Copeland v. Wasserstein, Perella & Co.

278 F.3d 472, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 79, 2002 WL 13624
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 2002
Docket00-31292
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 278 F.3d 472 (Copeland v. Wasserstein, Perella & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copeland v. Wasserstein, Perella & Co., 278 F.3d 472, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 79, 2002 WL 13624 (5th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

This Louisiana diversity case arises out of a food-business merger gone sour. Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee A1 Copeland owned the controlling interest in companies that sought to acquire a chain of restaurants and retained Defendant-Ap-pellee/Cross-Appellant Wasserstein, Perel-la, & Co. (“Wasserstein”) to provide financial advice regarding the deal. After the corporation that resulted from the merger was forced into bankruptcy by creditors, Copeland sued his investment banker, settled that lawsuit, and then sued Wasser-stein and one of its executive employees, Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant Charles Ward. Copeland appeals from the district court’s dismissal of his claims against Wasserstein and Ward, and they cross-appeal from the district court’s denial of their motion for sanctions. We affirm the district court’s dismissal of Copeland’s claims; we reverse the court’s denial of Wasserstein and Ward’s motion for sanctions and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In June of 1988, a corporation controlled by Copeland, A. Copeland Enterprises, Inc. (“Old ACE”), and its wholly-owned acquisition subsidiary, Biscuit Investments, Inc. (“Biscuit”), signed an engagement letter with Wasserstein, a New York investment bank boutique. This agreement committed Wasserstein to serve as the “exclusive financial adviser” to Old ACE and Biscuit in connection with their prospective acquisition of Church’s Fried Chicken (“CFC”). Acting chiefly through Ward, its Vice Chairman, Wasserstein de *476 vised a merger financing plan that contemplated finding an unsecured, subordinated lender that would commit to provide Biscuit a bridge loan and underwrite high-yield or “junk” bonds to capitalize the merged corporation. As Wasserstein lacked underwriting capacity, Biscuit solicited proposals for the unsecured financing, eventually choosing Merrill Lynch (“Merrill”) as the subordinated lender. Merrill lent Biscuit $173 million to fund its tender offer for CFC. This -loan was conditioned on Copeland’s contributing specified recipe royalties and the franchising arm of Old ACE to Biscuit. Copeland testified in the instant litigation that this condition was agreed to and complied with in reliance on advice from Wasserstein and Ward.

The tender offer closed on March 21, 1989. Biscuit acquired 86.5% of CFC’s shares and paid Wasserstein the balance of the fees owed under the engagement letter.

The terms of the bridge loan, which was by then in place, gave Merrill the right to designate two individuals to serve on Biscuit’s board of directors. Six days after the closing of the tender' offer, Merrill designated — and Copeland elected as directors — both Ward and Raymond Minella, the lead Merrill executive handling the merger. Ward agreed to serve only after Minella orally promised that Merrill would indemnify Ward for claims arising out of his service on Biscuit’s board of directors. These two continued to serve on that board until September, 1989, when Biscuit merged into CFC, which thereupon changed its name to A1 Copeland Enterprises, Inc. (“New ACE”). Copeland was the CEO and chairman of New ACE and owned all of its common stock. Again on Merrill’s designation, Copeland elected Mi-nella and Ward to serve as directors of New ACE. Ward served until January 1990, when he resigned after learning that Merrill would not indemnify him after all.

Flash back to 1988: Biscuit received a letter from Merrill stating that Merrill was “highly confident” that it could sell up to $200 million worth of junk bonds to capitalize New ACE; however, Merrill never took the bond issue to market. This lack of long-term financing prompted New ACE’s creditors, including Merrill itself as the bridge lender, to put New ACE into involuntary bankruptcy in 1991.

The following year, 1992, Copeland personally sued Merrill, alleging negligence and breaches of contractual and fiduciary duties, and claiming damages resulting from the salary he lost, the royalties he had foregone, and the assets he had contributed to Biscuit. Merrill and Copeland finally settled that litigation in 1997: Merrill agreed to pay Copeland a substantial sum of money; Copeland agreed to release all claims against “Merrill Lynch, its past, present, and future officers, directors, employees, agents [and] representatives ” (emphasis ours).

