Niehoff v. Maynard

299 F.3d 41, 2002 WL 1799663
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 9, 2002
Docket01-1153, 01-1154
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 299 F.3d 41 (Niehoff v. Maynard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Niehoff v. Maynard, 299 F.3d 41, 2002 WL 1799663 (1st Cir. 2002).

Opinion

STAHL, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Kenneth L. Maynard appeals from the decision of the district court that the claims of seven plaintiff-investors, which would otherwise be time-barred, were still viable due to tolling of the statute of limitations. After a thorough review of the record, we affirm.

I.

After a three-day bench trial, the district court found that Maynard breached the limited partnership agreement between him and the seven plaintiffs and breached his fiduciary obligations to them, and awarded each of the plaintiffs damages commensurate with their original investment. The court denied, however, the plaintiffs’ request for punitive damages. On appeal, Maynard does not challenge the court’s findings of liability. Rather, he insists only that the court erred in rejecting his statute of limitations defense. For their part, the plaintiffs appeal from the denial of punitive damages. In order to comprehend fully the issues raised by these appeals, we recount the factual background as developed in the record of the proceedings below.

In October 1987, Maynard purchased 178.8 acres of land in Charlestown, Rhode Island (Property). In 1988, Maynard formed a limited partnership to develop townhouse condominiums on the Property. The partnership, which was called Long Ridge Associates Limited Partnership (Partnership), was formed under Delaware law. The partnership agreement (Partnership Agreement) designated Maynard as the general partner and provided that he would turn over to the Partnership his interest in the Property, to which he assigned a value of $1.8 million.

Maynard decided to issue a private offering to solicit investments to fund construction of the condominiums. To that end, he distributed a Private Offering Memorandum (POM) in or about Decern- *43 ber 1988 with details about the construction of an 89-unit townhouse development on the Property (Project). The partnership was structured so that an investor could become a limited partner by subscribing to a “limited partnership unit,” or a portion thereof. The POM stated that eighteen limited partnership units were being offered at a price of $100,000 per unit. According to the POM, however, the offering was made on an all-or-nothing basis, meaning that the deal would go through only if all eighteen units were subscribed by November 1, 1989. 1 Therefore, unless all eighteen units were sold by November 1, 1989, the offering was to be withdrawn and the money refunded to the investors.

The POM obligated Maynard to hold the proceeds from the offering until the partnership was fully subscribed. 2 In addition, the Partnership Agreement required Maynard to provide the limited partners with financial disclosures on an annual basis, including a balance sheet, profit and loss statement, and a statement showing Partner distributions. The Partnership Agreement further required that “all of the books of account of the Partnership ... at all times be maintained at the principal office of the Partnership” and “be open to the inspection and examination” of the limited partners.

The plaintiffs — Norma J. Niehoff, Arlene Klughart, A. Stephen Melcher, Lee Frascino, Victor J. and Roseanna Cubelli Melone, and John Canzanella — are limited partners in the Partnership. 3 All had pri- or investment experience, and at least three of them — Victor Melone, Norma Niehoff and Lee Frascino — had invested previously with Maynard in connection with various New York-based real estate limited partnerships during the mid-1980s, which had apparently been successful ventures.

Canzanella was the first to invest in the Partnership in October 1988, followed by Niehoff, the Melones and Melcher in November 1988. Frascino invested in February 1989. As of November 1, 1989, the subscription deadline, only 6.4 of the eighteen units had been sold. Subsequently, Klughart invested in February 1990, bringing the aggregate of the plaintiffs’ investment to 6.9 of the eighteen units of the Limited Partnership.

Although Maynard was obligated under the POM to refund the plaintiffs’ money because the partnership was not fully subscribed by the November 1, 1989 subscrip *44 tion deadline, he failed to do so. Instead, in March 1990, Maynard subscribed to the remaining 11.1 unsold units himself and executed a Limited Partner Signature Page, which bound him to “all of the terms of the Limited Partnership Agreement of Long Ridge Associates,” including a provision that “fp]ayment for each Unit shall be made in cash.” As payment for these 11.1 units, Maynard paid via paper transfer $500,000 (which was due him from the Partnership for the Property) and, notwithstanding his obligation to make a cash payment, executed a promissory note for the remaining $610,000. None of Maynard’s machinations were revealed contemporaneously to the plaintiffs.

In March 1990, Maynard failed to deliver any financial reports to the limited partners, contrary to his contractual duty to do so by that date. On December 14, 1990, Melone sent a letter to Maynard inquiring about the status of the investment and suggesting that the provision of such information was “most overdue.” Despite Mel-one’s request, Maynard did not send out any financial reports at that time.

Throughout the latter part of 1990 and into the early part of 1991, several plaintiffs made telephone calls to Maynard, seeking information about the status of the Project. Maynard explained to them that the Project was “construction-ready,” but that there had been delays because of the regulatory approval process and a lawsuit brought by the Narragansett Indian tribe.

On February 28, 1991, Maynard sent an eighteen-page letter to the plaintiffs to “report on the current status of the Long Ridge Townhouse project and to describe the events that have brought us to the current point.” In this letter, Maynard informed plaintiffs that construction of the townhouses had not yet begun. Maynard explained this delay by recounting the progress on various preliminaries, including the permitting process and the surveying, engineering and land planning work. In addition, he described the particulars of a lawsuit brought by the Narragansett Indians against Maynard to block the Project. He also attributed the delays to a depressed real estate market and the resulting difficulty in obtaining a construction loan. As to financial matters, Maynard reassured the plaintiffs that the equity in the Project, including land and development expenses, stood at approximately $3.0 million. He stated that, while he was “looking aggressively for a way to make something happen,” he insisted that he was “not going to take action that would jeopardize this equity, part of which secure[d] [the plaintiffs’] investment.”

In 1993, Niehoff paid a visit to Maynard at his home in Charlestown, the principal place of business of the Partnership and the site of its books. Niehoff asserts that she went there specifically to examine the financial statements; however, Maynard told her the statements would not be ready until December 1993 and that he would send them to her at that time. To allay her concerns, Maynard took Niehoff to visit the project site.

Despite his promises, Maynard failed to send Niehoff any financial reports in December 1993.

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299 F.3d 41, 2002 WL 1799663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niehoff-v-maynard-ca1-2002.