Coen v. Coen

509 F.3d 900, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 28461, 2007 WL 4293038
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 2007
Docket06-3812, 07-1210
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 509 F.3d 900 (Coen v. Coen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coen v. Coen, 509 F.3d 900, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 28461, 2007 WL 4293038 (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

Deborah Coen (Coen), a resident of Minnesota, brought an action against defendants who reside in England and France, claiming the defendants defrauded her father, Edward Coen (Edward), in connection with certain shares Edward owned in a family-owned British company. Finding no personal jurisdiction over the foreign defendants, the district court 1 dismissed Coen’s lawsuit. In these consolidated appeals, Coen now appeals the district court’s decision. We affirm.

1. BACKGROUND

This family controversy arises out of a dispute between two brothers over the value of their ownership interests in their parents’ business, Compayne (Hampstead) Limited (Compayne), an English corporation with its principal place of business and all of its assets in England. Victor and Miriam Coen (deceased) were citizens of Great Britain and were the parents of three children: Edward (now a citizen of Minnesota), Louis (now a resident of France), and Lily (deceased). 2 After Vic *903 tor and Miriam Coen died, all shares of Compayne were divided among their children. Edward and Louis each owned approximately 42% of the outstanding shares, and Lily owned the balance.

In July 1994, Edward communicated to Louis his desire to liquidate his shares. In November 1994, Edward changed his mind and wanted to postpone the sale of his shares. With respect to Edward’s new decision to postpone the buyout, Louis wrote Edward stating:

I understood in July that you wanted to cash-in your holding within the near future, so it is a sudden change that you want now to postpone it indefinitely.
In the mean-time I am stopping my work here on the project [the purchase of Edward’s shares] until I know better what you want to do.
Edward wrote back stating:
I[am] willing to “accept” 36% of all Com-payne assets (less Lily’s share), giving you 48%.... Note: I do not expect to claim my share until perhaps 5 to 10 years from now.
Louis subsequently wrote:
I have done ... a case study supposing that you wished to exercise your option to sell out today.... Some of the figures are exact, others are not.
[An] evaluation of the two properties (11/30/94) is £1,060,530 and we have approximately £200,000 in liquid assets ....
If we take into account Lily’s holding, the shares would be redistributed as follows:
Value Ed’s shares [ ]= £449,740
Value Lou’s shares []= £599,483
Value Lily’s shares []= £211,777
Our liquid assets being around £200,000 we would have to take the decision to mortgage the property to borrow £249,-740....
An alternative solution of financing the buy-back would be to sell one of the properties, say the one in Compayne Gardens: Present day value of this property [ ] is £354,000.

Louis and Edward met in New York in late 1995 to discuss the sale of Edward’s shares. The brothers agreed not to rush into any sale of Compayne’s real estate because they foresaw real estate values rising. After the New York meeting in December 1995, Edward wrote to Louis stating:

I think your trip to New York was very useful ... on further thought, I am not as confident that we can count on a substantial increase in [Compayne’s real estate] value in the short term. One reason is that the market can go down as well as up.... I now feel strongly that we should proceed promptly to clear the decks of this issue [Edward’s buyout].... I would like to move toward an agreed document quite soon.

In January 1996, Louis wrote back saying:

I was so speechless by your letter announcing the sudden turn-around on what we all agreed to in N.Y. one month ago ... In July '94 you indicated that you wanted to cash in on your holding in the near future.... Five months later ... you changed your mind and you no longer needed the money now but would like to have an option to sell in 5-10 years ... After a great deal of work and expenditure [] this turned out to be impractical, and you then returned to your original request to sellout of your holdings as soon as reasonably possible ... This proved impractical also, and you agreed in N.Y. to the 3 year plan. A month later you reneg [sic] on that plan and announce that you want to sell your shares now ignoring the difficulties and the prejudice for the other shareholders pointed out in NY.
Edward subsequently wrote Louis:
*904 I have been thinking some more about ... changing the numbers in the direction that might make it more attractive from your point of view.... I am willig [sic] to take a further deduction in [my] share, from 36% to 33%.... I do want to clear the decks of this issue as soon as it reasonably can be accomplished.

Edward later met with his sons and informed them he effectively wanted to limit his claim to only 25% of the gross asset value of Compayne, which was approximately £300,000. Edward wrote to his sons stating:

I have never really appreciated the magnitude of the effort that [Louis] has devoted over the last twenty five years to converting [one of Compayne’s properties] from a zero profit rent controled [sic] enterprise into a high profit operation .... Moreover, during the last ten years of Miriam’s life [Louis] had to manage all her financial affairs; oversee the details of the administration of her estate and oversee the selling of her house. And for the last fifteen years he has in effect serve[d] as a parent for Lily ... [Louis] was carrying an unusual burden.... My number might be 42% of the shares, but my contribution to their value was zero.... My 42% of the shares grossly overstates my entitlement.

Edward’s sons, acting as intermediaries, then related to Louis by facsimile that Edward wished to take 25% or approximately £300,000 for the shares. Edward’s sons explained their father “was very upset” he and Louis “had quarreled,” and was “anxious to resolve this on any terms simply to put the quarrel behind him.”

Louis subsequently wrote Edward:

We suggest that the transaction takes place in January or February, 1999. Is this O.K.? As to the current value, you proposed £300,000 ... Do you still agree to this?
Our agent [] gave a professional estimate [ ] of the property value based on current values of similar apartments in the same area.... We can ask for other evaluations.

In 1999, for approximately £285,000, the buyout of Edward’s shares took place. In 2005, Coen filed an action against the defendants for fraud. 3 The family defendants reside in France, and the trustee defendants reside in England and France.

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509 F.3d 900, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 28461, 2007 WL 4293038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coen-v-coen-ca8-2007.