Clavet v. Dean

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 8, 2020
DocketCUMbcd-cv-18-04
StatusUnpublished

This text of Clavet v. Dean (Clavet v. Dean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clavet v. Dean, (Me. Super. Ct. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE BUSINESS AND CONSUMER COURT CUMBERLAND, ss BCD-CV-18-04

EMILE CLAVET

Plaintiff

v. FINDINGS AND ORDER FOR ENTRY OF JUDGMENT KEVIN DEAN, et al

Defendants

This matter came before the Court for a bench trial on September 10-12, and 16, 2019.

Plaintiff Emile Clavet is represented by Attorney Clifford Ruprecht, and Defendants Kevin Dean

and Cecile Dean are represented by Attorneys George Marcus, David Johnson and Daniel

Rosenthal. The parties elected to make their closing arguments in writing. The Court has

reviewed the evidence from trial, has considered the parties’ written submissions (the last of

which was received on November 18, 2019) and issues the following findings and order for entry

of Judgment.

FINDINGS

The Plaintiff’s Complaint brought seven counts but the Court in a prior Order dismissed

Count VII for aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty against Cecile Dean. Count V for

constructive trust was withdrawn by Plaintiff in his Post-Trial Brief, pg. 2. Counts remaining for

decision are: Count I for fraud; Count II for breach of fiduciary duty; Count IV for unjust

1 enrichment; Count VI for fraudulent transfer, and a claim for punitive damages. Little argument

was presented in either brief filed by Plaintiff on his Count III claim for negligent

misrepresentation. The Court interprets this as Plaintiff having brought Count III as an

alternative claim to Count I.

The case centers around the September 2016 purchase by the Defendants of the

Plaintiff’s membership interests in two entities they jointly owned, Blue Water, LLC and

Covered Marina, LLC (hereinafter the “Marinas”). The parties have a long history of running

multiple businesses in Maine and later in Texas. These businesses have included real estate

development, hotels, a storage facility, a car wash, two small insurance entities, and the utility

Electricity Maine. They began their business ventures with almost no money, but after

reinvesting proceeds of sales of businesses into other businesses, they became very successful.

Over the years they have been friends as well as business partners, and their families and

children were friends as well. While they had the ability to run businesses without the other

person, and were legally permitted to compete with each other, it is clear to the Court that they

were most successful when they worked jointly. Although they have different strengths and

qualities, Mr. Clavet and Mr. Dean are both very intelligent and savvy businessmen. As counsel

for Mr. Dean put it, “In every way Emile was Kevin’s equal and peer in business matters.”

[Defendants’ Post-Trial Brief, pg. 3]. The parties disagree as to whether before this dispute arose

they had already stopped being good friends and had begun to “unwind” their businesses as a

result, or whether it is the dispute at the center of this lawsuit that irrevocably changed their

friendship and made it impossible for them to continue working together as business partners. 1

1 Also pending in this Court is BCD-CV-18-49 which was referred by the Court to a Special Master, Eric Purvis. In that case the parties seek, in part, a judicial dissolution and/or dissociation. In a recent teleconference the parties agreed to a briefing and hearing procedure on that matter. The Court informed the parties that it would issue this

2 For over 10 years the parties owned the Marina properties which were located on the gulf

coast of Texas. They agree that the properties never provided reliable cash flow, and were very

difficult to insure. Periodically they would discuss selling the Marinas for these reasons. Mr.

Dean, who has roots in Texas, was the party who managed the Marinas, and he employed his

sister and her husband to run the properties day to day. The parties seem to agree that the

Marinas would only be valuable if they could sell to “the right kind of buyer”, namely someone

interested in developing the properties. When brokers would call Mr. Dean with a prospective

buyer, he would ask whether the buyer wanted cash flow or a development project, as only a

development made economic sense. They paid $2.5 million dollars to purchase the properties,

and under the two LLC agreements they each had 50 percent membership interests.

In September of 2016 a broker for a company called TCRG called Mr. Dean to discuss

buying the Marinas. The Court has reviewed the chronology and summary of testimony in

Exhibit A attached to Plaintiff’s Post-Trial Brief, and finds that it accurately sets out documented

communications between the parties along with proper citations to the trial record. 2 The Court

finds, based in part on the evidence summarized in that exhibit, that Mr. Dean breached a

number of legal duties which he owed to Mr. Clavet. Because of the interrelation between

fraudulent misrepresentation and breach of fiduciary duty under Maine law, and because the

factual findings that the Court must make on both claims significantly overlap, the Court will

analyze Counts I and II together.

Order without consideration of the recommendations made by Mr. Purvis, and would do so without delaying either case. 2 Defendants take issue with a number of assertions made about Mr. Dean’s conversations with Mr. Clavet, during the month of September of 2016 in particular. Mr. Dean claims that they first talked about the TCRG offer at the end of August 2016 and that Mr. Clavet’s response was to say that the offer from Mr. Donley was a “waste of time.” Mr. Clavet denies this conversation ever occurred and argues further that if it did there was all the more reason for Mr. Dean to supplement that information once he understood that Mr. Donley’s offer was a bona fide offer for a substantial sum.

3 Counts I and II: Fraud and Breach of Fiduciary Duty

In order to prevail on Count I, the Plaintiff must prove by clear and convincing evidence

each of the following: 1) that Mr. Dean made a false representation of a material fact; 2) that he

did so with knowledge of its falsity or in reckless disregard of whether it is true or false: 3) that

he did so for the purpose of inducing another to act or refrain from acting in reliance on it; and 4)

Mr. Clavet justifiably relied upon the representation as true and acted upon it; and 5) that Mr.

Clavet was damaged by it. Cianchette v. Cianchette, 2019 ME 87, ¶ 20, 209 A.3d 745.

In this Court’s Combined Order on Cross Motions for Summary Judgment, the Court

held that an omission by silence can constitute the supplying of false information as proof of

intentional misrepresentation, but only in circumstances when there exists a special relationship

such as a fiduciary relationship, which imposes on the defendant an “affirmative duty to

disclose.” Glyn v. Atl. Seaboard Corp., 1999 ME 53, ¶ 12, 728 A.2d 17. In that case the Law

Court stated, “Where a fiduciary relationship exists between the parties, ‘omission by silence

may constitute the supplying of false information,’” Id. (quoting Binette v. Dyer Library Assoc.,

688 A.2d 898, 903). See also Brown v. Oral Surgery Associates, 2003 ME 11, ¶ 22, 819 A.2d

1014.

As the parties know, the Combined Order was issued just hours before the Law Court

announced its decision in Cianchette. The Court in light of that decision granted Mr. Clavet’s

Motion for Revision in part and found as follows: “Pursuant to statute, as a manager, Mr. Dean

was a fiduciary to Blue Water and its other member – Mr.

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