After settling with Merrill, Copeland filed the instant action against Wasserstein and Ward in Louisiana state court. Copeland alleged that Wasserstein, as a financial adviser to the corporations, and Ward, as a director of Biscuit and its successor, New ACE, had breached duties they owed to Copeland individually, had failed to disclose material information to him, and had caused him to rely detrimentally on their negligent or fraudulent misrepresentations. The gist of Copeland’s allegations was that Wasserstein and Ward knew or should have known — but failed to disclose to Copeland — that, among other things, (1) the merger and financing plans were unworkable or unsound, (2) the Merrill “deal team” had no junk-bond experience, and (3) the junk-bond market had ceased to *477 exist before Biscuit’s acquisition of CFC closed.

Both Wasserstein and Ward removed Copeland’s state-court suit to the Eastern District of Louisiana on diversity grounds and subsequently filed motions to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). The district court granted Wasserstein’s motion, holding that it owed no fiduciary duty to Copeland personally and, alternatively, that his claims, which the court categorized as sounding in tort rather than in contract, had prescribed. The court denied Ward’s dismissal motion, however, concluding that Copeland had pled (1) a conflict-of-interest claim that could support a fiduciary-duty claim and (2) a special-relationship claim that could support a nonderivative cause of action.

In 2000, Ward filed a summary judgment motion grounded in, inter alia, release, prescription, lack of standing, and absence of causation. In due course, the district court granted Ward’s motion and dismissed Copeland’s claim? against him, stating that it “primarily rel[ied] upon ... the threshold issue, and that is the effect of that settlement agreement between Copeland and Merrill Lynch,” in which Copeland had released, among others, Merrill’s “representatives.” In addition to dismissing all claims against both Wasser-stein and Ward, the court awarded them costs.

Ward and Wasserstein had filed a motion for sanctions against Copeland and his counsel on the theory that they knew when the case was filed that it was time-barred and otherwise meritless. After analyzing the motion from the bench, but discussing only the release issue in any detail, the trial court orally denied Wasserstein and Ward’s motion for sanctions.

After final judgment issued, Copeland timely appealed the district court’s grants of Wasserstein’s 12(b)(6) motion and Ward’s summary-judgment motion, as well as the award of costs. Wasserstein and Ward timely cross-appealed the court’s denial of their motion for sanctions.

II.

ANALYSIS

A. Standards of Review

We examine a district court’s grants of

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Carlisle v. McNair
Fifth Circuit, 2023
Kemp v. Glass-Bradley
Fifth Circuit, 2023
George v. SI Grp
36 F.4th 611 (Fifth Circuit, 2022)
Elizabeth Franklin v. Regions Bank
976 F.3d 443 (Fifth Circuit, 2020)
Armando Armendariz v. David Chowaiki
683 F. App'x 338 (Fifth Circuit, 2017)
Lila McWhirter v. AAA Life Insurance Company
622 F. App'x 364 (Fifth Circuit, 2015)
Herring v. Merit Systems Protection Board
778 F.3d 1011 (Federal Circuit, 2015)
Travisha Mangwiro v. Jeh Johnson
554 F. App'x 255 (Fifth Circuit, 2014)
Shelley Thomas v. ITT Educational Services, Inc.
517 F. App'x 259 (Fifth Circuit, 2013)
Anthony Kariuki v. Tracy Tarango
709 F.3d 495 (Fifth Circuit, 2013)
Raylon, LLC v. Complus Data Innovations, Inc.
700 F.3d 1361 (Federal Circuit, 2012)
Jesse Copeland v. Brad Livingston
464 F. App'x 326 (Fifth Circuit, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 F.3d 472, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 79, 2002 WL 13624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copeland-v-wasserstein-perella-co-ca5-2002.