Escue v. Sequent, Inc.

869 F. Supp. 2d 839, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57664, 2012 WL 1429304
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 25, 2012
DocketCase No. 2:09-cv-765
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 869 F. Supp. 2d 839 (Escue v. Sequent, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Escue v. Sequent, Inc., 869 F. Supp. 2d 839, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57664, 2012 WL 1429304 (S.D. Ohio 2012).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

GREGORY L. FROST, District Judge.

This matter is before the Court for consideration of the following filings:

[842]*842(1) a motion for summary judgment filed by Defendants Michael Schoonover, John Boyer, Glenn Gettman, Steven Kerber, and Thomas Ewers (ECF No. 145), a memorandum in opposition filed by Plaintiff Michael Escue (ECF No. 154), and a reply memorandum filed by Schoonover, Boyer, Gettman, Kerber, and Ewers (ECF No. 169);

(2) a motion for summary judgment filed by Defendants Sequent, Inc., William Hutter, Schoonover, Boyer, Gettman, Kerber, and Ewers (ECF No. 146), a memorandum in opposition filed by Escue (ECF No. 155), and a reply memorandum filed by Sequent, Inc., Hutter, Schoonover, Boyer, Gettman, Kerber, and Ewers (ECF No. 168);

(3) a motion for summary judgment filed by Escue (ECF No. 157), a memorandum in opposition filed by Sequent, Inc., Hutter, Schoonover, Boyer, Gettman, Kerber, and Ewers (ECF No. 153), and a reply memorandum filed by Escue (ECF No. 170);1 and

(4) a supplemental motion for summary judgment filed by Escue (ECF No. 182), a memorandum in response filed by Sequent, Inc. (ECF No. 183), and a reply memorandum filed by Escue (ECF No. 186).

For the reasons that follow, the Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART the motion for summary judgment filed by Sequent, Inc., Hutter, Schoonover, Boyer, Gettman, Kerber, and Ewers (ECF No. 146), GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART the motion for summary judgment filed by Escue (ECF No. 157), and GRANTS the supplemental motion for summary judgment filed by Escue (ECF No. 182). The motion for summary judgment filed by Schoonover, Boyer, Gettman, Kerber, and Ewers is MOOT. (ECF No. 145.)

I. Background

This is a diversity action filed by Plaintiff, Alabama resident Michael R. Escue, against Defendant Sequent, Inc. (“Sequent”), a closely held Ohio corporation with its principal place of business in Dublin, Ohio. Also named as defendants are William F. Hutter, the CEO and majority shareholder of Sequent, and Sequent shareholders and directors Chairman Michael L. Schoonover, Treasurer John E. Boyer, Glenn J. Gettman, Corporate Secretary Steven R. Kerber, and Thomas A. Ewers.

Escue was the sole shareholder of Better Business Solutions of Alabama, Inc. (“BBSA”), a professional employee organization (“PEO”) located in Birmingham, Alabama, that provided human resource services to business clients in the Birmingham area. PE Os provide services typically performed by a human resources department, including payroll, audit, tax management, the administration of employee benefit plans, employment and labor law compliance, workers’ compensation claims, and risk management.

Sequent is also a PEO and provides human resource services, including health, dental, and vision insurance coverages, as well as coverage under the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (“COBRA”) to its own employees and to business clients (“Jobsite Employers”) and employees (“Jobsite Employees”) leased by Sequent to Jobsite Employers. Sequent is the sponsor of the Sequent, Inc. Flexible Benefits Plan (“the Plan”), an employee benefit plan under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 [843]*843(“ERISA”). Sequent also created the Sequent Welfare Benefits Trust (“the Trust”) for the purpose of holding the Plan assets, receiving premium payments received from Jobsite Employers and Employees and Sequent’s own employees, and paying those premiums to insurers.

Hutter and the other individual defendants also formed Accompany Benefits, LLC (“ABL”), an Ohio limited liability company currently registered under the trade name SRBG. ABL was formed to offer consulting services in the areas of employee benefits design, life, health, and disability insurance, as well as retirement and nonqualified deferred compensation plans. ABL provides consulting services to Sequent, the Plan, and the Trust. ABL’s shareholders and directors are Sequent’s shareholders and directors.

Beginning in 2005 and continuing into 2006, Escue engaged in negotiations with Hutter concerning the merger of BBSA with Sequent. In August 2005 and again in April 2006, Hutter told Escue that Sequent was the subject of a routine audit by the Department of Labor (“DOL”). Escue was aware that the DOL routinely audited PEOs and thought that this information was not significant. During the negotiations, Hutter also described Sequent’s business practice of “tiering,” which consisted of charging some Jobsite Employers more for insurance premiums in order to subsidize the coverage provided to other Jobsite Employers who were charged lower premiums in an effort to attract them as clients. Hutter represented that this practice was the reason for Sequent’s success, that it was legal, and that it had been approved by specialized ERISA counsel. A business valuation expert was employed to value both companies based on the 2005 financial statements and projections for 2006. BBSA was valued at $1,756,455, and Sequent was valued at $14,973,040.

Escue alleges that a draft of the proposed merger agreement was exchanged in December 2006. Section 6.08 of the merger agreement disclosed that Sequent was the subject of a “DOL Investigation into Sequent’s Section 125 Plan.” Escue apparently assumed that this meant the routine audit which was referred to by Hutter during the negotiations. Hutter and the other individual defendants signed a corporate resolution, effective December 19, 2006, which approved the merger agreement. Escue then signed the agreement, and Hutter signed the merger agreement and a closing certificate for the merger as CEO and President of Sequent. It is alleged in the first amended complaint that effective January 1, 2007, Sequent acquired BBSA through a merger transaction. Escue surrendered his BBSA shares, valued at $1,756,455, for 14,000 shares of Sequent common stock with a negotiated value of $1,871,630. After the merger, Escue became a director of Sequent and entered into an employment agreement with Sequent at an annual salary of $160,000 and incentive compensation in the amount of 10% of BBSA’s earnings for the fiscal year.

According to Escue, in order to procure the merger between BBSA and Sequent, Hutter and the other individual defendants made false statements to him and concealed or failed to disclose material facts bearing upon the value of Sequent and the shares acquired by Escue pursuant to the merger agreement. Specifically, Escue alleges that prior to the merger, Sequent, Hutter, and the other individual defendants engaged in improper and illegal activities that exposed Sequent to potential and actual financial liability and that adversely impacted the value of the Sequent shares acquired by Escue pursuant to the merger agreement. Escue also asserts that the financial statements provided to the valuation expert were false because [844]*844Sequent failed to disclose material facts about Sequent, including the fact that Sequent had been the target of a DOL criminal investigation since January 2006.

Escue alleges that prior to the merger, Hutter and the other individual defendants approved a plan for Sequent to make loans in a total amount of $347,918 to the individual defendants. According to Escue, this resulted in Sequent’s financial status failing to meet accounting standards established by the Employer Services Assurance Corporation, an entity that provides accreditation and client assurance programs for the PEO industry.

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