Redmellon, L.L.C. v. Halum

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 27, 2025
Docket2:23-cv-05754
StatusUnknown

This text of Redmellon, L.L.C. v. Halum (Redmellon, L.L.C. v. Halum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redmellon, L.L.C. v. Halum, (E.D. La. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

REDMELLON, L.L.C, et al. CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO: 2:23-cv-5754

MOHAMED “HAMMY” HALUM, et al. SECTION: T (5)

ORDER AND REASONS Before the Court is 1001 Canal, L.L.C., 1015 Canal, L.L.C., 934 Canal, L.L.C., Mohamed “Hammy” Halum, John C. Williams Architects, L.L.C., and John C. Williams, (collectively “Defendants”) Motion for Summary Judgment, R. Doc. 82. For the following reasons, the motion is GRANTED. BACKGROUND This litigation arises from disputes during the construction and redevelopment of several properties on Canal Street in New Orleans, Louisiana (“the Project”). Plaintiffs are Redmellon, LLC (“Redmellon”), a real estate development company, E. Neal Morris, Redmellon’s principal, and Canal Street 1, LLC, a company formed by Morris, (collectively “Plaintiffs”). Redmellon alone asserts Copyright Act claims. But Plaintiffs assert state law claims against Defendants Mohamed “Hammy” Halum, Halum’s owned companies, 1001 Canal, LLC, 1015 Canal, LLC, and 934 Canal, LLC (collectively the “Canal Defendants”), an architectural firm, John C. Williams Architects, LLC (“JCWA”), and its principal, John C. Williams (collectively “Defendants”). a. Factual History i. The PDA and Initial Negotiations 1 The buildings renovated for the Project are 1001-1015 Canal Street and 934 Canal Street (“the Properties”). Halum owns the Properties. In 2018, the New Orleans Downtown Development District (“DDD”) approached architectural firm Trapolin-Peer (“Trapolin”) to create conceptual drawings for the upper floors of 1001-1015 Canal Street. In 2018, Halum and Morris met to discuss

renovating those upper floors and other renovations. Throughout the summer of 2018, Halum and Morris discussed forming a joint venture to develop all of 934 Canal Street and 1001-1015 Canal Street. This is the Project’s scope. A Redmellon employee sent Halum on October 25, 2018, a financial model spreadsheet, to demonstrate the potential benefits of the joint venture. Halum and Morris on December 10, 2018, executed a document titled “Pre-Development Agreement” (the “PDA”). The PDA begins with this statement: “The purpose of this document is to lay out the terms and conditions which shall form the framework of a good faith negotiation towards a definitive Final Development Agreement, Partnership Agreement for a ‘Business Venture…”

R. Doc. 36-3 at 7 (emphasis added). The PDA outlined a potential joint venture for the development of the Properties. Redmellon and Morris agreed to “undertake traditional predevelopment activities [at their] own expense.” Id. at 8. Plaintiffs suggest they incurred over $1,000,000 in these pre-development work expenses. R. Doc 93 at n. 96. But the document also stated that “the work product of the pre-development activities shall be owned by Neal Ventures [Morris’s company] and Redmellon” should the project not move forward and the close of financing not occur. Id. However, the parties did not reach a final agreement and ended negotiations in August 2020. Furthermore, the PDA’s last two clauses provide Halum an exit route and disclaim any contractual duties as follows: 2 “If upon 6 months time from the execution of this agreement Hammy Halum and Halum Ventures are not reasonably satisfied with the progress of the drafting of the partnership agreement, development agreement, or the pre-development of the Project, Hammy Ventures may declare this agreement null and void with each party owing no obligation to the other. Further, nothing herein shall be deemed to give rise to any legal obligations, such obligations arising, if at all, only upon the execution of mutually agreeable documentation and other required agreements referenced herein.”

R. Doc. 36-3 at 9 (emphasis added). Plaintiffs nonetheless contend that the PDA obligated Halum to negotiate final development agreements in good faith. R. Doc. 93-1 at ¶ 16. ii. The Trapolin Design As part of these pre-development activities, Redmellon awarded Trapolin pre-development architectural work for the Project on March 8, 2019. Redmellon asked Trapolin to create an architectural blueprint design for the Project, for mixed-use development—hotel and short-term rental occupancy. Plaintiffs also aver that they instructed Trapolin to create the designs to secure tax credits and comply with National Park Service (“NPS”) and Louisiana State Historic Preservation Office (“SHPO”) regulations. On May 3, 2019, Trapolin and Plaintiffs submitted Part 1 of the Tax Credit Applications to SHPO. Plaintiffs also prepared part 2 of the Tax Credit Applications to SHPO and NPS in 2019 (the “Tax Credit Applications”). In these applications, Plaintiffs described the rehabilitation work to be performed on the buildings and included the Trapolin designs. NPS initially denied certification for Part 2, but Plaintiffs successfully appealed the decision. Peter Trapolin, principal of Trapolin, identified that design choice in the Project was limited because of regulatory and functional limitations. These limitations included “the means of the egress [because] [it] takes up so much of the floor area that it becomes an issue.” R. Doc. 82- 3 16 at 56:10-58:17. Also, Trapolin Architect Ashley King conceded that “any work on [the Project] would be heavily regulated by SHPO and NPS.” R. Doc. 82-17 at 164:12-15. Other design challenges limited design choice because the Project was required to preserve the historical significance of the buildings, such as the historically protected unit—the “Taxi Dance Hall,”

comply with modern building code requirements, and maintain ground-floor retail space to qualify for tax credits. Any design changes were to be approved by the City of New Orleans Historic District Landmark Commission (“HDLC”). Six months after signing the PDA, Redmellon failed to “circulate drafts of the partnership/operating agreement, lease agreement, and development services agreement.” R. Doc. 93-1 at ¶ 21. But Trapolin later issued the “Design Development” drawings for both 934 Canal Street and 1001-1015 Canal Street on August 8, 2019 (the “Trapolin Design”). Redmellon copyrighted the Trapolin Design on September 23, 2023, days before commencing this litigation. The copyright extends to both buildings—one for 934 Canal Street (Copyright Registration Number VAu 1-507-328) (the “328 registration”) and one for 1001-1015 Canal Street Restoration

& Renovation (Copyright Registration Number VAu 1-507-329) (the “329 Registration”). iii. Redmellon’s Financial Limitations and Project Constraints The COVID-19 pandemic strained Redmellon’s ability to proceed with the Project. In an April 22, 2020 email to Halum, Morris acknowledged “Redmellon is at a stopping point,” that “it doesn’t make sense for us [Redmellon] to keep…pushing forward,” and proposed revisiting the deal in “4 months or 6 months or whenever the debt market picks up again.” R. Doc. 82-13 at p. 127. Morris conceded in the same email that he had no objection to Halum no longer proceeding 4 with Redmellon and that the pre-development investment would be lost: “I am also cool with everything I spent being a sunk cost if you have to go your own way. I am absolutely at peace with that. That was the deal I made.”

R. Doc. 82-13 at p. 127. Morris acknowledged in the email that he did not “want to do any more work pushing [the Project] forward.” Id. Morris’s later deposition testimony also concedes that he did not witness any unethical or duplicitous activity. On May 12, 2020, however, Morris attempted to formalize the business arrangement by presenting a draft of the contemplated, final operating agreement to Halum. This draft contained different terms than what was contemplated in the PDA. Mainly, it suggested forming a joint venture with another entity and left key financing numbers blank. Id. at 129.

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Redmellon, L.L.C. v. Halum, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmellon-llc-v-halum-laed-2025.