Casey v. Cohan
This text of 740 So. 2d 59 (Casey v. Cohan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Patrick J. CASEY, Appellant,
v.
Stanford COHAN, William R. Boose, III, Alan J. Ciklin, Charles A. Lubitz, Richard L. Martens, Louis R. McBane, Phil D. O'Connell, Jr., Michael D. Gordon, Lynda J. Harris, Robert L. Crane, Brian M. O'Connell, and Richard B. Crum, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*60 Patrick J. Casey of Boose, Casey, Ciklin, Lubitz, Martens, McBane & O'Connell, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Marshall J. Osofsky of Lewis, Vegosen, Rosenbach, Silber & Dunkel, P.A., West Palm Beach, for appellee Stanford Cohan.
GROSS, J.
Patrick Casey appeals a detailed final judgment finding him liable on a promissory note. He also appeals a final order assessing attorney's fees and costs pursuant to an attorney's fee provision in the note. We affirm.
In stating the facts of the case, we are mindful of the great deference accorded to the trial judge's findings of fact. See Ferry v. Abrams, 679 So.2d 80 (Fla. 5th DCA 1996). In a non-jury trial, it is the obligation of the trial judge to reconcile conflicts, to determine the credibility of witnesses, and to evaluate the reasonableness and weight of the evidence presented. See Citibank, N.A. v. Julien J. Studley, Inc., 580 So.2d 784, 785-86 (Fla. 3d DCA 1991). An appellate court must accept "a determination of facts made by the trial judge where the record discloses testimony from which the trial judge could have determined the facts...." Pergament v. Pergament, 117 So.2d 26, 29 (Fla. 2d DCA 1959).
In 1986, appellee Stanford Cohan entered into an agreement to sell one half of the common stock he owned in the Palm Beach Lakes Bank. The purchasers under the agreement were twelve persons affiliated with the law firm Boose, Casey, Ciklin, Lubitz, Martens, McBane & O'Connell ("Boose, Casey"). Appellant Casey was one of these purchasers. On December 16, 1986, Cohan executed a letter of intent with the twelve purchasers, which provided for extensive due diligence procedures. The purchasers hired experts to assist them with the due diligence review. Closing occurred on February 9, 1987. Casey's portion of the stock purchase was $40,750.00. Casey paid $18,287.50 in cash and executed a purchase money note for $22,462.50. Cohan held the stock as security under a security agreement. After additional payments, in 1990, Casey refinanced the 1987 note by executing a secured term note to Cohan in the amount of $14,975.00.
After the closing, Boose, Casey represented the bank in legal matters, earning at least $387,000 in fees. In 1991, the bank was seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. From that date forward, the common stock Casey had purchased was valueless.
Among the members of the purchasing group in 1986 was Michael Gordon, who was "of counsel" to Boose, Casey and paid as its employee. Gordon was intimately involved in the stock transaction as the attorney for the purchasers. Gordon handled all of the purchasers' negotiations with Cohan. It was Gordon who first approached Cohan about joining forces with Boose, Casey in the operation of the bank. Gordon first met Cohan in the early 1980's and performed legal work for him before joining Boose, Casey.
On December 1, 1986, Gordon and Cohan entered into an agreement which they did not disclose to any of the purchasers. Entitled "personal and confidential," the letter agreement provided that Gordon was entitled to compensation "for services rendered" in an amount not less than $150,000; that Cohan would pay Gordon $75,000 upon the sale of his common stock in the bank to the purchasing group; that Cohan would make a second $75,000 payment upon Cohan's sale of his remaining common stock or the conversion of certain preferred stock, whichever occurred first; *61 and that if Cohan sold his remaining stock, Gordon was entitled to receive fifty percent of the sales price over $10.00 per share. Although the purchasers argued at trial that the bank was the client for Gordon's past legal work, Gordon testified that he performed most of the legal work for Cohan, in furtherance of Cohan's interest as the majority shareholder in the bank. The trial court found that in the agreement "Cohan agreed to pay" $75,000.00 out of the proceeds from the sale of bank stock "for past due legal fees to Gordon for legal services performed by Gordon before he became an employee of Boose, Casey. Casey first learned of this secret agreement in 1992.
In 1992, Cohan filed suit against Casey for the latter's failure to pay off the 1990 note. Casey's affirmative defenses asserted a fraud, the failure to disclose the secret letter agreement between Cohan and Gordon. Casey filed a counterclaim for rescission of the stock purchase agreement and the 1990 note based on the nondisclosure of the secret agreement.
After a non-jury trial, the trial court made findings of fact, which included the following:
The stock purchasers, including CASEY, all engaged in substantial due diligence and had the Stock Purchase Transaction, as well as the financial records of THE BANK, reviewed by lawyers, accountants, and independent financial advisors, and there was no showing that COHAN failed to disclose any material fact relevant to the financial condition of THE BANK or that the Stock Purchase Transaction was anything other than an arm's length transaction,
There is no showing that GORDON was acting as COHAN'S agent in any of the relevant transactions, so no actions of GORDON may be imputed or charged to COHAN.
There is no causal relationship between the existence and nondisclosure of the GORDON Agreement and the receivership of THE BANK by the FDIC.
As one reason for denying relief to Casey, the trial court ruled that the secret agreement "was not a material fact of the transaction, as there was no showing that its existence in any way effected [sic] the value of THE BANK stock sold." The trial court entered judgment for Cohan on the principal due on the 1990 note, along with prejudgment interest and late charges.
Both Casey's affirmative defenses and the counterclaim for rescission turned on the existence of fraud in Cohan's nondisclosure of the letter agreement with Gordon.
This case is controlled by Pryor v. Oak Ridge Development Corp., 97 Fla. 1085, 119 So. 326 (1928). In that case, R.E.L. Pryor obtained an option to purchase real property for $83,700. To finance the purchase, Pryor organized a corporation. He was a stockholder in the corporation and represented it "in consummating the purchase of the lands." Id. at 327. Pryor told the other stockholders that "the lands could not be purchased for less than $83,700" and made "false statements in regard to commissions which he was to receive...." Id. at 327, 328. Pryor procured one of the owners of the property "to make the same statement to one of the stockholders of the corporation prior to the closing of the deal...." Id. at 327. What Pryor and the owner withheld from the stockholders was information similar to that withheld in this case:
[I]n truth and in fact, the said R.E.L. Pryor was to receive a sum of money, and did receive a large sum of money, as his commission, and also received certain notes as commission, all of which he retained and did not divulge to the corporation or its stockholders.
Id.
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