Meecorp Capital Markets, LLC v. Timothy Oliver

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 13, 2015
Docket12-2102
StatusPublished

This text of Meecorp Capital Markets, LLC v. Timothy Oliver (Meecorp Capital Markets, LLC v. Timothy Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meecorp Capital Markets, LLC v. Timothy Oliver, (8th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 12-2102 ___________________________

Meecorp Capital Markets, LLC

lllllllllllllllllllll Plaintiff - Appellee

v.

Timothy J. Oliver

lllllllllllllllllllll Defendant - Appellant

PSC of Two Harbors, LLC; Gandolf Group, LLC, formerly known as Gandolf Development, LLC, formerly known as Red Cedar Estates; Christopher M. Anderson; PSC Funding, LLC; Gandolf Holdings, LLC, formerly known as Gandolf Group, LLC; Black Hawk Village Development, LLC; Blue Springs Village Development, LLC; Brandon Heights Village Development, LLC; Brandon Heights Village II Development, LLC; Lakewood Village Development, LLC, formerly known as Evergreen Heights Development, LLC; Gilcrease Hills Estates Development, LLC; Green Street Estates Development, LLC; Orleans Terrace Development, LLC; Pine Crest Village Development, LLC; River Falls Ventures, LLC; South Creek Village Development, LLC; South Glen Village Development, LLC; Woodglen Village Development, LLC, formerly known as Alta Vista Village Development, LLC; Black Hawk Village, LP; Blue Springs Village, LP; Brandon Heights Village, LP; Brandon Heights Village II, LP; Gilcrease Hills Estates, LP; Lakewood Village, LP, formerly known as Evergreen Heights, LP; Mercury Henderson Cottages, LP; Orleans Terrace, LP; Pine Crest Village, LP; South Creek Village, LP; South Glen Village, LP; and Woodglen Village, LP

lllllllllllllllllllll Defendants

SunAmerica Housing Fund 1270; SunAmerica Housing Fund 1306; SunAmerica Housing Fund 1307; and SunAmerica Housing Fund 1346

lllllllllllllllllllllIntervenors ___________________________

No. 12-2169 ___________________________

PSC Funding, LLC

Timothy J. Oliver; PSC of Two Harbors, LLC; Gandolf Group, LLC, formerly known as Gandolf Development, LLC, formerly known as Red Cedar Estates; Christopher M. Anderson; Gandolf Holdings, LLC, formerly known as Gandolf Group, LLC; Black Hawk Village Development, LLC; Blue Springs Village Development, LLC; Brandon Heights Village Development, LLC; Brandon Heights Village II Development, LLC; Lakewood Village Development, LLC, formerly known as Evergreen Heights Development, LLC; Gilcrease Hills Estates Development, LLC; Green

-2- Street Estates Development, LLC; Orleans Terrace Development, LLC; Pine Crest Village Development, LLC; River Falls Ventures, LLC; South Creek Village Development, LLC; South Glen Village Development, LLC; Woodglen Village Development, LLC, formerly known as Alta Vista Village Development, LLC; Black Hawk Village, LP; Blue Springs Village, LP; Brandon Heights Village, LP; Brandon Heights Village II, LP; Gilcrease Hills Estates, LP; Lakewood Village, LP, formerly known as Evergreen Heights, LP; Mercury Henderson Cottages, LP; Orleans Terrace, LP; Pine Crest Village, LP; South Creek Village, LP; South Glen Village, LP; and Woodglen Village, LP

SunAmerica Housing Fund 1270; SunAmerica Housing Fund 1306; SunAmerica Housing Fund 1307; and SunAmerica Housing Fund 1346

lllllllllllllllllllllIntervenors ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the District of Minnesota - Minneapolis ____________

Submitted: October 6, 2014 Filed: January 13, 2015 ____________

Before MURPHY, SMITH, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges. ____________

GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.

