Cost Management Group, Inc. v. Daniel L. Bommer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 26, 2014
DocketA13A1972
StatusPublished

This text of Cost Management Group, Inc. v. Daniel L. Bommer (Cost Management Group, Inc. v. Daniel L. Bommer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cost Management Group, Inc. v. Daniel L. Bommer, (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION BARNES, P. J., MILLER and RAY, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

March 26, 2014

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A1972. COST MANAGEMENT GROUP, INC., et al. v. BOMMER.

RAY, Judge.

This case has its genesis in competing lawsuits between former business

associates. One suit was in federal court1, and the other was in the Superior Court of

Fulton County. In the federal suit, Daniel Bommer sued his erstwhile business

partners, Steven Gareleck and George Remington Reynolds, in their individual

capacities. In the superior court suit, companies controlled by Gareleck and Reynolds

– Cost Management Group, Inc., Partnertel, Inc., and Telcentrex, LLC (collectively

“CMG”) – sued Bommer. This case is before us on appeal from the superior court’s

grant of partial summary judgment to Bommer.

1 Bommer v. Reynolds, 465 Fed. Appx. 876 (11th Cir. 2012). CMG first contends that the superior court erred in finding that its claims

related to allegations that Bommer was wrongly competing with them through his

company, Enhanced Billing Services (“EBS”), were collaterally estopped by the

federal action. CMG also argues that the trial court erred in determining that the EBS-

related claims were compulsory counterclaims in the federal action, thus barring

further litigation in superior court. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.

Summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. A de novo standard of review applies to an appeal from a grant of summary judgment, and we view the evidence, and all reasonable conclusions and inferences drawn from it, in the light most favorable to the nonmovant.

(Footnote omitted.) Coffee Iron Works v. QORE, Inc., 322 Ga. App. 137, 137 (744

SE2d 114) (2013).

The evidence shows that in January 2006, Bommer’s company, Telesis

Management Corporation, merged with Partnertel and Telcentrex, companies

controlled by Gareleck and Reynolds, to form CMG. These were all

telecommunications companies. Bommer also owned another company, EBS, which

handled hospital billing and which was not part of the merger that created CMG. The

merger that created CMG also involved a Stockholders’ Agreement and a Securities

2 Exchange Agreement (“SEA”). Pursuant to Section 6.5 of the SEA, Bommer agreed

that beginning January 16, 2006, he would not solicit any current or prospective

customers of CMG in a way that directly competed with CMG.

However, after some disputes over whether Bommer was impermissibly using

EBS resources and wrongly competing with CMG, Gareleck and Reynolds invoked

a buy-sell provision in the Stockholders’ Agreement called a Special Purchase Notice

(“SPN”) and, inter alia, offered to purchase Bommer’s shares in CMG. The SPN

provided that Bommer would be paid $1,728,000 when the transaction closed, and

an additional $192,000 pursuant to a promissory note if he entered into and did not

violate a two-year non-competition agreement and a two-year non-solicitation

agreement. Specifically, the SPN at Section 3 (a), under the heading entitled

“Additional Terms,” required Bommer’s resignation and at Section 3 (b) provided

that Bommer “will not directly or indirectly compete with the business of the

Corporation by engaging in any business or enterprise that engages in

telecommunication agency and resale services for telecommunications carriers

anywhere within the United States.”

In September 2008, Bommer submitted his resignation as a CMG officer and

director, tendered his shares, and requested his $1,728,000.

3 The District Court Litigation

When Bommer did not receive payment, on March 23, 2009, he sued Garelek

and Reynolds in their individual capacities in the United States District Court for the

Northern District of Georgia, seeking to enforce the SPN. The complaint alleges, inter

alia, breach of contract, and contends that there was a binding contract as to the SPN

and the additional terms, including the noncompetition agreement. Gareleck and

Reynolds responded by contending that there was no contract, alleging fraud, unclean

hands, and failure of conditions precedent. At the hearing before the district court,

counsel for Gareleck and Reynolds argued that the SPN was neither final nor

enforceable because Bommer had met their offer with a counteroffer. In discussing

Bommer’s alleged counteroffers, counsel for Gareleck and Reynolds told the court,

“[T]hose deal documents . . . contained all kinds of different terms from the SPN, but

most importantly, there was no non-competition agreement . . . [Bommer] could not

agree to a non-competition agreement, and so that issue just died.”

The district court entered an order on April 26, 2011. In that order, the court

stated that the issues before it were as follows: “the principal issue to be decided,

under the facts of the case, is whether a binding contract was established between the

parties. Also, the supplemental issue to be decided is whether the parties ever

4 reached an agreement on the ‘additional terms’ of the SPN.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The court then defined the SPN’s “additional terms” – that is, the noncompetition

portion of the agreement – in part, as follows: “(1) Bommer would resign as CMG’s

officer and director; [and] (2) Bommer would execute a specified two-year non-

competition and non-solicitation agreement (‘restrictive covenants’), subject to

review by counsel.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The court determined that a binding contract was established as to the SPN

itself, but that “subsequent negotiations between the parties concerned the ‘additional

terms.’ In this regard, the court found that the parties never reached a binding

contract, mainly because [Bommer] never agreed to the two-year non-competition

provision of the SPN.” (Emphasis supplied.) The district court then determined that

Bommer was entitled to recover $1,728,000 for the stock he tendered, but could not

recover the $192,000 that was contingent on the “additional terms” because Bommer

“never complied with the ‘additional terms’ of the SPN.”

It is this potentially unclear wording – that is, the court’s initial finding that

Bommer never agreed to the “additional terms” versus its later statement that he

“never complied with the additional terms” that underlies the instant dispute.

The Appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

5 Reynolds and Gareleck appealed this ruling to the United States Court of

Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. The Eleventh Circuit’s opinion notes that the

district court found that Bommer “never complied with the SPN’s ‘Additional

Terms.’” However, the Eleventh Circuit also writes that Gareleck and Reynolds

especially draw our attention to the matter of no competition. They focus on one sentence in particular: ‘The final terms of the non-competition agreement will be subject to review by each party’s counsel and shall conform to the requirements of applicable law.’ But we observe that [Bommer], by his acceptance, agreed that he would execute a non- competition agreement for a period of two years to bar his competition anywhere in the United States. We strongly doubt that [Bommer] was free to compete once he accepted the SPN.

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