Deborah Rasby v. James Pillen

905 F.3d 1097
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 28, 2018
Docket17-3185
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 905 F.3d 1097 (Deborah Rasby v. James Pillen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deborah Rasby v. James Pillen, 905 F.3d 1097 (8th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

LOKEN, Circuit Judge.

In 1994, Deborah Rasby received a ten percent minority shareholder interest when Progressive Swine Technologies ("PST") was formed to provide management services to customers in the swine industry. She also received a five or ten percent interest in five other entities to which PST provided management services. James Pillen owned the remaining shares. Rasby served as PST's accountant until she retired in May 2011. On June 29, 2012, Rasby sold her minority interests to Pillen for $ 2,350,000. In this diversity action, Rasby alleges that Pillen's actions created "significant economic duress" that forced her to sell her minority interests. She seeks restitution of the excess benefit Pillen received and asserts damage claims for fraudulent misrepresentation, securities fraud, denial of corporate opportunity, and breach of fiduciary duty.

After substantial discovery, the district court 1 granted Pillen's motion for summary judgment, concluding that undisputed facts establish no actionable duress, Rasby produced no evidence that the Unit Purchase Agreement was fraudulently induced, and therefore the agreement's mutual release provision bars all her claims. Rasby appeals. Reviewing the grant of summary judgment de novo and the facts in the light most favorable to Rasby, the non-moving party, we affirm.

I.

Like the district court, we begin with the economic duress issue because, if the Unit Purchase Agreement was not the product of duress and was not fraudulently induced, then the mutual release likely bars Rasby's other damage claims. On appeal, *1100 Rasby argues the district court "erred in deciding multiple factual issues when dismissing Rasby's economic duress claim." However, under Nebraska law, which governs this diversity action, "[w]hat constitutes duress is a question of law, but the existence of duress is a question of fact." Lustgarten v. Jones , 220 Neb. 585 , 371 N.W.2d 668 , 672 (1985). Thus, the district court made no error in granting summary judgment if the facts viewed most favorably to Rasby do not constitute economic duress as a matter of law.

The test under Nebraska law for determining what constitutes duress is well-established:

To be voidable because of duress, an agreement must not only be obtained by means of the pressure brought to bear, but the agreement itself must be unjust, unconscionable, or illegal. The essence of duress is the surrender to unlawful or unconscionable demands. It cannot be predicated upon demands which are lawful, or the threat to do that which the demanding party has a legal right to do.

Id. , quoting Carpenter Paper Co. v. Kearney Hub Pub. Co. , 163 Neb. 145 , 78 N.W.2d 80 , 84 (1956). To prove pressure that establishes duress, Rasby must show "application of such pressure or constraint that compels a person to go against that person's will and takes away that person's free agency, destroying the power of refusing to comply with the unjust demands of another." Bock v. Bank of Bellevue , 230 Neb. 908 , 434 N.W.2d 310 , 315 (1989). In addition, she must show that the resulting agreement was "unjust, unconscionable, or illegal." "Threatening to take advantage of business exigency to impose unjust demands is commonly referred to as 'economic duress' or a 'business compulsion.' " City of Scottsbluff v. Waste Connections of Neb., Inc. , 282 Neb. 848 , 809 N.W.2d 725 , 744 (2011). However, "[c]oercion does not include hard bargaining." Id.

Here, Rasby testified that her working relationship with Pillen deteriorated after his daughter joined PST, leading her to retire in May 2011. Before then, in addition to paying Pillen and Rasby salaries, PST had distributed its profits in good years, providing Rasby funds to pay income taxes she owed as a shareholder of this "Subchapter S" corporation. After she retired, Pillen stopped these PST distributions to Rasby, leaving her fearful that she could not afford to pay taxes due on her PST investment. Rasby hired Roger Wells, an experienced Omaha mergers and acquisition attorney, to consider her options. They concluded that sale of the minority interests was her best option.

In an April 2012 letter to Rasby, Pillen stated: "our plan is to liquidate [PST] since it no longer meets our business objectives. ... [Y]ou will receive ten percent of the net assets available for distribution [which] we anticipate ... would be just over $50,000." The letter went on to offer to buy Rasby's interests in the other five entities for a total of $1,881,029. Rasby considered this offer substantially below the fair market value of her interests. She and Wells discussed various options, including selling her interests to Pillen, selling to a third party, and suing Pillen for minority shareholder oppression. Rasby ultimately decided to sell her shares, and Wells proceeded to negotiate the Unit Purchase Agreement with Pillen's attorney.

Pillen provided Rasby and Wells the calculations used by the accountant Pillen hired to value Rasby's interests. Rasby considered retaining her own valuation expert but did not do so. She continued to consider other options, including litigation, but ultimately agreed to accept $2,350,000 for her interests in the six entities and repayment of her outstanding loan to one entity. The attorneys exchanged drafts of a purchase agreement. Wells suggested a *1101 provision releasing Rasby from future claims by Pillen; the attorneys agreed on the mutual release that became part of the signed agreement. Rasby reviewed the release before signing. She knew it was a complete release of liability on both sides and did not find it ambiguous. However, Rasby testified, she signed the Unit Purchase Agreement because of economic duress:

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905 F.3d 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deborah-rasby-v-james-pillen-ca8-2018.