Trayanoff v. Oak Island Land Co.

870 So. 2d 349, 2003 La.App. 4 Cir. 1425, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 630, 2004 WL 575066
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 2004
DocketNo. 2003-CA-1425
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 870 So. 2d 349 (Trayanoff v. Oak Island Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trayanoff v. Oak Island Land Co., 870 So. 2d 349, 2003 La.App. 4 Cir. 1425, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 630, 2004 WL 575066 (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

|,MAX N. TOBIAS, JR., Judge.

The plaintiff/appellant, Chris Trayanoff (“Trayanoff’), appeals the judgment of the trial court in favor of the defendants, Donald A. Pellissier (“Pellissier”), Robert J. Laporte (“Laporte”), Donna Maitre (“Mai-tre”), and the corporation of which they were officers, Oak Island Land Co., Inc. (“Oak Island”). Trayanoff alleged that the defendants defrauded him in a land investment scheme.1

Trayanoff and Pellissier met in 1974, when Trayanoff began providing coffee service to Pellissier’s radiator shops. Trayanoff was, at that time, a route salesman of chips, coffee, and snack foods. In or about 1982, Trayanoff formed his own business, Continental Coffee Co., providing coffee service to local businesses. While delivering coffee to one of four radiator shops owned by Pellissier, the two became friends. Both Trayanoff and Pellissier described their 1 pfriendship as close. They frequently socialized and even attended a spiritual retreat together following Traya-noff s divorce.

Trayanoff described Pellissier as a mentor. He testified that he believed Pellissier to be an experienced businessman with extensive knowledge of the real estate market. He knew that Pellissier had a real estate license and had developed other properties in New Orleans. Further, Pel-lissier was involved with the New Orleans East Economic Development Foundation (“NOEEDF”), having at times served on the Board of Directors and as president and vice-president. Trayanoff s opinion of Pellissier was further bolstered when Trayanoff and Pellissier invested in the construction of a townhouse in New Orleans East in 1980. Trayanoff contributed $12,000.00 to the deal and invested sweat equity by painting and preparing the property for occupation. In 1982, when he had the opportunity to own his own business, Trayanoff asked Pellissier for his original investment and the $12,000.00 was returned to him.

In 1984, Pellissier and a partner, Sam Scandaliato (“Scandaliato”), acquired a parcel of land in New Orleans East (“Mi-choud property”) for $417,000.00 in the hopes that economic development in New Orleans East would increase the value of the property. Pellissier and Scandaliato borrowed $80,000.00 from the Hibernia National Bank to make the down payment and arranged for the owner of the property to owner-finance the balance of $337,000.00. Subsequently, they obtained a personal loan from the Whitney National Bank (“the Whitney”) to make payments to the owner on the balance owed on the property. As of 30 June 1988, |3the debt incurred by Pellissier and Scandaliato totaled $450,000.00 and Pellissier then borrowed money from First Eastern Bank & Trust Company to pay off the previous owner and to pay on the Whitney loan. By early 1990, the debt was $500,000.00 and Pellissier and Scandaliato still owed the Whitney $117,000.00. Scandaliato, according to his own testimony, was forced to bankrupt his business, told Trayanoff that he could no longer support the debt on the Michoud property, and disavowed any further responsibility for the note at the Whitney. Interestingly, he admitted that no steps were taken to remove his name from the note. Thus, in 1990, Pellis-sier was facing a partner about to declare bankruptcy and the FDIC was attempting to foreclose on the property.

[352]*352In 1990, Trayanoff found Pellissier very upset in his office. Pellissier told Traya-noff that his business partner was filing bankruptcy and that he could no longer pay the mortgage on the Michoud property himself. He was concerned that the bank would foreclose on him and take deficiency judgments. Trayanoff testified that he offered to borrow money on his credit cards to help Pellissier manage his debts and keep the FDIC from foreclosing.2 He gave Pellissier a cashier’s check for $1,700.00 on 10 August 1990; a check in blank for $2,639.97 on 15 November 1990; and several personal checks made payable to Pellissier on 20 February, 25 April, 30 July, and 4 November 1991, totaling $5,806.71. Thus, as of 4 November 1991, Trayanoff had turned over to Pellissier over $10,000.00.

|Jn exchange for the money, Pellissier purportedly offered Trayanoff an opportunity to invest in the Michoud property. Trayanoff testified that Pellissier told him that the property was worth close to $1,000,000.00 and that they should have no trouble selling it within 18 months. He showed Trayanoff two appraisals for the Michoud property dated 1984 and 1988, both of which valued the land at $877,000.00. Although the land was undeveloped, Pellissier told Trayanoff that it would be a great site for a new tourist center and even produced a letter from Dale Tynes, an officer of the NOEEDF, which stated that the Michoud property was the best site for the tourist center and the price for the property was expected to be $3.50 per square foot.

Trayanoff testified that he could not afford to participate in the land deal, but Pellissier persuaded him by agreeing to repay all of Trayanoff s money on demand if he needed it, as he had in their prior business venture. According to Trayanoff, Pellissier told him that he would enjoy a return on his money shortly. Trayanoff testified that he agreed to treat the loans as an investment, and testified that had Pellissier not agreed to return his money should he need it, he would not have invested in the property.

Pellissier introduced Trayanoff to La-porte, a certified public accountant, and told Trayanoff that he wanted to bring him in as a co-investor. Trayanoff, Laporte, and Pellissier had a meeting to discuss the Michoud property. Notes taken by Traya-noff purportedly show that at that meeting, Pellissier was valuing the Michoud property at $5.00 per square foot, or $1,400,000.00. Trayanoff testified that at that time he wasn’t interested in investing in the land, but rather in helping his friend out by loaning him money so that he could keep the Michoud property. He testified that Pellissier and Laporte wanted to form a corporation to develop the [¡¡property, and that he didn’t understand the need to incorporate. He further testified that he was never present at an election of any directors or officers, and didn’t even realize that he had been “elected” president of the company.

Laporte testified that he incorporated the company to protect the three from personal liability, and that the incorporation was not meant to divest Trayanoff of his rights in the property. Laporte, Pellissier, and Trayanoff were supposed to own the land equally, each having 1/3 interest in the property. At the outset of [353]*353incorporation, Laporte, Pellissier, and Trayanoff were each issued 100 shares of Oak Island stock.

According to Trayanoff, it was also at that meeting that Laporte and Pellissier told him that if Oak Island purchased the property from Pellissier and his wife, the property would be dationed and the FDIC would not foreclose on the land. The company would offer $75,000.00 for the property and Pellissier asked Trayanoff to request that Pellissier be completely released from his debt on the property as a condition of the sale. A letter to that effect was signed by Trayanoff as president of Oak Island and was sent to the FDIC. The letter did not mention Pellissier’s involvement in Oak Island.

William Curry (“Curry”), an attorney retained by Pellissier to incorporate Oak Island, handled the Act of Sale of the Michoud property. At the Act of Sale, Pellissier and Laporte produced a counter letter regarding the sale of the property.

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Bluebook (online)
870 So. 2d 349, 2003 La.App. 4 Cir. 1425, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 630, 2004 WL 575066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trayanoff-v-oak-island-land-co-lactapp-2004.