BAIM v. DUKART

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 2, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-01696
StatusUnknown

This text of BAIM v. DUKART (BAIM v. DUKART) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BAIM v. DUKART, (E.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA EDWARD S. BAIM, et al., Plaintiffs,

v. CIVIL ACTION NO. 21-1696 JOEL DUKART, et al., Defendants. PAPPERT, J. March 2, 2023 MEMORANDUM Edward Baim owned and operated numerous McDonald’s franchises over the course of fifty years. This lawsuit concerns the last seven restaurants Baim owned before retiring. Three of them were in New Jersey and four in Philadelphia and an adjacent county. In the fall of 2019, he sold the three New Jersey franchises to an entity owned by Grant and George Skylass, fellow McDonald’s franchise owners. The Skylasses wanted Baim’s entire portfolio, to include the Philadelphia stores, which Baim at that point was unwilling to sell. So the parties compromised and, as part of his agreement to sell the New Jersey restaurants, Baim granted the Skylasses a right of first refusal on the Philadelphia stores. As a result, if Baim decided to sell those last four locations, the Skylasses had the right to match any offer Baim received. If they did, Baim was required to sell the restaurants to the Skylasses. Within a year it became a seller’s market for McDonald’s franchises and Baim decided the time was right to retire. He told the Skylasses he was now ready to sell the Philadelphia stores. Unwilling to bid against themselves, the Skylasses told Baim to put the restaurants on the market and bring them any offer he received. Around that time, Joel and Michael Dukart contacted Baim. Baim was a longtime friend of the Dukart family, having for years known Joel and Michael’s father and uncle, themselves former franchisees in Delaware. Baim told the Dukarts the Skylasses had the right of

first refusal on his remaining stores but asked them to make him an offer. The Dukarts, who very much wanted to expand into Philadelphia, were willing to be stalking horses if it meant there was a chance they could get Baim’s stores. Besides, given their family’s longtime relationship with Baim, they were hopeful that, all things being equal, “Eddie” would want to sell them the restaurants. Baim, obviously seeking the best deal possible, now had two potential suitors. To make sure he didn’t run afoul of his obligations to the Skylasses, he sent them anything that could be perceived as an offer, including preliminary letters of intent he received from the Dukarts. That is where a previously straightforward situation began to get a little tricky. The Skylasses purported to exercise their right of first refusal on a

letter of intent from the Dukarts that was silent on certain key terms. For example, Baim wanted a larger deposit at closing than the Skylasses wanted to pay. The Dukarts were willing to give Baim everything he wanted. Baim told the Dukarts he needed their full terms in writing so he could send the complete offer to the Skylasses and get their final answer. The Skylasses threatened to enjoin any deal with the Dukarts if their right of first refusal wasn’t honored. The Dukarts, always hopeful the Skylasses would walk away or not be able to do the deal, signed a Purchase and Sale Agreement with Baim that both parties knew would only be valid if the Skylasses didn’t want or couldn’t afford the restaurants. But the Skylasses matched the Dukarts’ terms, and Baim signed a contract to sell them the restaurants. The Dukarts hung around until the Skylass deal was finalized so they’d be first in line if it fell through. When it became clear they weren’t getting the stores, the Dukarts asked Baim to pay a “breakup fee” that would at least

reimburse them for their deal expenses. Baim, a businessman to the end notwithstanding past family friendships, offered them five or ten thousand dollars. Joel Dukart didn’t think this was reasonable, but when he pushed back, Baim told him to “do what you got to do, kiddo.” (Trial Tr. Day 1 95:12–13.) Baim’s condescending statement insulted the Dukarts and when they still hadn’t received what they thought was a reasonable breakup fee five months after losing the deal, they threatened to sue. Baim was confident he did nothing wrong and wanted to make the first move, so he sought a declaration from the Court blessing his sale of the Philadelphia restaurants to the Skylasses. The Dukarts asserted counterclaims contending Baim breached his contract to sell them the stores.

The parties tried the case without a jury. Baim, Joel and Michael Dukart, and Grant Skylass, among others, testified. The Court fully credits Baim’s testimony on all salient points of his transactions, and interactions, with the Skylasses and Dukarts. By contrast, the Court gives the Dukart brothers’ testimony very little weight. Neither of them were credible on many of the issues that mattered. They were evasive. They pretended not to remember things they could not have possibly forgotten, and their versions of events were inconsistent with documentary evidence and common sense. The result in this case was pretty easy to reach, but the reasoning behind it doesn’t take as short and straight a path as it should. Sloppy drafting of the Purchase and Sale Agreement between Baim and the Dukarts created ambiguities requiring the Court to consider parol evidence to determine the parties’ intent. After doing so and considering all other evidence, the credibility of the witnesses, and the parties’ post- trial submissions (ECF 53, 54), responses (ECF 56, 57), and oral argument (ECF 59),

the Court finds that Baim properly honored his contractual obligations to the Skylasses and did not breach his agreement with the Dukarts. Findings of Fact I A Edward Baim is a retired McDonald’s franchisee who owned up to 22 restaurants over his fifty-year career. (Trial Tr. Day 1 9:25–10:17; Pl.’s FF&CL 2 ¶ 1.) Joel and Michael Dukart are current McDonald’s franchisees and equal partners in their family’s franchising business, which owns six McDonald’s restaurants in Delaware. (Trial Tr. Day 1 71:14–15, 72:6–17; Pl.’s FF&CL 2 ¶ 2; Def.’s FF&CL 1.) The

parties are family friends who met through the McDonald’s community and go “back many years.” (Trial Tr. Day 1 72:18–21; Pl.’s FF&CL 2 ¶ 3.) On October 31, 2019, Baim, through entities he owned and controlled, agreed to sell three McDonald’s restaurants in New Jersey to GNS Enterprises 6, LP, an entity ultimately owned by the Skylasses, other franchisees operating in the area. (Trial Tr. Day 1 12:17–19, 114:22–116:3, 119:9–25, 135:4–8, 136:4–137:5; Pl.’s FF&CL 2 ¶ 4; Def.’s FF&CL 1; Ex. 1.) In addition to these restaurants, Grant Skylass wanted to buy four more restaurants Baim owned, three in Philadelphia and the fourth in a county adjacent to the city.1 (Pl.’s FF&CL 2 ¶ 5; Def.’s FF&CL 1.) Baim was unwilling to sell the Philadelphia restaurants at the time, but the Skylasses wanted them so badly that, as Grant Skylass testified, he agreed to “overpay substantially” for the right of first refusal and was prepared to walk away from the New Jersey deal without it. (Trial

Tr. Day 1, 138:3–14; Pl.’s FF&CL 2 ¶ 5.) Baim ultimately agreed, and the right was included in Section 10.11 of the Purchase and Sale Agreement for the New Jersey restaurants (the “2019 Skylass Agreement”).2 (Trial Tr. Day 1 138:3–19; Pl.’s FF&CL 2 ¶ 5; Def.’s FF&CL 1; Ex. 1.) The provision gave the Skylasses the right to purchase the Philadelphia restaurants on the same terms and conditions extended in any bona fide offer by another purchaser, so long they accepted those terms within 14 days of receiving the other offer: If . . . any BAIM ENTITY receives [an offer] for any one or more PHILADELPHIA RESTAURANT from anyone other than PURCHASER and desires to accept such offer, it must first give notice to PURCHASER of the proposed terms and conditions of the offer, including without limitation the purchase price, the proposed closing date and the conditions of closing (the “AGREEMENT TERMS”). Within 14 days of the date of the notice, . . .

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BAIM v. DUKART, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baim-v-dukart-paed-2023.