Bontempo v. Lare

119 A.3d 791, 444 Md. 344, 2015 Md. LEXIS 558
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 6, 2015
Docket55/14
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 119 A.3d 791 (Bontempo v. Lare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bontempo v. Lare, 119 A.3d 791, 444 Md. 344, 2015 Md. LEXIS 558 (Md. 2015).

Opinions

McDonald, J.

Under the Maryland General Corporation Law,1 a minority shareholder of a closely held corporation who has been “oppressed” by those who control the corporation may ask a court of equity to dissolve the corporation. Many courts have measured oppression by looking to the “reasonable expectations” of minority shareholders at the time they join the venture. The Court of Special Appeals is one of those courts,2 and now by virtue of this decision, so are we. Many courts in other jurisdictions — and the Court of Special Appeals, as well — have held that a court of equity may employ other equitable tools, short of dissolution, to remedy shareholder oppression. By virtue of this decision, so do we. This case requires us to consider the limit of those remedies when a minority shareholder, who also was an employee, seeks employment-related damages under the dissolution statute.

[349]*349Petitioner David Bontempo, a minority shareholder in, and former employee of, Respondent Quotient, Inc., successfully proved in the trial court that he had been oppressed by Respondent Clark Lare, whose shares together with those owned by his wife Jodi Lare, also a Respondent, are the majority interest in Quotient. While the trial court ordered an accounting and awarded Mr. Bontempo damages, unpaid corporate distributions, and attorneys’ fees, it declined to dissolve Quotient, to require Quotient to reinstate Mr. Bontempo as an employee, or to award other employment-related relief. In addition, the trial court was unpersuaded that the actions of Mr. Lare constituted fraudulent conduct meriting an award of punitive damages to Mr. Bontempo.

We hold that the measuring stick for “oppression” of a minority shareholder — the shareholder’s “reasonable expectations” upon becoming an owner of the company — does not dictate the nature of equitable relief (short of corporate dissolution) that a trial court must impose. In fashioning relief, the trial court may properly take account of the viability of the corporation, and the impact of the relief on others associated with the corporation, including other shareholders, management, employees, and customers. Employment-related relief, such as pay-related monetary damages or a requirement that the corporation employ the minority shareholder, is unlikely to be appropriate in the absence of a written or oral employment agreement. We hold that the trial court in this case did not abuse its discretion in deciding on appropriate relief.

I

Background

A. Bontempo, the Lares, and Quotient

Formation of Quotient

Mr. Bontempo and Mr. Lare worked together during the 1990s at Maxim Healthcare, a health care staffing company, in Chicago, Illinois. They shared the idea of running a business [350]*350together. By the late 1990s, they had separately left Maxim and returned to the Baltimore-Washington area.

In 1999, Mr. Lare and his wife founded Quotient, a company that would recruit information technology professionals for placement as consultants at government entities and private employers. Ms. Lare was, and remained, employed as a pharmacist at Watermont Pharmacy (which she owned with her mother). The Lares initially operated Quotient out of their home and funded it with their personal savings and credit cards. A Stockholders Agreement dated November 15, 2000 recited the ownership of the company’s shares by the Lares. Among other things, the Agreement also designated certain “triggering events” that would require a shareholder to sell (to the corporation or to the remaining shareholders) the shareholder’s interest. Among the triggering events was termination of the shareholder’s employment with Quotient “for good cause.”3

Mr. Bontempo joins Quotient as an Employee and Shareholder

Mr. Lare and Mr. Bontempo had stayed in touch, and Mr. Bontempo made a referral to Mr. Lare that resulted in a contract between Quotient and the United States Census Bureau. Soon thereafter, Mr. Bontempo himself joined Quotient as Vice-President of Business Development. Mr. Bontempo agreed to leave his $85,000 salary at another company to become a 45% shareholder in Quotient and draw a salary of $20,000 from the company beginning in February 2000. The parties did not enter into a written employment contract. It was understood that the Lares would continue to take no salary, and would adjust their ownership so that Mr. Lare owned 4% and Ms. Lare owned 51% of the shares (apparently an effort to qualify for government contracting preferences for woman-owned and managed small businesses). The Circuit Court later found that the parties had essentially entered into [351]*351a “handshake deal” under which Mr. Bontempo would join the company, but without an employment contract that set out any particulars of his employment.

In early 2001, the parties formalized the arrangement to a certain extent. In January 2001, the Lares and Mr. Bontempo executed an attachment to the Stockholders Agreement in which Mr. Bontempo assented to the terms of the earlier Agreement. Minutes of a contemporaneous board meeting stated that Mr. Lare had transferred stock to Mr. Bontempo “in recognition of his efforts on behalf of the Corporation since becoming an employee of the Corporation.” Coincident with the transfer of shares to him in March 2001, Mr. Bontempo also signed a promissory note to Mr. Lare in the amount of $46,800 to be paid in installments over a five-year period. The parties later differed on the purpose of the note, although they agreed that it was related to the stock transfer. Mr. Bontempo testified that the note was never meant to be repaid, but was simply an “accounting record” and that he executed it for the company’s books when he received his shares. Mr. Lare testified that Mr. Bontempo was expected to repay the note. It was undisputed that Mr. and Ms. Lare reported a capital gain as a result of the note and had paid approximately $12,000 in taxes on that gain. Mr. Bontempo never made a payment on the promissory note.

In December 2001, the Lares began to draw a salary from the company. Mr. Bontempo testified that he had an oral agreement with the Lares that his salary would match the Lares’ combined salaries, once they started to take a salary, but the Lares contended that there was no such agreement. The trial court found that there was not “a meeting of the minds” on this issue and that it was not part of any employment agreement. In fact, over the 10-year period that Mr. Bontempo spent as an employee of Quotient, Mr. and Ms. Lare’s combined salaries roughly equaled Mr. Bontempo’s salary for approximately four years, while the salaries were significantly different in both the early and later years of his employment.

[352]*352In 2004, the Lares and Mr. Bontempo executed an Amended and Restated Stockholders Agreement (ARSA), which acknowledged Mr. Bontempo as a 45% owner, noted that he had owned the shares since 2001, and made other minor changes not relevant here. Mr. Bontempo had not contributed any capital to Quotient.

At first, both Mr. Bontempo and Mr. Lare focused on acquiring business for Quotient. As the company grew, Mr. Bontempo focused on sales and client relationships, and Mr. Lare focused on executive management and operations. At the time of trial in 2011, the parties agreed that Jodi Lare had not been involved in Quotient for four or five years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 A.3d 791, 444 Md. 344, 2015 Md. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bontempo-v-lare-md-2015.