Colaco v. Cavotec SA

236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 542, 25 Cal. App. 5th 1172
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedJuly 11, 2018
DocketG052619
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 542 (Colaco v. Cavotec SA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colaco v. Cavotec SA, 236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 542, 25 Cal. App. 5th 1172 (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

ARONSON, J.

*547Appellants *1175Inet Airport Systems, Inc., Inet Airport Systems, LLC,1 Michael Colaco, and April Barry appeal from the judgment entered *1176against them in this action arising from Inet's sale of its assets to respondents Cavotec SA and Cavotec Inet US, Inc. (collectively Cavotec). Colaco was Inet's sole shareholder and its chief executive officer and Barry was Inet's director of administration. After the transaction, Colaco became Cavotec Inet US, Inc.'s president and a member of its board of directors, and Barry became the company's chief financial officer.

Following a lengthy trial, the jury awarded Cavotec $1.313 million against Inet, Colaco, and Barry, jointly and severally, based on the jury's findings that (1) Inet breached its asset purchase agreement with Cavotec by failing to forward all postclosing customer payments Inet received on Cavotec's behalf; (2) Colaco and Barry breached the fiduciary duties they owed as Cavotec officers by causing Inet to withhold customer payments and creating false and backdated invoices to conceal Inet's failure to pay; (3) Colaco's conduct breached the employment contract he entered into as Cavotec Inet US Inc.'s president; and (4) Colaco and Barry converted Cavotec's funds for their personal use. The jury also awarded Cavotec $2 million in punitive damages against Colaco only.

On appeal, Inet argues the trial court erred in denying its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) because the undisputed evidence showed Cavotec breached the asset purchase agreement by failing to make its final $2 million payment. Inet contends the trial court should have offset that $2 million against the $1.313 million Inet failed to pay to Cavotec, and the net result is a judgment for $687,000 in Inet's favor.

We agree the trial court erred in denying Inet's motion. Cavotec's obligation to make the final $2 million payment and Inet's obligation to turn over all postclosing payments to Cavotec are independent covenants under the asset purchase agreement. Inet's breach of its obligation therefore did not excuse Cavotec from its obligation. Rather, Cavotec was contractually required to perform and then seek damages or an offset from Inet. The jury's verdict, however, excused Cavotec from its obligation based on Inet's breach and awarded Cavotec damages for the same breach. That is an impermissible windfall that allows Cavotec to retain the assets it purchased from Inet without paying the full purchase price.

Colaco contends the trial court erred in refusing to apply Delaware law to the claims against him because Cavotec Inet US, Inc., was incorporated in Delaware, and therefore the internal affairs doctrine required the court to apply Delaware law in resolving the issues regarding Colaco's performance as an officer of Cavotec Inet *548US, Inc. Colaco asserts he was entitled to judgment on Cavotec's fiduciary duty and punitive damages claims because Delaware law bars fiduciary duty claims that arise from contractual obligations and prohibits punitive damages on fiduciary duty claims. *1177We disagree. In Colaco's employment agreement, he and Cavotec Inet US, Inc. agreed California law would govern all their rights and liabilities. California law recognizes a strong public policy favoring enforcement of choice-of-law provisions and our courts may refuse to enforce a provision bearing a reasonable relationship to the parties or their transaction only when the opponent shows a state other than the one on which the parties agreed has a materially greater interest in the determination of the particular issues involved. Colaco fails to explain how Delaware has a materially greater interest in applying its law on the fiduciary duty claims raised in this case. Instead, he simply argues the internal affairs doctrine establishes a bright line rule that overrides the parties' choice-of-law provision. It does not, and Colaco fails to explain how applying California law on these particular issues will impair internal corporate affairs.

Barry also argues the internal affairs doctrine required the trial court to apply Delaware law regarding the fiduciary duty and punitive damages claims against her. Barry's position differs from Colaco's because she did not enter into a contract with Cavotec Inet US, Inc. and she never agreed California law would govern her rights and liabilities. Nonetheless, we need not decide whether the internal affairs doctrine required the trial court to apply Delaware law because the result on the claims against Barry are the same under both Delaware and California law, and therefore Barry cannot establish any error was prejudicial.

We also reject Colaco's contention the asset purchase agreement barred Cavotec's claims for breach of his employment contract and punitive damages. As explained below, the exclusive remedy provision on which Colaco relies only applies to claims arising under the asset purchase agreement, but Cavotec sued Colaco for breaching his fiduciary duties and his employment agreement, not the asset purchase agreement. Contrary to Colaco's contention, the jury's decision to award Cavotec damages on its claim against Inet for breach of the asset purchase agreement and award the same amount of damages for Colaco's breach of his employment contract does not mean the jury held Colaco liable for Inet's breach of the asset purchase agreement. Rather, it simply means the breach of those separate agreements resulted in the same damages, nothing more. Similarly, the punitive damages waiver in the asset purchase agreement does not apply to Cavotec's punitive damages claim against Colaco because that claim is not made under the asset purchase agreement.

We conclude Cavotec's $1.313 award against Inet must be offset against its failure to make the second $2 million payment owed under the APA. Finally, for the reasons expressed at the end of this opinion, we leave undisturbed Cavotec's $2 million punitive damage award against Colaco.

*1178I

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Inet was headquartered in Fullerton, California. It designed, manufactured, and installed stationary and mobile airport and aircraft servicing equipment at airports around the world. Michael Colaco was Inet's chief executive officer and its sole shareholder. April Barry was Inet's director of administration. Cavotec SA is a global engineering company headquartered *549in Lugano, Switzerland. It has 42 subsidiaries that operate in 30 countries.

In August 2011, Colaco and Inet entered into the "Asset Purchase Agreement and Plan of Reorganization" (APA) with Cavotec SA and Cavotec Inet US Inc., a Delaware corporation Cavotec SA formed as a subsidiary for this transaction.2 Under the APA, Inet agreed to sell substantially all of its assets to Cavotec, including Inet's long-term, in-process customer contracts, Inet's inventory and equipment, all leasehold improvements to Inet's manufacturing facility, and Inet's intellectual property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 542, 25 Cal. App. 5th 1172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colaco-v-cavotec-sa-calctapp5d-2018.