Clair v. Clair

464 Mass. 205
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 464 Mass. 205 (Clair v. Clair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clair v. Clair, 464 Mass. 205 (Mass. 2013).

Opinion

Spina, J.

This case arises from a family dispute among the owners of twenty-six business entities (collectively, companies) that were established in connection with the operation of the Clair Auto Group, a chain of automobile dealerships. When the family patriarch, James E. Clair, Sr., died in 2004, his four sons — James E. Clair, Jr.; Mark J. Clair; Joseph P. Clair; and Michael S. Clair (collectively, Clair brothers) — held approximately equal ownership interests in the companies. In November, 2007, the Clair brothers sold most of the companies’ dealerships, real estate, and other assets to Prime Motor Group (Prime Motors). A few years thereafter, following the deaths of two of the Clair brothers, family relationships began to deteriorate.

On April 9, 2010, Claire M. Clair, the executrix of the estate of her husband, James E. Clair, Jr., and Jane M. Clair, the executrix of the estate of her husband, Mark J. Clair (together, the plaintiffs), brought an action in the Superior Court against Joseph P. Clair, Michael S. Clair, and the companies (collectively, the defendants),4 challenging the disposition of business assets that remained after the 2007 sale to Prime Motors. In connection with their civil action, Claire unsuccessfully sought, through service of subpoenas duces tecum, testimony and documents from James C. Jones, the companies’ general counsel, and from Robert E. Richards, Jr., the companies’ outside counsel (together, corporate counsel). The basis for the lawyers’ noncompliance with the subpoenas was attorney-client privilege.5 On March 11, 2011, Claire filed a motion to compel testimony and the production of documents from corporate counsel. Following a hearing, a judge allowed Claire’s motion on May 17, 2011.6 The com-panics then filed a petition for interlocutory relief pursuant to [207]*207G. L. c. 231, § 118, first par., with a single justice of the Appeals Court. The single justice allowed the petition and reported his decision to a panel of that court.7 We transferred the case to this court on our own motion. For reasons slightly different from those articulated by the judge below, we affirm the order of the Superior Court, subject to specified limitations.8

1. Background. For purposes of the present appeal, the facts are drawn from the allegations in the plaintiffs’ verified second amended complaint, the motion judge’s memorandum of decision and order on Claire’s motion to compel, and relevant documents in the record.

During a span of fifty years, James E. Clair, Sr., built the Clair Auto Group from a single Buick dealership in the West Roxbury section of Boston into one of New England’s largest automobile dealership chains. The companies are comprised of closely held corporations, limited partnerships, trusts, and limited liability companies.9 Over time, the Clair brothers entered the family business and became directors, officers, shareholders, partners, and members of the companies. As of 2004, the year their father died, each brother’s ownership share of the companies was approximately twenty-five per cent. A majority of the companies’ valuable assets were held by Clair International, Inc. (Clair International), and Clair, L.R (Clair LP).

Pursuant to a 1998 stockholders’ agreement for Clair International (stockholders’ agreement),10 James, Joseph, and Mark each were required to “apply for, own, and be the beneficiary of life insurance policies on the life of each of the other [208]*208Stockholders (other than James E. Clair, Sr.)” in designated amounts.11 The stockholders’ agreement subsequently was amended on January 1, 2003,12 and January 1, 2004. As significant here, the final amendment to the stockholders’ agreement, dated October 1, 2006, wholly revised the section on life insurance to provide that Clair International would “apply for, own and maintain life insurance policies on the life of each of the Stockholders”; that Clair International or its affiliates “shall be the beneficiary of such policies”; and that Clair International would pay all premiums in connection with the life insurance policies.13 Ownership of the policies thus was transferred from the individual Clair brothers to Clair International and Clair LP. The life of each brother was insured by two policies. The 2006 amendment to the stockholders’ agreement further provided that Clair International was purchasing and maintaining such insurance “as a means to make payment to the estate of a deceased Stockholder for the purchase of all or a portion of the Stock owned by the deceased Stockholder.”14

After the Clair brothers sold most of the companies’ assets to Prime Motors in November, 2007, a majority of the proceeds, [209]*209totaling approximately $80 million, were distributed to the shareholders. The companies’ remaining assets consisted of, among other things, money held in a reserve account,15 funds to service warranty claims, and several parcels of real estate. In addition, Clair International and Clair LP continued to own the life insurance policies. However, once Prime Motors purchased substantially all of the assets of the companies, it no longer was necessary for Clair International and Clair LP to maintain the life insurance policies on the Clair brothers in order to be able to fund a buyout of a deceased shareholder’s stock. After receiving advice from corporate counsel, Clair International and Clair LP offered each shareholder the opportunity to purchase the policies individually.16 The purchase price would be established in accordance with each policy’s interpolated terminal reserve (ITR) value.17 The purchase and transfer of the life insurance policies to the Clair brothers was arranged by, among others, the companies’ outside counsel.

Mark died suddenly on December 1, 2007, shortly after the closing on the sale of the companies’ assets to Prime Motors, but before the completion of the necessary paperwork to effectuate the transfer of his insurance policies from Clair International and Clair LP. Mark’s ownership interests in the companies passed to his estate. According to the plaintiffs, at a [210]*210special shareholders’ meeting held on December 10, 2007, the three surviving Clair brothers and corporate counsel acknowledged and confirmed that Clair International and Clair LP had entered into binding agreements to transfer ownership of the life insurance policies to the individual Clair brothers, each of whom would pay the ITR values of his respective policies.18 Thus, when the life insurance proceeds for Mark were paid by the insurers, Joseph, on behalf of Clair International and Clair LP, indorsed the checks (totaling $12 million) to Mark’s estate in exchange for payment of the policies’ ITR values. The companies made no claim at that time that Mark’s estate must surrender his shares of the companies.

Joseph and Michael, on behalf of Clair International and Clair LP, also executed documents transferring ownership of James’s life insurance policies to irrevocable trusts that he had created.19 Outside counsel directed James to remit one-half of the policies’ ITR values to Clair International and the other half of the policies’ ITR values to Clair LP, and those payments were made immediately.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
464 Mass. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clair-v-clair-mass-2013.