Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 98,655 J. Scott Campbell v. The Upjohn Company

676 F.2d 1122, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 19674
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 29, 1982
Docket80-1823
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 676 F.2d 1122 (Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 98,655 J. Scott Campbell v. The Upjohn Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 98,655 J. Scott Campbell v. The Upjohn Company, 676 F.2d 1122, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 19674 (6th Cir. 1982).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judge.

This is an action brought under § 17 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77q, and § 10 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j, and the Security and Exchange Commission’s Rule 10b--5, 17 C.F.R. 6240 § 240.10b-5 (1981). 1 The appel *1124 lant alleges that the appellee, Upjohn Company, fraudulently, induced him to sign a merger agreement between the corporation of appellant and a subsidiary of Upjohn, and that Upjohn then fraudulently concealed from him terms of the agreement.

District Judge Benjamin F. Gibson granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that the claim of appellant was barred by time by the applicable statute of limitations. The opinion of Judge Gibson is reported at Campbell v. The Upjohn Co., 498 F.Supp. 722 (W.D.Mich.1980).

We affirm.

I

Only a brief summary of the relevant facts will be presented in this opinion. On this appeal from a grant of summary judgment in favor of the appellee, we accept as true the factual allegations of appellant and draw inferences therefrom in favor of appellant. Reference is made to the comprehensive and well considered opinion of Judge Gibson for a more complete statement of the facts and issues.

Prior to 1969, appellant Campbell and two other men, Edward Wilsmann and Ernest Wunderlich, were the only shareholders of Homemakers, Inc., a small Illinois corporation which specialized in providing health care services. In 1969 Homemakers, in search of additional capital to meet the needs of an expanding business, entered into merger negotiations with defendant Upjohn.

After several meetings and discussions, the initial proposed agreement was reduced to a letter of intent on June 19, 1969. Upjohn would exchange 225 shares of Upjohn stock for each share of Homemakers; in addition six shares each of Wilsmann’s and appellant Campbell’s Homemakers stock were to be converted into a 5.4 per cent interest in the successor corporation, which Upjohn would have the option of buying out in 1975 at a price very favorable to Campbell and Wilsmann. This latter provision was termed the “back end payment.” Appellant asserts that he relied on receiving this “back end payment” throughout the events and years that followed the signing of this first letter of intent.

A second letter of intent was drawn up and signed by the parties on August 11, 1969, after a loan from Upjohn to Homemakers had necessitated for tax purposes a restructuring of the terms of the merger. The parties eliminated the back end payment from the agreement, and decided that Campbell and Wilsmann would retain no interest in the successor corporation. In *1125 stead, Upjohn offered them incentive employment plans which would provide many of the same financial rewards originally embodied in the back end payment agreement.

The parties thereafter drew up several drafts of a final merger agreement, none of which contained an employment agreement. Upjohn presented Wilsmann, but not Campbell, with a separate employment agreement. Campbell alleges he was assured orally that the back end agreement was still in effect, that he eventually would receive an employment agreement, and that the discrepancies between the written terms and the oral promises were due to Upjohn’s desire to deceive Wunderlich, the third Homemaker’s shareholder, whom the parties did not want to share equally in the profits of the merger.

On November 6,1969, the parties were to sign the merger agreement and close the deal. Campbell alleges that when he arrived for the closing, two Upjohn executives took him into an adjacent room and confronted him about a misrepresentation on his resume. They shoved a resignation agreement in front of him and shouted that if he did not sign it he would be fired immediately after the merger. Campbell alleges that these actions so shocked, humiliated and intimidated him that he signed the resignation agreement, and that then the Upjohn officials ushered him back into the adjoining room, where he signed the merger agreement without reading it.

The merger agreement contained no provision for a back end payment, and no provision for employment of Campbell, although it did contain an employment agreement with Wilsmann. The merger agreement contained an integration clause superseding and nullifying all other agreements to the contrary.

The appellant says he did not read the merger agreement for nearly six years. He asserts that he relied on oral assurances from Upjohn officials and from Wilsmann (who had been made president of the successor corporation) that he would receive the back end payment agreed to in the first letter of intent in June 1969. However, he retained no ownership interest in the successor corporation and had no employment arrangement with it. Both mechanisms for delivering the back end payment had been foreclosed.

Campbell suffered from poor health immediately after the closing. By 1971, however, he had retained a lawyer who helped him extract from an escrow account the last of the Upjohn shares due him under the agreement. 2 This attorney had a copy of the agreement. Nonetheless, appellant says he did not read the agreement or learn of its contents until 1975, when he realized that no back end payment was forthcoming.

He filed this suit in 1975 in a Connecticut state court, alleging that Upjohn had procured his signature on the merger agreement fraudulently by promising the back end payment, and that Upjohn had fraudulently concealed from him the terms of the merger agreement by making oral assertions after the signing that his payment would be forthcoming. The case was removed to the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut and then transferred by stipulation of the parties to the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan. The parties agree that the applicable statute of limitations is Connecticut’s Blue Sky statute, Conn.Gen.Stat. § 36-346(e). 3

*1126 II

The Connecticut limitations statute requires that all actions involving security sales contracts be brought within two years after the sale or exchange involved. 4 The sale in the instant case took place on November 6, 1969, when the defendant procured the signature of plaintiff on the merger agreement, allegedly by intimidation and by the fraudulent promise that it contained provisions for the back end payment.

The appellant, citing Bauman v. Centex Corp., 611 F.2d 1115 (5th Cir.

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676 F.2d 1122, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 19674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fed-sec-l-rep-p-98655-j-scott-campbell-v-the-upjohn-company-ca6-1982.