Bruce E. Toll

Bruce E. Toll
Born (1943-04-29) April 29, 1943
Nationality United States
Ethnicity Jewish
Education B.A. University of Miami
Occupation businessman
Known for co-founder of Toll Brothers
Spouse(s) Robbi S. Toll
Children Michelle Toll O'Flanagan
Elizabeth Toll Feuer
Wendy Toll Topkis
Jennifer Toll Schulman
Parent(s) Albert Toll
Sylvia Steinberg Toll
Family Robert I. Toll (brother)

Bruce E. Toll co-founded the American luxury homebuilder company Toll Brothers.[1]

Biography

Born to a Jewish family, the son of Sylvia (née Steinberg)[2] and Albert Toll, he grew up in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania.[1] His father, who emigrated from Ukraine,[3] was a millionaire investor who lost everything in the Wall Street Crash of 1929.[4] In 1965, Toll graduated with a B.A. from the University of Miami.[5] In 1967, Toll and his brother Robert I. Toll founded Toll Brothers with a focus on building luxury homes ($500,000+)[4] starting with a plot of land in Caln Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania given to them by their father.[6] They grew the business using a conservative financial model always including a 10 percent expense cushion in all their project cost estimates, never assumed price appreciation during construction, and always used conservative sales estimates.[6] Bruce was responsible for the book-keeping and Robert the legal side of the business.[4] In the late 1980s, they expanded out of the Northeast to Washington, D.C. and in the mid-1990s, to California.[4] The Tolls are credited with mass-producing luxury housing by taking a few standard home styles and increasing the scale several fold.[6] Toll Brothers later expanded into building “active-adult” communities for the elderly affluent and urban high-rises for the newly affluent (Toll Brothers City Living).[6] In 1998, Toll sold 5 million shares of Toll Brothers for $186.6 million although still remaining its second largest shareholder and vice-chairman.[3][7] In November 2013, Toll Brothers purchased Shapell Homes (founded by Nathan Shapell) for $1.6 billion.[8] As of 2013, Toll Brothers has sold over 40,000 homes in twenty-two states.[9]

Using the proceeds from his stock sale, he has diversified his investments. Toll is principal of real estate investor and developer, BET Investments,[9] and has a diversified pool of investments including: National Renal Alliance of Franklin, Tennessee, a for-profit chain of 12 kidney-dialysis centers; Premier Kids Care Inc. of Atlanta, Georgia, which sells human-growth hormones; Puresyn Inc., a Malvern, Pennsylvania company which develops gene vaccines and gene-therapies; Colonial Management Group L.P., a Orlando, Florida chain of 50 methadone-treatment centers; UbiquiTel Inc., a Conshohocken, Pennsylvania company that sells Sprint-branded PCS wireless service in the West and Midwest; Aquilent Inc., a Laurel, Maryland company which provides IT services to the government; several automobile dealerships in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania area including Reedman-Toll Auto World of Langhorne, Pennsylvania, one of the largest dealerships in the USA.[7]

Philanthropy and accolades

Toll serves on the board of directors for the Home Builders Association of Bucks and Montgomery Counties, the Ben Franklin Technology Center of Southeastern Pennsylvania, Abington Memorial Hospital, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art.[9] Toll typically donates to the Republican party.[3]

Personal life

Toll is married to Robbi S. Toll.[10] Robbi is an interior designer[11][12] and serves as secretary of the board of the National Museum of American Jewish History.[10] They have four daughters; Michelle, Elizabeth, Wendy, and Jennifer.[3] In 1997, his daughter Elizabeth married investor Leonard M. Tannenbaum;[13] they divorced in 2010.[14]

Toll had also been battling a court case with Leonard M. Tannenbaum, founder and Chief Executive Officer of Fifth Street Asset Management which was finalized on December 17, 2014. Bruce Toll, the appellant, builds luxury homes. He sued his former son-in-law, Leonard Tannenbaum, over a multi-million dollar business deal gone badly. Toll alleged that he made an oral agreement with Tannenbaum to personally guarantee loans for one of Tannenbaum’s ventures provided that Toll’s daughter (and Tannenbaum’s wife at the time) share equally in the profits. Toll asked the District Court to enforce this purported oral agreement or, in the alternative, for equitable relief. Applying New York law, the District Court granted summary judgment to Tannenbaum on all of Toll’s claims. Toll appealed and the court will affirm. In summary, New York law applies to Toll’s breach of contract claim. Therefore, the District Court correctly granted summary judgment to Tannenbaum because the alleged oral contract could not be performed, by Toll’s own admission, within one year of its making. Further, the court said Toll’s claims under quasi-contract theory are meritless and the District Court rightly granted summary judgment to Tannenbaum. The court said it considered all issues that were raised by Appellant and find no merit to any of them. Therefore, they affirmed the decision of the District Court.[15]

References

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