Ray v. Clh New York Ave, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedAugust 20, 2021
DocketCivil Action No. 2019-2841
StatusPublished

This text of Ray v. Clh New York Ave, LLC (Ray v. Clh New York Ave, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray v. Clh New York Ave, LLC, (D.D.C. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

JOHN L. RAY, Plaintiff,

V. Case No. 19-cv-2841-RCL CLH NEW YORK AVE, LLC, e¢ al., Defendants. ) a ) CLH NEW YORK AVE, LLC, ) Counterclaim Plaintiff,

Vv. Case No. 19-cv-2841-RCL JOHN L. RAY, Counterclaim Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Discovery in this matter closed on December 2, 2020. See ECF No. 82. Since then, five motions have become ripe. Defendants Richard Cohen, Tony Lash, Donnie Hinton, and CLH New York Ave, LLC (““CLH LLC”) move for summary judgment on all ten counts of plaintiff John Ray’s Corrected Third Amended Complaint. ECF No. 85. Defendant CLH LLC also moves for partial summary judgment on Counts 1-3 of its Amended Counterclaim against Ray. ECF No. 86.

Before filing a combined opposition to both summary-judgment motions, ECF No. 95, Ray filed three more discovery-related motions. Ray first moves for reconsideration of the Court’s

ruling in its September 2020 Memorandum Opinion that the defendants properly invoked Maryland’s accountant-client privilege during discovery to withhold certain correspondences between the defendants and their accountant. ECF No. 89. Ray also moves for an emergency hearing and to compel CLH LLC to disclose unredacted versions of its 2014 and 2015 tax returns. ECF No. 90. Finally, Ray moves to strike the expert report of Professor Michael Frisch and to preclude Professor Frisch from testifying as an expert witness at trial. ECF No. 91. The defendants oppose all three motions. ECF Nos. 94, 96, 97.

Upon consideration of the parties’ filings, the applicable legal standards, and the record herein, the Court will DENY Ray’s motion to reconsider, ECF No. 89, DENY Ray’s motion for an emergency hearing and to compel the production of CLH LLC’s unredacted tax returns, ECF No. 90, and DENY IN PART and DISMISS IN PART AS MOOT Ray’s motion to strike the expert report of Professor Frisch and preclude him from testifying as an expert at trial. ECF No. 91. The Court will further GRANT defendants Richard Cohen, Tony Lash, Donnie Hinton, and CLH LLC’s motion for summary judgment on all ten counts of Ray’s Corrected Third Amended Complaint, ECF No. 85. And it will GRANT IN PART and DISMISS AS MOOT IN PART CLH LLC’s motion for partial summary judgment on Counts 1-3 of its Amended Counterclaim against Ray, ECF No. 86.

I. BACKGROUND A. Procedural History i. The Complaint

In August 2019, Ray sued Richard Cohen, Tony Lash, and Donnie Hinton, along with an LLC that Cohen, Lash, and Hinton formed (CLH LLC), in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. See ECF No. 1-1 (“Compl.”) at 1-2. Ray claimed that defendants Cohen, Lash, and

Hinton breached their oral agreement to give Ray a 10% equity interest in real property they

2 owned. Compl. at 45. In short, Ray alleged that in 2012, he discovered that the property located at 1345 New York Avenue N.E., Washington, D.C. (“the Property”) presented a lucrative real- estate investment opportunity. Jd. at J 10-12. After making that discovery, Ray claimed, he brought the investment opportunity to defendant Lash. Jd. at § 13. Because of his due diligence on the Property, the complaint alleged, defendant Lash and his two business partners (defendants Cohen and Hinton) purchased the Property through an LLC the three of them formed together (CLH LLC). /d. at 457. In return for his due diligence on the Property and discovery of this investment opportunity, Ray claimed, Cohen, Lash, and Hinton orally promised him a 10% “equity interest in the Property and any improvements thereon.” Jd. at 445. But after seven years of repeatedly asking Cohen, Lash, and Hinton to memorialize that agreement and pay him the amount owed, they never honored their promise. Jd. at § 55. So, in 2019, Ray sued. See id. Shortly after initiating his suit, Ray also filed a lis pendens against the Property with the District of Columbia Recorder of Deeds. See ECF No. 9 at 13.!

The defendants timely removed the suit to federal court. ECF No. | at 3. Ray then filed an Amended Complaint, ECF No. 6, and the defendants answered. ECF No. 9. Defendant CLH LLC separately counterclaimed, alleging that Ray’s filing of the lis pendens against the Property was improper because Ray claimed only an interest in the entity owning the property (CLH LLC), not

in the Property itself. Id. at 12-17. In its counterclaim, CLH LLC seeks (1) a declaratory judgment

' “Lis pendens” is Latin for “pending lawsuit.” Lis Pendens, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019). As used here, the term refers to “[a] notice, recorded in the chain of title to real property, required or permitted in some jurisdictions to warn all persons that certain property is the subject matter of litigation, and that any interests acquired during the pendency of the suit are subject to its outcome.” Jd.

3 stating that Ray’s filing of the lis pendens was improper under D.C. law, (2) the cancellation and release of the /is pendens, and (3) sanctions pursuant to D.C. Code § 42-1207(d)(1).” ii. Discovery

The parties proceeded to discovery. See ECF Nos. 9 & 17. During discovery, and with the Court’s permission, both sides amended their pleadings. CLH LLC filed an Amended Counterclaim with a newly added claim for unjust enrichment (Count 4), which requested the return of $190,000 it allegedly advanced to Ray in 2013. See ECF No. 84 at {| 45-50. Ray also filed a Third Amended Complaint,? which added claims for beach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, common law fraud, civil conspiracy, promissory estoppel, and “breach of partnership loyalty.” ECF No. 79.

Just before the close of discovery, Ray moved to compel responses to certain discovery requests. ECF No. 50 at 6. Relevant here is one of those requests, which sought copies of CLH LLC’s tax returns from 2014 and 2015. See id. The Court found Ray’s request to be “unduly burdensome” and thus granted it only in part. Ray, 2020 WL 5594064, at *10—11. It ordered the defendants to “produce redacted versions of CLH’s state and federal tax returns from 2014 and 2015, leaving only the information pertaining to plaintiff's claims unredacted.” Jd. at *11. The

Court added that “[i]f information in any of the redacted tax returns indicates that the entire return

2 D.C. Code § 42-1207(d)(1) reads: “If judgment is rendered in the action or proceeding against the party who filed the notice of the pendency, the judgment shall order the cancellation and release of the notice at the expense of the filing party as part of the costs of the action or proceeding. When appropriate, the court may also impose sanctions for the filing.”

3 After moving for leave to file a second amended complaint, Ray subsequently filed a “Notice” that added a new claim to his proposed second amended complaint. ECF No. 49. Because the Notice added a new claim, the Court treated the Notice as a motion for leave to file a third (rather than second) amended complaint. Ray v. CLH New York Ave, LLC, No. 19-CV-2841, 2020 WL 5594064, *1 n.1 (D.D.C. Sept. 18, 2020). The Court granted him leave to do so. Jd. would be relevant to plaintiff's claims, plaintiff can move for the Court to review the tax return in camera.” Id.

Because the Court authorized this limited additional discovery, it extended the deadline for fact discovery until November 2, 2020 and ordered that summary-judgment motions be submitted by November 16, 2020. ECF No. 78 at 1. At Ray’s request (and without opposition from the defendants), the Court extended both deadlines by one month. ECF No. 82.

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