-3- After a bench trial, the district court1 found Timothy Oliver and PSC Funding, LLC, liable to Meecorp Capital Markets, LLC, for fraud. Oliver and PSC Funding now appeal. We affirm.

I.

Oliver was the chief manager and part-owner of PSC Funding. In 2004, Oliver and PSC Funding applied to Meecorp Capital Markets (“Meecorp”) for a $1 million loan to refinance property located on the north shore of Lake Superior in Minnesota. Meecorp made a preliminary commitment to provide the loan in December 2004. After conducting an appraisal of the property, Meecorp informed Oliver and PSC Funding that Meecorp would not make the loan unless the borrowers pledged collateral in addition to the north-shore property. In response, Oliver provided Meecorp with a list of fourteen other income-producing properties and associated “Oliver values,” valuations of Oliver’s interest in each.2 The list represented an offer of Oliver’s interests as additional collateral. The sum of the “Oliver values” on the list was more than $1 million. Gandolf Group (“Gandolf”), a real-estate development company owned by Oliver and PSC Funding, also supplied information to Meecorp regarding the fourteen properties, including cash-flow projections and the value of Oliver’s interests. Meecorp used this information to independently analyze the value of the pledged collateral—Oliver’s interests in the fourteen properties—and to determine the amount of loan principal the collateral would support. Ultimately, Meecorp made a new loan offer for $1.32 million.

1 The Honorable Donovan W. Frank, United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. 2 These valuations reflected the calculated present value of Oliver’s alleged interests in the companies associated with the fourteen properties, including his share of the profits.

-4- Before closing, Meecorp requested additional information from Oliver about the fourteen properties. In response, Gandolf supplied member-control agreements, certificates of good standing, and Schedule K-1s for several limited-liability companies owned by Gandolf and associated with each property (“Gandolf’s LLCs”). Gandolf, however, did not supply the deeds of ownership for the properties. After reviewing the provided materials, Meecorp concluded that Oliver, as an individual, could not pledge collateral of sufficient value to secure the $1.32 million loan because he held no direct interest in the properties. Instead, Meecorp believed that Gandolf’s LLCs actually owned nearly all the properties on Oliver’s list and that Oliver held only governance rights—not financial rights—in Gandolf’s LLCs.3 Meecorp therefore requested that Gandolf, as the owner of the remaining governance rights and the 100% owner of the financial rights in Gandolf’s LLCs, pledge as additional collateral its interests in the LLCs. Meecorp’s attorney and managing director testified that they believed Gandolf’s pledge, along with Oliver’s initial pledge, would make the loan “safe” because it would provide Meecorp with an enforceable pledge of 100% of the membership interests in a sufficient number of property-owning LLCs to secure the loan. The parties agreed which interests Gandolf would pledge, and Oliver, acting as Gandolf’s representative, signed the pledge agreement. Meecorp subsequently delivered the promised funds to PSC of Two Harbors, a single-asset entity created for the project by Oliver and PSC Funding.

Oliver and PSC Funding defaulted on repayment of the loan, and Meecorp was unable to recover any of the loan principal. During the subsequent legal proceedings, Meecorp learned that neither Oliver nor Gandolf’s LLCs owned the properties pledged as collateral. Instead, Gandolf’s LLCs were merely general partners in undisclosed limited partnerships that owned and managed each property. Outside

3 Here, as in Gandolf’s LLC’s organizational documents, the term “financial rights” refers to a member’s right to share in net income, net losses, and distributions. “Governance rights” refers to a member’s rights other than financial rights. Together, these rights and interests constitute “membership interests.”

-5- limited partners, not revealed to Meecorp during loan negotiations, owned up to 99.99% of the equity interests4 in the properties pledged. Gandolf’s LLCs were able to claim only approximately 0.01%. Thus, Gandolf owned only a very limited equity interest in the partnerships.

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Meecorp Capital Markets, LLC v. Timothy Oliver, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meecorp-capital-markets-llc-v-timothy-oliver-ca8-2015.