Commercial Recycling Center, Ltd. v. Hobbs Industries, Inc.

228 P.3d 93, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2010 WL 1407776
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 2010
DocketS-12616
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 228 P.3d 93 (Commercial Recycling Center, Ltd. v. Hobbs Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Recycling Center, Ltd. v. Hobbs Industries, Inc., 228 P.3d 93, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2010 WL 1407776 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

*96 OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 1996 the shareholders of Hobbs Industries, Inc. signed a buyout agreement under which James Cucullu and Gregory Tiplady sold their shares to Austin and Lori Hobbs. The Hobbses experienced difficulty fulfilling the terms of the buyout almost immediately. In 1998 Cucullu and Tiplady sent the Hobbs-es a letter declaring a rescission of the buyout agreement. Cuculli and Tiplady then sold their reclaimed shares in Hobbs Industries, Inc. to Commercial Recycling Center, Ltd. Commercial Recycling Center, Ltd. sued Austin and Lori Hobbs for an order establishing its ownership in Hobbs Industries, Inc. and for damages, including punitive damages; Tiplady was later added as a plaintiff. The superior court concluded that Cucullu and Tiplady were not entitled to rescission of the buyout agreement. It also found the Hobbses liable to Commercial Recycling Center, Ltd. for the value of Cueul-lu's and Tiplady's shares provided in the original buyout agreement. Commercial Recycling Center, Ltd. and Tiplady appeal.

We conclude that Cueullu and Tiplady did not legally rescind their agreement with the Hobbses and were not entitled to equitable rescission on a failure of consideration theory. We also conclude that the superior court properly valued the shares of Hobbs Industries, Inc. in determining the damages for the Hobbses' breach of the buyout agreement. We thus affirm these aspects of the superior court's judgment. But we conclude that it was error to dismiss, sua sponte, the breach of fiduciary duty claim for equitable rescission on summary judgment, and we remand for further proceedings relating to this claim.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Hobbs Industries, Inc. (HIAK), an Alaska corporation, was incorporated in 1988 in connection with the pursuit of work related to the federal government's Over the Horizon Backscatter project, which had been awarded to Slana Energy, Inc., a corporation owned in part by Austin Hobbs. HIAK's shareholders were Austin Hobbs, Lori Hobbs, Gregory Tiplady, and James Cuceullu. Cuecul-Iu and Tiplady worked for HIAK, which was one of the principal subcontractors on the Over the Horizon Backscatter project. But in 1992, the federal government terminated the project before completion. HIAK stopped operating as a construction company and thereafter focused on pursuing "termination expenses" for the project. Cucullu and Tiplady left the employment of HIAK as there was no longer a source of income from which they could be paid. At the time the federal project was terminated, HIAK had invested a significant amount of money to acquire and develop the Knik Arm Power Plant and two coal mines. One of these coal mines was transferred to another business, Nerox, and litigation ensued between HIAK and Nerox on that transfer.

HIAK's close-out of the federal project did not go smoothly, and after several years of escalating conflicts over management and ownership of shares, a special meeting of the board of directors of HIAK took place on September 25, 1996. At the meeting, the Hobbses, Cucullu, and Tiplady came to an agreement concerning their ownership interests in HIAK and the proposed settlement with Nerox. The four shareholders entered into a consent resolution that set out terms and conditions for a buyout by the Hobbses of Cueullu's and Tiplady's ownership shares in HIAK. This buyout agreement contained several terms, including: (1) payment to Cu-cullu for his shares in HIAK at a price of $40,000 plus interest; (2) payment to Tiplady for his shares in HIAK at a price of $24,000 plus interest; (8) an increase in the buyout price for Cueullu and Tiplady "if by independent appraisal it is demonstrated that their respective share of the liquidated value of the [cJorporation is higher [than the agreed-upon amount]"; (4) an assurance that the payment obligations would be personally guaranteed by Austin and Lori Hobbs as well as secured by the major assets of HIAK, including the Knik Arm Power Plant and equipment, an Alaska Railroad land lease, and a 1989 Chevrolet pickup; (5) payment to both Tiplady and Cucullu of a portion of the forthcoming *97 settlement with Nerox in accordance with respective shareholder interests at the time of the buyout; and (6) a full release of all present and future claims.

The Hobbses began experiencing difficulty fulfilling the payment terms of the buyout almost immediately after the signing of the agreement. In addition, the settlement with Nerox fell through. The Hobbses kept Cu-cullu and Tiplady informed about HIAK's failure to produce the income needed to fulfill the buyout agreement, but neither Cuecullu nor Tiplady indicated dissatisfaction with the delay of the payment schedule required in the 1996 buyout agreement.

In a letter dated June 22, 1998, Cueullu and Tiplady unilaterally declared a rescission of the 1996 buyout agreement. The letter noted that the Hobbses had failed to perform any of the terms and conditions of the agreement and accused the Hobbses of breaching fiduciary duties owed to Cueullu and Tiplady. Cucullu and Tiplady then sold their putative shares in HIAK to Commercial Recycling Center, Ltd. (CRC).

B. Proceedings

In March 1999 CRC filed a complaint against Austin and Lori Hobbs, HIAK, and several other defendants, seeking an order establishing CRC's ownership of sixty-five percent of HIAK, a full accounting of all of HIAK's finances, and various money judgments, including punitive damages against the Hobbses. Tiplady was added as a plaintiff in CRC's second amended complaint. In April 2002 CRC 1 filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Cucullu and Tiplady had rescinded the buyout agreement and seeking an order acknowledging the rescission. CRC claimed that it was entitled to rescission of the buyout agreement primarily because the Hobbses had failed to perform and also because the Hobbses had breached their fiduciary duty to Cueullu and Tiplady. The Hobbses opposed the motion.

In May 2002 Superior Court Judge John E. Reese agreed with the Hobbses and denied CRC's motion for summary judgment, ruling that Cucullu and Tiplady's 1998 letter claiming rescission of the buyout agreement "was ineffective." Judge Reese then sua sponte granted summary judgment in favor of the Hobbses on the question whether rescission could be an appropriate remedy without addressing the breach of fiduciary duty claims. Judge Reese concluded that the only remaining claims were Cucullu's and Tiplady's claims for breach of the buyout agreement. CRC filed a motion for reconsideration, which was denied.

Superior Court Judge Craig Stowers took over the case after Judge Reese retired. In early April 2006, a three-day bench trial was held on the remaining issues surrounding the 1996 buyout agreement. In December 2006, after concluding that Judge Reese's ruling denying CRC's claim for rescission was "the law of the case," Judge Stowers issued a decision that made several findings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P.3d 93, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 38, 2010 WL 1407776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-recycling-center-ltd-v-hobbs-industries-inc-alaska-2010.