Bogosian v. Woloohojian

158 F.3d 1, 1998 WL 568615
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 14, 1998
Docket97-2055, 97-2411, 98-1159, 98-1164
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 158 F.3d 1 (Bogosian v. Woloohojian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bogosian v. Woloohojian, 158 F.3d 1, 1998 WL 568615 (1st Cir. 1998).

Opinion

BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.

This ease principally concerns the amount owed to Elizabeth V. Bogosian for her shares in Woloohojian Realty Corporation (“WRC”). What could have been a relatively simple suit has been complicated by intervening actions by Bogosian’s creditors, an eventual inter-pleader suit, and a number of appeals to this court. At the present time, the original parties have been litigating for over ten years.

I. THE FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Stock Buyout Case. On January 19, 1989, Elizabeth V. Bogosian filed this action under R.I. Gen. Laws § 7-1.1-90 to dissolve WRC, a corporation that she owned in equal parts with her two brothers. The action was *3 brought as a diversity suit in the federal district court. The defendants were the corporation and Bogosian’s two brothers.

On February 16, 1989, WRC elected to purchase Bogosian’s shares under R.I. Gen. Laws § 7-1.1-90.1. Under the Rhode Island statute, Bogosian is entitled to the fair value of her shares as of January 19, 1989, 1 plus interest from the date of WRC’s election to buy the shares until the date of payment in full for her shares. As of the valuation date, WRC’s assets consisted substantially of twenty-one parcels of real estate, including commercial buildings, residential apartments, and undeveloped land.

The case came before Judge Boyle. Judge Boyle’s first action was to provide interim relief to Bogosian. To secure her claim, he ordered WRC to give Bogosian a $10 million mortgage on a piece of property referred to as the Jamestown apartments. And, as advances on her ultimate recovery, Judge Boyle ordered WRC to make her an interim $100,-000 payment in cash, and to pay her $10,000 monthly until the entry of a final judgment from which no appeal was taken. 2 In July 1990, Judge Boyle appointed a special master to value the property and much of the next two years appears to have been spent in this exercise. In August 1992, the special master presented his initial report, which valued the corporation at $13,240,404. Both parties objected to the report, and it was sent back for adjustments.

Later in 1992, WRC sold a piece of property at Routes 2 and 117 in Warwick, Rhode Island. With the profits, it issued checks payable to Bogosian for a total of $1,000,000 and delivered them to Flanders & Medeiros (“F&M”), Bogosian’s then-counsel, as a partial payment for her stock. At least one objective was to stem the accrual of interest on WRC’s debt to Bogosian. Rhode Island’s stock buyout statute expressly provides that the “petitioner will be entitled to interest on the purchase price of the shares from the date of the filing of the election to purchase the shares.” R.I. Gen. Laws § 7-1.1-90.1. When the checks were sent, interest had already been accruing under the statute for almost four years.

A dispute then arose between Bogosian and F&M over the checks because Bogosian had agreed with F&M that the first proceeds of the suit would be used to pay the money Bogosian owed the lawyers for fees. Judge Boyle later conjectured that the true reason WRC sent the checks was to provoke this controversy, although there does not appear to be actual evidence to support this theory. The resulting litigation reached this court as Flanders & Medeiros, Inc. v. Bogosian, 65 F.3d 198 (1st Cir.1995). The cheeks at issue were never cashed, but were never returned to WRC.

While the proceedings continued in the stock buyout ease, there were new developments involving Bogosian, WRC, and Bogo-sian’s creditors. In April 1993, the IRS served a notice of levy on WRC for approximately $216,000 owed to it by Bogosian. Faced with this levy and the perceived possibility that it would face double liability if it paid money out to Bogosian, WRC filed a motion with Judge Boyle seeking permission to file.an interpleader action and to place all future payments to Bogosian in the registry of the district court rather than paying them directly to Bogosian.

At about the same time, Bogosian filed a motion for a protective order from the court, declaring that the $10,000.monthly payments would be exempt from hens and levies and restraining WRC from contacting any of Bo-gosian’s creditors. WRC objected to the motion and it was referred to Magistrate Judge Boudewyns. The magistrate judge denied Bogosian’s motion, and ruled that WRC should make the monthly payments into an escrow account held by its attorneys, pending Judge Boyle’s determination of WRC’s motion for interpleader. Ultimately, WRC *4 would place a total of $100,000 and $160,000 into two escrow accounts under this order.

More liens followed the IRS levy, including attorney’s liens asserted by F&M and R. Daniel Prentiss (another counsel to Bogo-sian) in April and an attorney’s lien asserted by Tillinghast, Collins, and Graham (yet another of Bogosian’s lawyers). Prompted by these liens and by the fact that Judge Boyle still had not ruled on the interpleader motion, WRC filed a separate interpleader action on June 25, 1993. In the interpleader action, WRC asked to make all payments of any sum due (or to become due) to Bogosian into the registry of the district court, including the amounts held in the escrow accounts. 3

The new interpleader ease was assigned to Judge Pettine in July 1993, and to Magistrate Judge Boudewyns, but in October it was transferred to Judge Boyle who again assigned it to Magistrate Judge Boudewyns for settlement purposes. In March 1994, WRC sought permission in the interpleader action to put money into the registry. Over the next two months it made deposits of $95,000 and $1 million into the account. On June 2, 1994, the magistrate judge authorized the deposits that had been made. These deposits did not include the required $10,000 monthly payments, but were additional amounts paid by WRC, apparently in another attempt to stem the accrual of interest in the stock buyout case.

In September 1994, the special master produced his final report, valuing WRC at $14,-705,404, a third of which (Bogosian’s share) would be $4,901,801. Both parties objected, but in April 1995, Judge Boyle affirmed the report, subject to further hearings before him on two issues: (1) WRC’s claim that the value of the corporation should be discounted by what WRC referred to as discounted tax liabilities — the amount that they would have to pay in capital gains taxes if they sold (or made a taxable transfer of) properties that had been held for a long time and had increased in value; and (2) the proper rate to be fixed for prejudgment interest owed to Bogosian. Judge Boyle did say, however, that the rate applied would be compound, rather than simple, interest.

The Bank Claims.

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158 F.3d 1, 1998 WL 568615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bogosian-v-woloohojian-ca1-1998.