Raymond Heck v. Kenneth Buhler

775 F.3d 265, 90 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 513, 2014 WL 7335023, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 24388
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 2014
Docket14-30146
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 775 F.3d 265 (Raymond Heck v. Kenneth Buhler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond Heck v. Kenneth Buhler, 775 F.3d 265, 90 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 513, 2014 WL 7335023, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 24388 (5th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge:

Following a jury trial, the district court entered judgment imposing liability on Defendant-Appellant Wayne Triche for violations of the Louisiana Securities Law, La. Rev.Stat. Ann. § 51.701 et seq. Triche appealed the judgment to this court and, for the reasons to be explained, we AFFIRM.

Facts and Proceedings

I. Evidence Adduced at Trial

The facts developed at trial, consistent with the jury’s verdict, are as follows. Defendant Ken Buhler was an auctioneer specializing in antique furniture. Buhler met co-defendant Triche, a certified public accountant, in 1990, and shortly thereafter hired Triche’s then accounting firm, Triche and Associates. In the late 1990s, with the help of Triche and Associates, Buhler launched “Go Antiques,” an internet antique furniture business. Triche and Associates helped Buhler draft prospectuses for Go Antiques, raising approximately eight and a half million dollars.

Buhler was fired from his dual roles as president and CEO of Go Antiques on December 20, 2002. Prior to his termination, Buhler took out a number of loans in connection with Go Antiques that left him personally indebted to First Bank for just over one million dollars. Buhler also had a number of outstanding claims and judgments against him totaling over half a million dollars. Triche was aware of these debts. Buhler considered Triche his “business advisor” and close friend and went to Triche for advice after his termination from Go Antiques. Triche advised him to get back into the auction business.

Buhler set out to form a new antique company in the fall of 2003, which ultimately took the name of Antique Investment Group, LLC (“AIG”). With the help of Triche and a partner in Triche’s consulting firm, Daryl DeArmond, Buhler created a prospectus (or “AIG pool document”) to raise money for AIG from private investors. The AIG pool document explained that “[t]he investors will make loans to [AIG], the proceeds of which will be used to buy inventory pool items.” The inventory would then be sold through auctions, showrooms and warehouses, and over the internet. Investors were entitled to a percentage of AIG’s “gross profits,” 1 deter *269 mined by the amount of money they advanced to AIG. The AIG pool document assured investors that “[a]ll investments are secured by inventory purchased on the behalf of AIG,” and that “[t]he inventory pool will fully collateralize the loans.” Triche did not draft any of the prospectus himself, but contributed to portions of the document related to payout structure, loan terms and conditions, and securitization.

Buhler used the AIG pool document to solicit investments from Raymond Heck, Doug Hamley, Charles Moore, Joseph McKearn, and Allen Richardson (collectively “plaintiffs”). Between September 12, 2003, and May 5, 2004, plaintiffs advanced Buhler $324,949.00. Buhler reported to Triche each • time he obtained money from an investor. Triche, however, did not have direct contact with any of the investors except for Heck. Buhler told Heck that Triehe’s firm would provide accounting services for AIG, and when Heck called Triche to inquire about the company’s legitimacy, Triche assured him it was the “real deal.”

During the time Buhler was soliciting investments for AIG, Buhler and Triche 'had multiple meetings with representatives of First Bank to address his debt obligations. On November 25, 2003, Buh-ler and Triche had a meeting with Andy Adler, Buhler’s loan officer, and Rick Holland, the president of First Bank. Triche was a shareholder in First Bank and had a personal relationship with Adler and Holland. During this meeting, or around this time period, First Bank asked Buhler for “more collateral” for his outstanding loans because his “debt to inventory ratio ... [was] upside down.” The only assets he had to pledge were the inventory of AIG, which had been purchased with plaintiffs’ funds. On December 17, 2003, Buhler and Triche again met with representatives of First Bank regarding his debt and borrowing capacity. An invoice from Triche and Associates billed for ^ Triche’s time as “meeting with client and bankers regarding loan package and restructure of present debt.” The bank demanded additional security from Buhler and, consequently, Buhler “ended up having to pledge assets belonging to [AIG] to the bank in order to get [his] loans restructured.”

Triche instructed Buhler to pledge AIG’s inventory to First Bank. Triche knew that the AIG pool document promised that the investors’ loans would be secured by this inventory, and had specifically discussed this fact at the December 17, 2003 meeting with First Bank. On May 3, 2004, Buhler wrote a letter to First Bank, addressed to Andy Adler, titled “Re: In Reference to Loan Restructuring Proposal.” In this letter, Buhler agreed to pledge AIG’s inventory to “secure” his existing debt and open up a line of credit for AIG. Buhler wrote that he had “spent a significant amount of time” meeting with Triche “to come up with the best possible financial structure of [Buhler’s] indebtedness with First Bank and the integration of that relationship with [his] new investor groups.” Buhler proposed that the “balance of [his] current inventory loan would be converted to a working line of credit at a favorable interest rate for [him] personally and secured by first position in 100% of all inventory (including all inventory purchased with investor funds).” Buhler continued that pledging his AIG inventory would “secure this portion of the converted debt making your loan to value ratio favorable.”

*270 On August 20, 2004, Buhler, on behalf of AIG, executed a promissory note with First Bank in the amount of $350,000 evidencing a line of credit advanced by First Bank to Buhler and AIG. On that same day, Buhler signed a “Commercial Security Agreement,” which offered as collateral “all inventory, accounts, equipment, general intangibles and fixtures” of AIG. A few days before August 20, 2004, Triche went to Buhler’s office to assist him in putting together the AIG inventory to present to First Bank. Buhler’s then accountant, Charlotte Glaspie, asked Triche whether it was legal to pledge the AIG inventory twice. Triche responded that the inventory did not belong to the investors, and that all Buhler owed them was a return on their investment. Buhler told Glaspie that if “Wayne [Triche] said it was okay[,] I guess it’s okay.”

Buhler subsequently defaulted on his line of credit from First Bank. On July 13, 2005, First Bank’s successor, State Bank & Trust, foreclosed on Buhler’s AIG inventory. Plaintiffs sued Buhler and Triche 2 for violations of state and federal securities laws, La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 51:712 and § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder. Plaintiffs alleged that the omission of Buhler’s dire financial condition and lack of notice that Buhler could pledge the collateral promised to investors to First Bank constituted fraud.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
775 F.3d 265, 90 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 513, 2014 WL 7335023, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 24388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-heck-v-kenneth-buhler-ca5-2014.