ECCLESIASTES 9: 10-11-12, INC. v. LMC Holding Co.

497 F.3d 1135, 2007 WL 2285901
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 11, 2012
Docket05-4192
StatusPublished
Cited by220 cases

This text of 497 F.3d 1135 (ECCLESIASTES 9: 10-11-12, INC. v. LMC Holding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ECCLESIASTES 9: 10-11-12, INC. v. LMC Holding Co., 497 F.3d 1135, 2007 WL 2285901 (10th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

HOLMES, Circuit Judge.

This appeal challenges the district court’s decision to dismiss this action with prejudice for failure to prosecute pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(b). The district court dismissed this case, which originally was commenced in 1995, as a sanction for the alleged discovery-related dilatoriness of appellant Ecclesiastes 9:10-11-12, Inc. (“Ecclesiastes”). This delay allegedly precluded the parties from preserving the deposition testimony of John Z. DeLorean prior to his death. At times material to the dismissal, DeLorean was Ecclesiastes’s sole director, its corporate designee pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 30(b)(6), and Ecclesiastes’s only witness with first-hand knowledge of the factual underpinnings of the litigation.

We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in granting defendants’ motion for dismissal pursuant to Rule 41(b). Thus, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Asset Purchase Agreement

On December 2, 1992, DeLorean and three corporations he directly and indirectly controlled, Logan Manufacturing Company (“Logan”), 1 DeLorean Manufacturing *1137 Company (“DeLorean Manufacturing”), and Cristina Corp. (“Cristina”) (collectively “plaintiffs”), entered into an asset purchase agreement (“APA”) with LMC Holding Co. (“LMC Holding”) for the sale of plaintiffs’ snow-grooming equipment business. 2 Paul Wallace specifically formed LMC Holding to acquire plaintiffs’ assets. DeLorean and Wallace negotiated the terms of the APA.

Pursuant to the APA, LMC Holding was to pay a purchase price of $12,750,000, subject to certain closing and post-closing “adjustments” (the “purchase-price adjustments”). The APA placed responsibility on plaintiffs for producing the necessary financial documentation to calculate the purchase-price adjustments. This included audited financial statements for the fiscal year that ended on November 30, 1992. Because closing took place after December 1. 1992, plaintiffs also were responsible for furnishing the following documents within 77 days of closing: (1) a balance sheet, a statement of operations, retained earnings and cash-flow statements, and inventory assessments for the new fiscal year through the closing date (“closing-date documentation”); (2) a report from plaintiffs’ independent accountant, KPMG Peat Marwick (“KPMG”), containing the results of its audit of this closing-date documentation; and (3) plaintiffs’ computation of the purchase-price adjustments based upon the audited closing-date documentation. Thereafter, the parties would make arrangements for the transaction’s final payment.

DeLorean was plaintiffs’ sole representative at the January 5, 1993 closing. At closing, plaintiffs transferred their assets to LMC Holding, which, in response, paid plaintiffs $4,900,000 in cash, provided them with a promissory note for $850,000, and transferred to an escrow agent other notes and shares of preferred stock. Seventy-seven days later, however, plaintiffs did not deliver to defendants the closing-date documentation and their related calculation of the purchase-price adjustments, as contemplated by the APA.

The closing-date documentation was never completed. Nevertheless, DeLore-an apparently attempted to negotiate the purchase-price adjustments with defendants, offering a variety of seemingly contradictory methodologies and calculations to conclude the agreement. Ultimately, defendants tendered no additional payment.

B. Pleadings

In January 1995, Ecclesiastes filed a complaint against LMC Holding and Wallace. On March 24, 1995, an amended complaint was filed, and DeLorean, DeLo-rean Manufacturing, and Cristina were added as plaintiffs. The amended complaint named LMC Holding, LMC Operating Corporation (“LMC Operating”), 3 LMC Tenant Corporation (“LMC Tenant”), 4 Lawrence Lopater, 5 and Wallace as *1138 defendants (collectively “defendants”). A second amended complaint was filed on December 15,1995.

Plaintiffs brought claims for, inter alia, breach of contract, common law fraud, fraud-in-the-inducement, securities fraud, and violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq. Plaintiffs alleged that Wallace perpetrated a fraudulent scheme to induce DeLorean to enter into the APA. According to plaintiffs, defendants further perpetrated this scheme after the January 5, 1993 closing by imper-missibly dissipating Ecclesiastes’s assets to avoid satisfying defendants’ financial obligations to plaintiffs, by demanding fraudulent offsets to the balance of the purchase price, and by preventing plaintiffs from accessing the business premises and the requisite records to calculate the purchase-price adjustments.

Plaintiffs’ claims placed DeLorean at the center of the litigation. According to the second amended complaint, DeLorean negotiated the APA, misunderstood the terms of this purposefully “ambiguous and confusing” contract, was misled by the methodology for calculating the purchase-price adjustments, and personally participated in the “purported closing.” App. at 40, 47.

In response, defendants filed an array of counterclaims, including claims for breach of contract, fraud-in-the-inducement, and negligent misrepresentation. Defendants asserted that DeLorean made several fraudulent representations to induce them to enter into the APA. Defendants specifically alleged the following: after closing, defendants discovered that Ecclesiastes’s inventory of machines, parts, and supplies was both inadequate and obsolete; plaintiffs inflated the sales and revenue figures; Ecclesiastes’s machines yielded significant undisclosed warranty liabilities due to defective design; and plaintiffs failed to make contributions to Ecclesiastes’s pension plan and never discontinued its pension plan.

C. Discovery

DeLorean declared personal bankruptcy in September 1999. Approximately seven months later, LMC Operating filed for bankruptcy. On February 26, 2001, following these bankruptcy filings, the district court administratively closed the action. Little discovery had been completed at that point.

On November 4, 2002, plaintiffs moved to re-open the case and to dismiss the bankrupt parties. Plaintiffs filed a memorandum in support of this motion on July 10, 2003. On September 15, 2003, defendants filed a Rule 41(b) motion to dismiss the action for failure to prosecute, arguing that plaintiffs inexcusably failed both to advance the litigation in the years prior to the administrative closure of the action and to proceed against the remaining defendants while the case against LMC Operating was stayed in accordance with bankruptcy law.

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Bluebook (online)
497 F.3d 1135, 2007 WL 2285901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ecclesiastes-9-10-11-12-inc-v-lmc-holding-co-ca10-2012.