B. & v. Distributing Co. v. Dottore Companies, LLC

278 F. App'x 480
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 2008
Docket06-3839
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 278 F. App'x 480 (B. & v. Distributing Co. v. Dottore Companies, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. & v. Distributing Co. v. Dottore Companies, LLC, 278 F. App'x 480 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

ROSEN, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

In this appeal, Plaintiff/Appellant Albert Battler (“Battler”) challenges the district court’s decision to dismiss with prejudice a breach-of-contract suit brought by Battler and a company he formed, B. & V. Distributing Co., Inc. (“B. & V. Distributing”), against Defendants/Appellees Dottore Companies, LLC, Mark Dottore, and Thomas Dottore. Only Battler, and not B. & V. Distributing, has appealed from the district court’s ruling. Specifically, Battler argues (i) that the district court impermissibly deviated from the standards of Fed. R.CivJP. 12(b)(6) by considering a contract that was not attached to the complaint, but instead was provided as an exhibit to the defendants’ motion to dismiss; (ii) that the district court erred in determining that Battler failed to identify a viable legal basis for an individual recovery under an alleged agreement to sell the assets of B. & V. Distributing to Defendant Dottore Companies; and (iii) that the district court’s dismissal of this suit with prejudice was inconsistent with the court’s purported determination that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the district court’s ruling in all respects.

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 1972, Plaintiff/Appellant Albert Battler formed two companies that shared the same name — B. & V. Distributing Co., Inc. — but were established under the laws of two different states, Ohio and Florida. 1 In 1993, Battler merged the two companies to form the second plaintiff in this suit, B. & V. Distributing Co., Inc. According to Battler, he believed at the time that the resulting entity was an Ohio corporation, but he later learned that the Ohio corporation had been merged into the Florida corporation. Battler is the president and *482 sole shareholder of Plaintiff B. & V. Distributing.

According to the complaint, in the summer of 1999, Battler entered into negotiations with Defendant/Appellee Mark Dottore for the sale of all of B. & V. Distributing’s assets to Defendant/Appellee Dottore Companies, LLC. These negotiations were concluded by the fall of 1999, with Dottore Companies agreeing to pay monthly installments of $8,500 toward the total purchase price of $306,000. In accordance with these terms, all of the assets of B. & V. Distributing were transferred to Dottore Companies by December 16, 1999, before the parties had reduced their agreement to writing. When presented with a written contract memorializing this agreement, Defendant/Appellee Thomas Dottore refused to sign it, but an unspecified “representative” of Dottore Companies signed the contract on March 1, 2000. (See Complaint at ¶ 15, J.A. at 9.) 2

Over four years later, in August of 2004, Battler commenced the first of two lawsuits arising from this transaction, alleging that while all of B. & V. Distributing’s assets were transferred to Dottore Companies, the defendants failed to make any of the agreed-upon monthly payments for these assets. (See 8/20/2004 Complaint at ¶¶ 9-14, J.A. at 86-87.) Although the complaint in this first suit referred to a “[written and signed contract” that was attached as an exhibit, (id. at ¶ 12, J.A. at 87), no such exhibit accompanied the complaint. Rather, Battler separately filed this document — entitled “Asset Purchase Agreement” and dated March 1, 2000, (see Asset Purchase Agreement, J.A. at 93) — roughly two months after the complaint was filed. Battler was the sole plaintiff in this 2004 action, and B. & V. Distributing was not named as a party, despite the fact that the Asset Purchase Agreement identified the contracting parties as B. & V. Distributing and Dottore Companies. (See id. at 1, J.A. at 93.)

In lieu of answering this 2004 complaint, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss, arguing (i) that Battler lacked standing to bring breach-of-contraet and related claims that properly belonged to B. & V. Distributing, and (ii) that there was no diversity of citizenship between the proper plaintiff, B. & V. Distributing — which was identified in both the 2004 complaint and the Asset Purchase Agreement as an Ohio corporation — and the defendants, each of whom was also a citizen of Ohio. Before this motion could be heard, however, Battler agreed to voluntarily dismiss the case without prejudice.

Precisely a year after this dismissal, Battler commenced the present suit, this time naming B. & V. Distributing as an additional plaintiff and identifying this company as “a citizen of the State of Florida.” (12/15/2005 Complaint at ¶ 2(a), J.A. at 6-7.) The complaint in this case, like the earlier one, alleges that all of B. & V. Distributing’s assets were transferred to Dottore Companies by December of 1999, but that the defendants failed to make any of the required monthly payments toward *483 the agreed-upon purchase price of $306,000. This latest complaint also refers to a written agreement that was signed by a representative of Dottore Companies on March 1, 2000 and was “attached hereto as Exhibit A,” (id. at ¶¶ 14-15), but no such document accompanied the complaint. In all other respects, the complaint in the present case is substantially the same as the 2004 complaint filed by Battler individually.

As they did in the earlier action, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss, and attached to their motion the “Asset Purchase Agreement” filed by Battler in the prior suit. In support of their motion, the defendants once again argued that Battler lacked standing to assert claims belonging to the corporate party to this alleged agreement, B. & V. Distributing. The defendants further challenged the standing of the other named plaintiff, B. & V. Distributing, to assert any claims arising from or related to the Asset Purchase Agreement, where this plaintiff was identified in the complaint as a Florida corporation— ie., B. & V. Florida — but the agreement identified the contracting party as an Ohio corporation — ie., B. & V. Ohio. To the extent that the complaint’s allegations could be construed as claiming that B. & V. Florida was the successor-in-interest to the rights held by B. & V. Ohio under the Asset Purchase Agreement, the defendants contended that any such assertion was refuted by an affidavit and supporting documents filed by Battler in the prior suit, which established, in the defendants’ view, that the contracting party, B. & V. Ohio, had not been merged into B. & V. Florida.

In an opinion and order issued on April 26, 2006, the district court granted the defendants’ motion and dismissed the case with prejudice. In so ruling, the district court accepted the Asset Purchase Agreement accompanying the defendants’ motion as the written contract referenced in the complaint, explaining that this contract was “central to Plaintiffs’ claims,” and noting that “Plaintiffs do not argue that the contract attached to Defendants’ motion is not the contract referred to in the complaint or is otherwise inaccurate.” (4/26/2006 Op. at 8 n. 3, J.A.

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278 F. App'x 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-v-distributing-co-v-dottore-companies-llc-ca6-2008.