SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Real estate tycoon and cowboy extraordinaire James F. Cotter died as he lived, sowing confusion among the people he loved.
Since his death from cardiac arrest Jan. 25,
2017, his estate has been the subject of much dispute and legal
maneuvering among his surviving widow, five children, his lenders,
creditors and the IRS.
The San Antonio Express-News reports Cotter
died at 83 without a valid will. The bulk of his estate, valued at
about $288 million 13 months before his death, comprises a vast real
estate empire of 66 properties in six states. In San Antonio,
it includes the twin Alamo Towers along Northeast Loop 410 and the two
Petroleum Towers just around the corner on Tesoro Drive.
After Cotter’s death, Bexar County Probate Judge Tom Rickhoff appointed San Antonio attorney Marcus Rogers as the independent administrator to oversee the estate.
Rogers called it “the case of a lifetime” but would not discuss it further, saying he considered it a family matter.
The probate case is further complicated by the fact that the Cotter companies’ books were left in disarray, Rogers noted in a March court filing.
The balance sheets reflect “substantial intercompany-related accounts
that did not balance and had not been reconciled for what appears to be
many years,” he said.
As a result, Rogers added, “balance sheets cannot be relied upon to represent the true book value of the assets, liabilities and equity accounts.”
The loans on the real estate were personally
guaranteed by Cotter, so his death “resulted in an event of default on
virtually every mortgage,” one court document reads.
The companies that own Petroleum Towers, Alamo Towers and a 36-story Cotter Ranch Tower office building in Oklahoma City,
considered the Cotter portfolio’s crown jewel, were put into bankruptcy
after his death. The latter two bankruptcies were filed to stop lenders
from foreclosing on the properties.
Other Cotter entities narrowly skirted bankruptcy themselves, a lawyer for the companies recently said in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in San Antonio. Many of Cotter’s properties have been put up for sale.
“This is a good example of how you don’t want
to exit,” attorney Randall Pulman quipped. Pulman, managing partner of
Pulman, Cappuccio, Pullen, Benson & Jones in San Antonio,
represented Cotter in a dispute with a janitorial company that sued
Cotter and some of his companies for unpaid cleaning services.
Cotter was born “from humble beginnings” in Boise, Idaho, one of his obituaries reads.
Cotter
served in the 82nd Airborne Division during the Korean War and attended
Walla Walla College in Washington state after leaving the Army. Before
graduating, he made his foray into the real estate business by
developing a 36-lot subdivision, he told the San Antonio Express-News in
2007.
He later moved to Northern California and bought his first nursing facility under the name Cotter Health Centers.
Cotter was “a self-made man and had very strong religious and Christian principles,” San Antonio attorney Richard Jenkins, who had represented the real estate magnate, said in an affidavit in the probate case last year.
BJ Corp., a cleaning company that sued Cotter and his companies to collect on allegedly unpaid bills, had a different take.
“The Cotter defendants have a reputation for
failing to pay their debts when due in an effort to cheat small
businesses and to gain an advantage,” BJ Corp. said in its lawsuit.
Cotter was a colorful character, often clad in a
cowboy hat and boots, and even required his building security staff to
wear similar western attire, The Oklahoman newspaper reported. He bought
what’s now known as the 36-story Cotter Ranch Tower, his prized office
tower in downtown Oklahoma City, in the 2000s. A bronze statue in front of the building depicts Cotter astride a horse.
“He always had a story, sort of like a mix
between visiting with Forrest Gump and the Marlboro man,” Pulman said.
“He had a story about all sorts of significant events in history and how
he was a bystander.”
Cotter is survived by his third wife, Bettye “Ruth” Cotter, two daughters and three sons.
Cotter’s marriage to his first wife, Loretta,
produced three children: Vivian Mueller, 61; James Val Lee Cotter, 59;
and Valeri Zaharie Glauser, 53. The couple divorced in 1981 after 26
years of marriage.
Four years later, the then-53-year-old Cotter
remarried to a woman more than half his age. The union lasted less than
three years but produced his two youngest sons, James Adam Cotter, 31,
and James Andrew Cotter, 29.
Why he gave each of his three sons the same first name is somewhat of a mystery.
“He wondered about that himself,” said Ruth Cotter, 81, his longtime companion whom he married in 2012.
For all of his accomplishments in life, Cotter
apparently wasn’t much of a planner or very organized. In dying without a
will, or at least one that was declared valid, his final wishes for his
vast real estate portfolio are unknown.
Even the value of his estate is in dispute.
Cotter’s assets were valued at $287.9 million
13 months before his death, with his real estate holdings representing
all but about $41 million as of Dec. 31, 2015, according to a Statement
of Financial Condition submitted in the probate case. His liabilities
were listed at $181.7 million.
Yet in April 2017, while the probate estate was being contested, Rickhoff wrote a letter to estate administrator Rogers
and other attorneys in the case letting them know that he had been
informed by another judge who had briefly filled in for him that the
“value of this estate is somewhat speculative in nature.”
“In such cases, I often prefer to determine
whether or not the estate is solvent and then after the dollar signs in
the parties’ eyes disappear and they get realistic about the decisions
that need to be made to resolve the real issues in the case, set
relevant matters for hearings,” Rickhoff wrote.
