Thomas J. Rasmussen, et al. v. Foundation for Affordable Housing

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJanuary 29, 2026
Docket2:24-cv-02081
StatusUnknown

This text of Thomas J. Rasmussen, et al. v. Foundation for Affordable Housing (Thomas J. Rasmussen, et al. v. Foundation for Affordable Housing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas J. Rasmussen, et al. v. Foundation for Affordable Housing, (D. Kan. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

THOMAS J. RASMUSSEN, et al.,

Plaintiffs,

v. Case No. 24-2081-TC-BGS

FOUNDATION FOR AFFORDABLE HOUSING,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO AMEND THE COMPLAINT This matter comes before the Court on Plaintiffs’ motion to amend the complaint and scheduling order. Doc. 161. Plaintiffs Thomas Rasmussen, Daniel Stechschulte, and Mark Rasmussen contend they have shown good cause, and that amendment is appropriate to add an alternative breach of contract theory and to supplement factual allegations concerning the Defendant Foundation for Affordable Housing’s distribution methodology and other related transactions. Doc. 163. Defendant opposes the motion, arguing that Plaintiffs have not shown good cause because the information learned was known or discoverable earlier, and that amendment at this stage would be untimely and prejudicial. Doc. 179. For the reasons stated herein, the motion is GRANTED. I. Background Facts Plaintiffs are investor members of Cross Creek Apartment Holdings, LLC (“Cross Creek” or “the Company”) and collectively hold a 99% membership interest. See Doc. 1 at ¶ 10-13. Defendant is the Company’s managing member and holds the remaining 1% interest. The Company owned Cross Creek Apartments (“the Apartment Complex”), a Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (“LIHTC”) project located in Beaufort, South Carolina. Id. ¶ 2. The Apartment Complex sold on September 12, 2022. Id. ¶ 50. Plaintiffs allege they did not learn of the sale until the Defendant provided notice on December 12, 2022. Id. ¶ 72. Plaintiffs further allege that on February 21, 2023, the Defendant issued distribution checks to each Plaintiff in the amount of approximately $84,890 (“the Original Distributions”), which Plaintiffs did not cash. Id. ¶ 79. The parties’ dispute centers on the Defendant’s calculation and distribution of net sale proceeds under the Operating Agreement, including whether the sale should have been distributed under § 4.02(b)

(as Plaintiffs contend) or instead under § 4.03’s liquidation/termination distribution provisions (as Defendant contends). The Court sets forth the following background to provide context for the pending motion to amend. The chronology of discovery, motion practice, and subsequent developments is relevant to the Court’s evaluation of whether Plaintiffs have shown good cause to seek amendment and whether amendment should be permitted at this stage of the case. Before this lawsuit began, the parties exchanged communications regarding a housing cooperative owned by the Defendant known as “Ashley Square.” See generally Doc. 162-3. Those communications addressed the relationship, if any, between Ashley Square and Cross Creek’s financing and obligations. In particular, the parties discussed whether and to what extent Cross Creek’s debt was cross-collateralized with debt associated with Ashley Square and what that cross- collateralization meant for Cross Creek’s accounting and distributions. The Defendant contends that Plaintiffs had information about Ashley Square and cross-collateralization as early as 2023,

including through a memorandum of understanding (“MOU”) and related correspondence. See, e.g., Doc. 179, at 10. The Defendant further contends that Plaintiffs raised cross-collateralization concerns in a November 2023 letter. Plaintiffs dispute the extent to which the MOU and related correspondence disclosed the specific information they now seek to plead. They also point to a June 20, 2023, email in which counsel for Defendant represented that “[t]he debt for Ashley Square is unrelated to Cross Creek and did not affect the calculations for Cross Creek.” Doc. 162-3, at 2. In Plaintiffs’ view, this supports their position that they did not yet have all the information necessary to plead the alternative breach-of-contract theory now asserted in the proposed amended complaint. The pre-suit communications did not resolve the dispute, and Plaintiffs therefore filed this action on March 8, 2024. See Doc. 1. The Court entered a scheduling order on June 5, 2024, which

was later amended on October 1, 2024. See Docs. 25, 54. The original scheduling order set the deadline to move to amend the pleadings as July 19, 2024, and the amended scheduling order set the final discovery deadline as February 12, 2025. The deadline to move to amend the pleadings was not extended or otherwise modified by the amended scheduling order. Following entry of the scheduling order, the parties engaged in written discovery and noticed depositions. See, e.g., Docs. 30, 38, 66, 72-78, 84, 87. The Defendant responded to discovery requests and produced documents on a rolling basis throughout 2024. By October 1, 2024, the Defendant represents it had produced approximately 16,424 pages of documents, along with an additional 5,435 pages obtained from third party Burlington Capital Group. The Defendant contends this production included materials relevant to the challenged sale and dissolution, the distribution calculations, and Ashley Square-related transactions. As relevant here, the Defendant points to specific documents it contends put Plaintiffs on notice of the relationship between Ashley Square and Cross Creek during discovery. These include a

mortgage and security agreement produced on June 24, 2024 and an email produced on October 1, 2024 stating that Cross Creek was “taking over the Ashley Square note.” See Doc. 179, at 7. The Defendant also notes that a MOU produced during discovery referenced Ashley Square and that similar information had been exchanged in pre-suit communications. According to the Defendant, these materials were sufficient to alert Plaintiffs to the significance of Ashley Square and any potential cross-collateralization issues before the deadline to move to amend. Plaintiffs do not dispute that these documents were produced but contend they did not disclose the factual connections Plaintiffs now seek to plead. They maintain that earlier productions reflected only that Ashley Square existed and that some relationship between Cross Creek and Ashley Square debt was discussed, without revealing how Ashley Square-related financing

intersected with liquidation planning or the methodology used to calculate distributions. Plaintiffs assert that those connections did not become apparent until January 2025, after a dispute regarding communications involving Lutz & Company, P.C., the accounting firm involved in analyzing liquidation planning and distribution calculations. See, e.g., Doc. 163, at 6. In their motion, Plaintiffs assert that the Defendant “was forced to produce key documents in January 2025,” including what Plaintiffs describe as a “plan of complete liquidation and dissolution” and related communications that, in Plaintiffs’ view, revealed connections among Cross Creek’s liquidation, Ashley Square, and a bridge loan. Id. Plaintiffs contend these documents bear on the Defendant’s distribution methodology and on Defendant’s position that the Ashley Square debt did not affect Cross Creek’s distribution calculations. The parties had depositions noticed for February 11 and 12, 2025, following those productions. On February 11, 2025—one day before the discovery deadline—counsel notified the Court that the Defendant had identified an error in a prior Cross Creek tax return filing that had been used

as the basis for the Original Distributions. The disclosure occurred on the eve of the February 11 depositions and led to a stay of the proceedings while the parties addressed corrective tax filings and related issues. See Docs. 98, 121, 132. The Court set a status conference for March 7, 2025 to address the tax issue and the path forward. At that time, a motion for judgment on the pleadings was also pending.

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Thomas J. Rasmussen, et al. v. Foundation for Affordable Housing, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-j-rasmussen-et-al-v-foundation-for-affordable-housing-ksd-2026.