Cohn v. Freeman

900 A.2d 283, 169 Md. App. 255, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 6, 2006
Docket611, September Term, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 900 A.2d 283 (Cohn v. Freeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohn v. Freeman, 900 A.2d 283, 169 Md. App. 255, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 81 (Md. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

DAVIS, J.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Appellant, Bernice Cohn, filed the instant appeal, aggrieved by the Order of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, which established the date to begin the accrual of post-judgment interest of her award of $151,838 as of November 14, 2003, rather than January 14, 2000. The case reaches this Court for the third time, and appellant and appellees, Ernest Freeman, Redge Mahaffey, Louis Biosca, Kerry Hurlebaus, and XLG Cellular Partnership (XLG), agree that the facts have been thoroughly set forth in the two unreported opinions, Ernest Freeman, et al. v. Bernice Cohn, et al, No. 1673, *257 September Term, 2000, 142 Md.App. 713 (filed Jan. 10, 2002) (Freeman I), and Ernest Freeman, et al. v. Bernice Cohn, No. 2231, September Term, 2003, 159 Md.App. 739 (filed November 23, 2004) (Freeman II). We shall recite briefly the facts as set forth in Freeman II in order to provide context for this appeal.

The parties were involved in a partnership, XLG, for the purpose of pooling their applications for cellular licenses awarded by lottery by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Freeman II, slip op. at 1. The group also intended to profit from the sale of any licenses awarded. Id. The partnership applied to the first lottery with several partners winning licenses and the resulting cellular systems. Id. at 3 (citing Freeman I). The profits, totaling over eight million dollars, were distributed evenly among the partners. Id. In a second lottery, Hurlebaus was selected as the winner of the cellular licensing rights for the RSA services for Lebanon, Pennsylvania and Claibourne, Louisiana. Id. at 3-4 (Quoting Freeman I).

Hurlebaus, by the time he was selected to receive the cellular licenses, had become involved in the ownership of several radio stations, including WMTO in Florida. Id. at 4. Through a series of maneuvers, a majority of the XLG group invested in WMTO. Id. The WMTO group entered into an agreement and, additionally, Hurlebaus promised the group investing in WMTO that they would not lose any money on their investment. Id. at 5. More than two years after the agreement was entered into by the WMTO group, Hurlebaus wired $1.56 million dollars to the XLG account, without explanation. Id. Aware that the Lebanon RSA system had been sold, it was assumed that the wire transfer represented the profits from the sale minus Hurlebaus’ one-fifth share. Id. Mahaffey deducted $603,352 from the wire and distributed the remaining balance equally among the other XLG partners. Id. The deducted amount was the sum required to reimburse the WMTO group for their losses. Id. at 6.

*258 Appellant sued for her one-fourth share of the $603,352. The case was tried without a jury and the court found in favor of appellant in the amount of $151,308, plus pre-judgment interest at 6% from December 1, 1993. Appellees appealed and we quote from Freeman II the disposition of the appeal and the subsequent remand.

In Freeman I, the argument by the defendants was that they had invested the monies in WMTO LP not only in the hope of making a profit but also for the purpose of preserving Hurlebaus’s position as a winning applicant for the Lebannon RSA cellular license. Under those circumstances, defendants argue, CA § 9-401(2) authorized their majority action and bound the plaintiff to the agreement of September 1991, without her consent. On that point this Court said:
“[A] partner is [not], as a matter of law, barred from recovery under Section 9-401(2) when the partnership has more than one purpose for making payments. Nevertheless, one purpose of the partner’s investment must be for the preservation of its business or property and that purpose must be reasonable. The trial court did not say whether it believed that appellants invested in WMTO with such reasonable purpose in mind. Motivation is generally a factual matter, to be decided by the trier of fact.”

Specifically, we directed the circuit court

“to make two factual findings: (1) a determination as to whether the investment into WMTO was made in the ordinary and proper conduct of XLG’s business; and (2) a determination as to whether one reasonable purpose of appellant’s investment was to preserve the partnership property within the meaning of [CA] Section 9-401(2).”

On remand, the parties agreed to proceed by memoranda and oral argument, based on the unsupplemented trial testimony and exhibits. The circuit court answered both questions in the negative. The lost investments in WMTO LP were not in the ordinary and proper conduct of XLG’s business because the circuit court found that “[t]he only *259 business or purpose of XLG was to distribute the profits resulting from successful applications and sales of cellular licenses.”

In rejecting that the lost investments were “for the preservation of [XLG’s] business or property,” the circuit court analyzed the evidence as set forth below:

-“It is quite clear, based on the circumstances, Mahaffey, Biosca, and Freeman invested in WMTO to make a personal profit. Only when the ‘plan’ fell through did they claim said investment was for the preservation of XLG’s interests.”
-The Cohns were not included in the September 1991 meeting.
-They were not alerted to the WMTO LP transaction.
-Nothing in the record suggested that the defendants would have shared profits from WMTO LP had it been successful.
-“[I]t is quite clear, as this Court found before, Defendants’ ‘investment’ in the radio station was purely personal in nature. It was a venture to bail Hurlebaus out of a bad financial situation, and to make some money based on a promise by Hurlebaus that Defendants would not lose any money.”
-The defendants, “after the fact[,] tried to claim their motivation or intention was to protect XLG in order to have their personal expense absorbed by XLG.”

Id. at 7-9 (emphasis in original).

Following the decision by the circuit court, on November 13, 2003, on remand, appellees once again appealed, on December 16, 2003. Their principal argument on appeal, in Freeman II, was “that the record compelled a finding that the investment was to preserve an asset of XLG.” Id. at 10. We disagreed with appellees and, on November 23, 2004, issued an unreported opinion in that case, reasoning:

The purpose of the remand was to give the defendants an opportunity to persuade the finder of fact that the investment by the partners of WMTO LP was both to make a *260

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Bluebook (online)
900 A.2d 283, 169 Md. App. 255, 2006 Md. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohn-v-freeman-mdctspecapp-2006.