Fort Point Commercial Co. v. Spiegel

28 Mass. L. Rptr. 339
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedApril 8, 2011
DocketNo. 082296BLS1
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Mass. L. Rptr. 339 (Fort Point Commercial Co. v. Spiegel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fort Point Commercial Co. v. Spiegel, 28 Mass. L. Rptr. 339 (Mass. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Lauriat, Peter M., J.

The plaintiff and counterclaim defendant, Fort Point Commercial Company, Inc. (“Hunneman”), commenced this action against Wayne Spiegel in an effort to obtain Spiegel’s cooperation with a corporate restructuring plan. A central issue to the case is which of two documents, the Shareholders [340]*340Agreement Components (“SAC”) or the “March Document”1 controls Spiegel’s stake in Hunneman, and the effect of the applicable agreement on his equity share in the company. Hunneman asserted five claims in its Complaint against Spiegel.

Spiegel responded by asserting ten counterclaims. Against Pratt and Hunneman, he asserted claims for breach of contract (Count I), breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing (Count II), breach of fiduciary duty/freeze-out (Count III), misrepresentation (Count IV), and promissory estoppel (Count V). Against all of the counterclaim defendants, Spiegel asserted claims based on unjust enrichment (Count VI), conversion (Count VII), and constructive trust (Count VIII). He also requested an accounting (Count IX) and a declaratory judgment as to which document controls his equity interest (Count X). Hunneman, Fort Point Management & Development Corp., and Fort Point Appraisal Corp. (the “Fort Point entities”) have now moved for summary judgment on all counterclaims against them, and as to Count v. of the Complaint. Pratt has moved for summary judgment as to all counts against him. For the following reasons, the counterclaim defendants’ summary judgment motions are allowed in part and denied in part.

BACKGROUND

The relevant facts are taken from the record and viewed in the light most favorable to Spiegel, the non-moving party. See Attorney Gen. v. Bailey, 386 Mass. 367, 371 (1982). Hunneman is a leasing and brokerage firm specializing in commercial real estate. Pratt is the president and CEO of Hunneman and majority shareholder of the Fort Point entities. Spiegel was employed by Hunneman as a real estate broker for approximately twenty years. In 2001, Spiegel and Hunneman entered into the Shareholders Agreement Components (“SAC”). The SAC provided that Spiegel and two others would each receive ten percent of the equity stock interests in Hunneman. A fourth person would receive five percent of the outstanding stock, and Pratt would hold the remainder, sixty-five percent.

Section II of the SAC covers circumstances under which a shareholder might part ways with Hunneman. Section II.B. states that if a shareholder is dismissed “for cause,” his or her stock “will be deemed surrendered and cancelled without payment.” Section II.C. provides, in pertinent part:

Upon termination of the Shareholder’s working relationship with [Hunneman] other than for cause (including on account of death or permanent disability), or upon the Shareholder resigning from [Hunneman] after April 30,2003, the following shall occur: first, [Pratt] shall have the right, but not the obligation, to buy that Shareholder’s stock at a price equal to (i) two times book value (corporate net worth as set forth on [Hunneman’s] balance sheet at the close of [Hunneman’s] then last fiscal year) if the termination is during the two (2) years beginning May 1, 2003, or (ii) at three times the book value, if during the next two (2) years, or (iii) at four times the book value thereafter (the “Formula Price”); and, if termination of the Shareholder’s working relationship occurs after May 1, 2006, and the Shareholder has then continuously been a full-time [Hunneman] broker, if [Pratt] does not elect to purchase that Shareholder’s stock the Shareholder may, within thirty (30) days after termination, elect to sell his/her shares to [Hunneman], and [Hunne-man] shall then be obligated to purchase his/her shares at the Formula Price determined as of the date of that person’s election to sell.

In Section VI.A., “Application of Cash Flow,” the SAC provided: “It is intended that [Hunneman’s] profits be built to enable [Hunneman’s] cash flow to be paid and applied in ... an amount equal to 10% of the balance for a special distribution to James, Spiegel and Minnerly [to the exclusion of other minoriiy shareholders] . . .”

Another document, entitled “Hunneman Commercial Company Corporate Organization Structure Year 2001" (“Structure Agreement”), and signed by Spiegel, provided that Pratt would receive an annual salary of $175,000 for three years, but it did not address Pratt’s compensation beyond April 30, 2004.

In 2007, the Hunneman shareholders entered into negotiations to restructure the corporation. On March 12,2008, the shareholders met on Hunneman’s premises. All of the minority shareholders were present. According to the counterclaim defendants, the March 12, 2008 meeting resulted in a document titled “Agreement” (the “March Document”) which was circulated on March 16, 2008 and eventually signed by all shareholders other than Spiegel. Spiegel disputes this and contends that the shareholders could not come to a final agreement at the meeting; that they did not reduce anything to writing; and that the resulting March Document contained material provisions that were not discussed at the meeting. Pursuant to the March Document, Spiegel’s equity interest would be reduced from ten percent2 to three percent, in exchange for $40,000. Other shareholders, whose equity shares would increase by virtue of the Document, would also receive $40,000.

Section 7(C) of the March Document attempted to cover the potential situation of a single shareholder refusing to agree to the Document’s terms:

In the event that one or more of the parties refuses to document the agreements and understandings previously reached by signing this Agreement, Pratt, in his capacity as CEO of the Company, may determine to proceed with this Agreement provided at least a majority in number of Stockholders have then signed this Agreement, in which event the Company may proceed to enforce the understandings previously reached and/or the terms of prior instruments entitling rescission and or recall of [341]*341shares or rights to receive shares of the Company previously granted.

Spiegel resigned from Hunneman on April 18, 2008. He did not object in writing to the terms of the March Document before resigning. In a letter dated May 16, 2008, Spiegel demanded that his shares be redeemed pursuant to Section II.C. of the SAC, which he claims entitles him to four times the book value of his shares. In the May 16, 2008, letter, Spiegel, through counsel, asserted that “[t]here is no question that the stated book value for the company is artificially low for a number of reasons, including but not limited to the failure to secure the outright ownership of the ‘Hunneman’ name, despite the allocation of a $250,000 expense charged to the Company by [Pratt] in the form of a note for that stated purpose as well as other questionable corporate allocations which were improperly assessed to the Company.”

The parties disagree about Hunneman’s book value in the fiscal year ending December 31, 2007. Hunne-man argues that the book value was $966,743. Spie-gel, through his expert, Matthew G. Medlin, contends that the book value was actually $4,075,660. Medlin stated in his report that he had identified accounting entries and payments between May 1, 2001 and December 31, 2007 that decreased the book value of Hunneman and that should be added to the book value in order to calculate the Formula Price.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Mass. L. Rptr. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-point-commercial-co-v-spiegel-masssuperct-2011.