The judge then added, “Set everything you want, but I sense a bankruptcy which will stay anything I do anyway.”
Rogers
valued Cotter’s assets at $54 million in a May 1 court filing. But that
doesn’t take into account what’s owed to lenders and other creditors.
It also doesn’t include properties outside Texas that are being worked
out in other states. A court filing from last year valued those assets
at about $69 million.
Sorting things out has been time-consuming.
Ryan Reed, Pulman’s law partner and attorney for Cotter’s two youngest
sons, speculated that all the heirs are “slightly unhappy” about how the
probate case has been proceeding.
“The family business assets are no longer Mr. Cotter’s
to run as he pleases, but now have to be administered to pay taxes,
debts and ultimately be distributed to the respective heirs,” Reed said.
“It’s simply a different dynamic, and they are all trying to figure out
how to transition.”
Cotter’s largest creditor was Loma Linda
University, a Seventh-day Adventist health sciences university in
California. It’s owed more than $42 million in secured debt on various
properties, according to a court filing.
The IRS is owed up to $30 million in estate
taxes, Reed said, adding that the agency authorized the sale of some
property to pay the estate taxes and keep the real estate business
running.
Rogers
is “selling properties, but there’s no money coming to me,” Ruth Cotter
complained in a recent phone interview. She was receiving a monthly
$25,000 “family allowance” from the estate until April. In court papers
seeking to continue the payments, she accused Rogers of “engaging in financial dealings” with the estate’s other beneficiaries. Rogers denied the allegations in a brief response filed with the court.
“He was strong-willed and he worked hard,” Ruth
Cotter said of her late husband. “And I’d hate to see all of that hard
work just go away.”
San Antonio
lawyer Jason Davis, who in the probate case represents the three
children from Cotter’s first marriage, didn’t respond to requests for
comment.
Cotter’s death was unexpected, according to a
bankruptcy court document, though he complained of various ailments in a
2014 deposition. He cited heart trouble, diabetes and neuropathy, or
damage to nerves that often causes weakness, numbness and pain.
Three weeks after Cotter’s death, Ruth Cotter filed an application asking the probate court
to appoint her the temporary administrator of his estate. The five
children immediately contested her appointment, contending that they
were the sole beneficiaries.
Daughter Valeri Glauser and second son James
Adam Cotter wanted to be named the estate’s co-administrators. They also
filed a handwritten will that Cotter crafted in 1981 - before his two
youngest sons were even born. The will named his three oldest children
and his mother, among others, as beneficiaries.
“Being of sound mind, gangled (sic) nerves, and
nothing but pitie (sic) on those that read this and especially those
that must carry on in my stead. Weep not for me; weep for your selves,”
Cotter wrote in the disjointed document.
Ruth Cotter opposed the will. She said her
husband left behind a more recent will and provided affidavits from
three women who worked at Cotter companies and vouched for the document.
If it exists, it has never turned up.
Last June, the parties reached a mediated
“Family Settlement Agreement.” Under the plan, one-sixth of the estate -
after debt, taxes and other expenses are paid - will be used to fund a
trust to support Ruth Cotter for the rest of her life. An independent
trustee agreed upon by the parties will administer the trust.
Ruth Cotter said documents Rogers
provided during the mediation “were misleading and in retrospect were
not a sound basis for a negotiation of such magnitude,” a court filing
states. She also contends that other heirs have attempted, through Rogers, “to underfund (her) share with assets that have been significantly overvalued.”
Rogers disputed the allegations. The judge has yet to take up the issue.
Assets awarded to Ruth Cotter include the
couple’s Dominion home, some vehicles (he had more than 120, including a
1905 Franklin Runabout), home furnishings and $126,2225 in cash, court
documents show.
The Dominion estate was sold last month. It had
been listed for more than $1.2 million, but Ruth Cotter said the return
was “quite small.” James Cotter had purchased the property on Cotswold
Lane from country music star George Strait in 1994, county records show.
“There was quite a bit of debt on it,” Ruth
Cotter said, adding that she had to make a lot of repairs. She declined
to say where she’s living now.
In August, Rickhoff
awarded each of Cotter’s children a 20 percent interest in the property
that James Cotter didn’t jointly own with his wife. The children also
stand to receive 20 percent of their father’s share of the community
property, subject to Ruth Cotter’s share while she’s still alive.
The actual amount each will receive isn’t known yet because the disposition of many of Cotter’s properties is still underway.
Commercial real estate brokerage firm Cushman
& Wakefield is selling nine office properties totaling more than 1
million square feet in San Antonio and Houston.
At a May 16 bankruptcy court hearing involving
Alamo Towers, attorney H. Anthony Hervol said there were three
prospective bidders for the buildings. A sale would require court
approval.
Cotter Ranch Tower, the Oklahoma City office building, is under contract to BancFirst of Oklahoma City
for $23 million, Hervol said during a recent bankruptcy court hearing. A
higher offer could still be submitted. Any deal also requires the court’s approval.
It’s an outcome that Cotter may not have wanted, if his 1981 handwritten will is any guide.
Cotter urged his heirs to “be careful about selling anything.”
“It did not come easy,” he wrote. “I earned it the hard way.”
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Death of Texas tycoon James Cotter leads to estate issues
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