3d 573, 2010 Ark. App. 712, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 750 (Ark. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

DAVID M. GLOVER, Judge.

|! This case involves the imposition of a constructive trust on a piece of real property.1 The parties are Paul Phuoc Le, appellant, and Ashley Xuan Nguyen, ap-pellee. It is undisputed that Nguyen and Le lived together from 1994 until their relationship ended in January 2006; they were each fifty-percent owners of Le’s Import, Inc., incorporated in October 1999 as an “S” corporation in Van Burén, as a business that purchased wrecked vehicles, and then rebuilt and sold them; Nguyen invested money in Le’s Import, Inc.; in April 2000, Nguyen, a realtor, found commercial property at 2932-3000 Midland Avenue (investment property) in Fort Smith available as an investment; and they moved their business 12from Van Bu-rén to 3600 Midland Avenue (3600 Midland) in Fort Smith, where it operated four or five years until January 2006. Ultimately at dispute is the purchase, payment, and ownership of the 3600 Midland commercial property. The parties’ testimony on all property matters is diametrically opposed. After hearing extensive testimony from the parties, the trial court held that a constructive trust was to be imposed on the property. Le now appeals the trial court’s imposition of a constructive trust. We agree with the trial court and affirm.

In February 2006, Nguyen filed a petition against Le for partition of real property and division of business assets, alleging that as of December 31, 2005, Le’s Import held assets that included a building at 3600 Midland, currently valued at $525,000 with a mortgage of $30,000, which was purchased in Le’s name in May 2001, and all payments were made from the parties’ jointly owned Le’s Import bank account; equipment and fixtures valued at $75,000; a bank account valued at $80,000 in both parties’ names, listed as Le’s Import Auto; a Porsche valued at $100,000; and two Toyota Tundra trucks valued at $50,000. Nguyen pled that after the parties ended their relationship in January 2006, they sold the equipment from Le’s Import for $75,000 and divided the sales proceeds equally. She alleged that Le had removed all the company funds from the bank account and did not give her one-half of the funds; that Le entered into a lease, which contained an option to purchase, with TKO Auto Body Repair without disclosing Nguyen’s interest in the building; that Le was receiving rent from the building at 3600 Midland in the amount of $3550 per month, paying a $1932 mortgage out of those rents, and that she was entitled to one-half of the remaining amount, |sor $809 per month; and that Le had moved the three vehicles out of Arkansas and had failed to pay her for her one-half interest in the vehicles. Nguyen prayed that she be paid one-half of all rents over and above the mortgage payment since January 1, 2006, on the property located at 3600 Midland; that the trial court set aside the lease agreement between Le and TKO Auto Body Repair and order a new agreement showing her as co-owner of the property and that she was entitled to one-half of the lease payments and one-half of any buyout provision; that she be awarded one-half of the proceeds from the Le’s Import bank account; and that she be awarded one-half the value of the three vehicles owned by Le’s Import or order that the Porsche be turned over to her.

In the final order entered on December 1, 2009, the trial court determined that with respect to the property located at 3600 Midland, which was the sole asset owned by Paul Le Properties, LLC (PLP), Gene Didion owned forty-five percent; and that with regard to the remaining fifty-five percent of the asset titled in PLP, a constructive trust existed and that Nguyen was entitled to a twenty-seven and one-half percent interest in the property, with Le owning the remaining twenty-seven and one-half percent interest. The trial court also ordered that Nguyen was entitled to one-half of $834.90 (fifty-five percent of the $1518 monthly profit), and that she was owed back rent of $12,100.25. The trial court further awarded Nguyen $6,872.38, which was one-half of the remaining total of the bank account. At the time of the order, the vehicles in question had already been sold by private sale, and the proceeds had been equally divided between the parties.

14The Disputed, Testimony

Nguyen’s Version of Events

At trial, Nguyen testified extensively. Le performed the actual work on the cars while she, a realtor, handled the financing portion of the business. From June 1994 through October 2003, she contributed $212,003.47 to Le’s Import from her checking account. In April 1999, she found the investment property in Fort Smith for a buyer who was looking for commercial property; however, the buyer was unable to secure financing. She then brought up the idea of purchasing the property to Le; they both agreed to buy the property for the price of $60,000. Le had bad credit and she considered putting the property in her name only, but if she did that, she would have to purchase the property through her broker pursuant to her employment agreement, which the parties did not want to do. She and Le then approached a friend, Gene Didion, who had financed purchases for Le’s Import, to purchase the property in his name and carry a note on the property while she and Le paid the note off, at which time Didion would issue a deed transferring title to her and Le. Didion agreed to do this, and in April 1999, Didion purchased the investment property for $60,000. She made payments to Didion on that property from the Le’s Import bank account. Nguyen identified a document dated December 2003 as a note to Didion, which, to her knowledge, was the $60,000 note that now had a $88,000 balance. They did not make regular monthly | ¡¡payments to Didion. Didion was renting out the property and keeping the rents because she and Le had not yet paid the building off.

Le’s Import moved its business location from Van Burén to 3600 Midland in Fort Smith at some point, where they rented from A1 Williams for five or six years at the rate of $1000 per month. At some point, Williams agreed to sell the building to her and Le for $200,000. According to Nguyen, they were to trade the investment property as partial payment for the 3600 Midland property. Although Didion actually had title to the investment property, they had been making payments to Didion on it since it was purchased in 1999. Further according to Nguyen, they received a $90,000 credit for the investment property, leaving a $110,000 balance on the 3600 Midland property, which was going to be owner-financed by Williams. Didion had an interest in the 3600 Midland property only on the $60,000 note that was owed to him on the investment property.

At the time of the sale of the 3600 Midland property, Nguyen did not know anything about PLP — Le did not tell her that he was forming the company with Didion. Le’s Import was going to make monthly payments to Williams on the $110,000 note in the amount of $1982 per month; this payment came from the Le’s Import bank account. In 2001, because Nguyen believed that she and Le had purchased the building from Williams, Le’s Import stayed in the unit (for which Le’s Import had previously paid $1000 per month in rent), and paid $1982 monthly, which was the amount of the note payment. The monthly rents from the building were deposited in the Le’s Import bank account from 2001 until they broke up | (¡in January 2006. They took depreciation on the building as well as an interest deduction on the Le’s Import tax returns.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
379 S.W.3d 573, 2010 Ark. App. 712, 2010 Ark. App. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-v-nguyen-arkctapp-2010.