Faith Lawley, L.L.C. v. McKay

2021 Ohio 2156, 175 N.E.3d 1
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 2021
DocketCA2020-08-052
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2021 Ohio 2156 (Faith Lawley, L.L.C. v. McKay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faith Lawley, L.L.C. v. McKay, 2021 Ohio 2156, 175 N.E.3d 1 (Ohio Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

[Cite as Faith Lawley, L.L.C. v. McKay, 2021-Ohio-2156.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

WARREN COUNTY

FAITH LAWLEY, LLC, et al., :

Appellees, : CASE NO. CA2020-08-052

: - vs - OPINION : 6/28/2021

JOHN MCKAY, :

Appellant. :

CIVIL APPEAL FROM WARREN COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS Case No. 18CV91051

Robbins, Kelly, Patterson & Tucker, LPA, Richard O. Hamilton, Jr., Robert M. Ernst, 7 West Seventh Street, Suite 1400, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202, for appellees

Gottesman & Associates, LLC, Zachary Gottesman, 404 East 12th Street, First Floor, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 and Crehan & Thumann, LLC, Lynne M. Longtin, 404 East 12th Street, Second Floor, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202, for appellant

BYRNE, J.

{¶1} Defendant-appellant, John McKay, appeals from the summary judgment

decision of the Warren County Court of Common Pleas. The trial court dismissed McKay's

counterclaims against plaintiffs-appellees, Eric Novicki, Christopher Lawley, and Faith

Lawley, LLC ("the plaintiffs"), and granted the plaintiffs' requested declaratory judgment.

For the reasons set forth below, we agree that McKay failed to identify any disputed issues Warren CA2020-08-052

of material fact precluding summary judgment. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's

decision.1

I. Factual Background

{¶2} McKay purchased an investment unit of Granite Creek Flexcap I, L.P.

("Granite Creek"), a small business investment hedge fund. McKay's funding commitment

for the unit was $1.5 million. From June 2006 through the first quarter of 2010, McKay

funded the unit with $900,000. McKay also paid $165,000 in taxes related to the unit.

{¶3} In early 2010, Granite Creek issued McKay a capital call for $75,000. McKay,

however, was in the midst of a divorce and facing liquidity issues. He could not afford the

cash call.

{¶4} McKay was acquaintances with Novicki and Lawley and had done business

deals with them in the past. According to McKay, he approached Novicki and Lawley with

a proposal that would allow him to avoid losing or diluting his investment. He would sell

them the Granite Creek unit but retain an option to repurchase the unit at a later date.

{¶5} Novicki and Lawley agreed to this transaction and together they formed Faith

Lawley, LLC – of which they would be the sole members – to hold the investment. To

memorialize the transfer and option to repurchase, McKay had his attorney prepare a

transfer agreement ("Transfer Agreement").

{¶6} Under the Transfer Agreement, Faith Lawley, LLC agreed to pay McKay

$125,000 for the Granite Creek unit. Faith Lawley, LLC further agreed to pay the $75,000

capital call. According to McKay, the price for the unit was set "well below" his investment

because the deal was intended to provide him with a quick cash infusion until he could

repurchase the unit.

1. Pursuant to Loc.R. 6(A), we have sua sponte removed this appeal from the accelerated calendar and placed it on the regular calendar for purposes of issuing this opinion.

-2- Warren CA2020-08-052

{¶7} The Transfer Agreement provided McKay with an option to repurchase the

Granite Creek unit at any time through and including December 31, 2012. Thus, McKay

had slightly less than two years to exercise the option. To exercise the option, the Transfer

Agreement required McKay to give Faith Lawley, LLC written notice of his intent to exercise

the option and to pay the option price prior to the expiration of the option period.

{¶8} The option price was the original purchase price of $125,0000 plus the

$75,000 capital call payment, plus any other capital calls incurred by Faith Lawley, LLC,

plus interest at 25% per annum on the total.2 McKay characterized this 25% interest as

Novicki and Lawley's "additional incentive," to enter the deal.

{¶9} The Transfer Agreement contained an integration clause. The clause

provided that no provision of the agreement could be modified, amended, or waived except

by a written agreement, executed by all the parties.

{¶10} On February 26, 2010, the parties executed the Transfer Agreement. Faith

Lawley, LLC paid McKay the purchase price and further paid Granite Creek's capital call.

The transfer of the investment unit required Granite Creek's approval, and Faith Lawley,

LLC subsequently entered into a separate subscription agreement with Granite Creek.

Consequently, the transfer was completed.

{¶11} In September 2012, approximately three months before the expiration of the

option, McKay approached Lawley and Novicki to discuss what he called a "tail" agreement.

According to McKay, this would be an alternative to exercising the option and would permit

him to instead buy back an interest in the Granite Creek unit. On December 17, 2012,

McKay emailed Novicki a detailed proposal containing his terms for this proposed "tail"

agreement. Novicki responded, said he would call Lawley the following week, and told

2. The option price also included a payment to account for certain taxes, and a minimum interest payback of $20,000.

-3- Warren CA2020-08-052

McKay to contact Lawley about setting up a meeting. In a follow-up e-mail, Novicki told

McKay to forward the proposal to Lawley. No agreement was reached concerning the "tail"

agreement proposal prior to the expiration of the option.

{¶12} It is undisputed that McKay never sent Faith Lawley, LLC written notice of his

intent to exercise the option prior to the December 31, 2012 option deadline, or at any other

time. Nor did McKay tender the option price to Faith Lawley, LLC at any time. McKay never

obtained any written extension of the option deadline from the plaintiffs.

{¶13} Following the expiration of the option deadline, McKay continued to

communicate with Novicki and Lawley concerning the proposed "tail" agreement. The

parties met for an in-person meeting on January 7, 2013. This meeting became "heated"

and the parties left with no agreement in place. According to Lawley, McKay had refused

to consider a proposal by the plaintiffs that would require McKay to "back stop" what the

plaintiffs had paid into the Granite Creek unit with McKay's stock in a separate company.

{¶14} Over the next three years, McKay continued communicating with Novicki and

Lawley concerning potential agreements to buy back into the Granite Creek unit. Many of

these discussions were memorialized in e-mails. However, none of McKay's efforts to

broker a new deal concerning the Granite Creek unit resulted in any agreement.

{¶15} On May 4, 2016, McKay e-mailed Novicki and Lawley purporting to accept a

proposal that they had made to him during the in-person meeting on January 7, 2013 –

more than three years earlier. Both Novicki and Lawley quickly responded, repudiating that

any offer was available to accept. In Lawley's response, he reminded McKay that in 2013,

the Granite Creek unit was not producing any investment return. For that reason, the

plaintiffs were only willing to allow McKay to join with them in the investment if he agreed to

take on some of the risk. They had asked him to share that risk by putting up his separate

company stock, and he had refused. Lawley indicated that Granite Creek had since hit a

-4- Warren CA2020-08-052

"home run" with one of its investments and the unit was starting to produce a return.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 Ohio 2156, 175 N.E.3d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faith-lawley-llc-v-mckay-ohioctapp-2021.