Foster v. Ohlwiler

597 S.E.2d 481, 266 Ga. App. 371, 4 Fulton County D. Rep. 1027, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 372, 4 FCDR 1027
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 18, 2004
DocketA03A2278
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 597 S.E.2d 481 (Foster v. Ohlwiler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Ohlwiler, 597 S.E.2d 481, 266 Ga. App. 371, 4 Fulton County D. Rep. 1027, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 372, 4 FCDR 1027 (Ga. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

The Superior Court of Dawson County was called upon to determine whether Robert Ohlwiler and his wife, Anita (“the Ohlwilers”) could sell their shares of stock in Hidden Valley Resorts, Inc. to nonshareholders, without first offering them to other shareholders. Steven Foster and Donald Landry, shareholders of the corporation, claimed that a document entitled “corporate resolution” established that the Ohlwilers’ shares were so restricted. While the mattér was pending, the Ohlwilers proceeded with a sales transaction, and Foster and Landry thereafter sought to have the Ohlwilers held in contempt. After an evidentiary hearing, the court found that the shares were not restricted as claimed by Foster and Landry, declared judgment against them and in favor of the Ohlwilers, and denied Foster and Landry’s contempt motion. On appeal, Foster and Landry contend that the court’s rulings were erroneous. Because the record shows otherwise, we affirm.

On November 8, 2002, Foster and Landry filed a compláint against the Ohlwilers (Case No. 02-CV-510-C), alleging that the Ohlwilers had entered into an agreement to sell their shares to nonshareholders, that a “corporate resolution” showed that Foster and Landry, as shareholders, were entitled to first refusal rights of the Ohlwilers’ shares, that the Ohlwilers had not offered to sell their shares to them, and that therefore the Ohlwilers were in violation of the corporate resolution. Foster and Landry also alleged that the Ohlwilers’ actions constituted tortious interference with their business relations with the corporation. They sought damages, a declaratory judgment concerning their first refusal rights as shareholders, and specific performance by the Ohlwilers. In addition, Foster and *372 Landry filed a motion for interlocutory injunction, seeking to halt a pending sale of the shares. A hearing on their motion was set for January 2003.

The Ohlwilers answered Foster and Landry’s complaint, denying that their agreement with the nonshareholders violated any corporate resolution. They filed counterclaims against Foster and Landry, alleging malicious use of process and wrongful interference with contract.

In addition, on November 15, 2002, the Ohlwilers filed, as a separate action in the same court (Case No. 02-CV-523-C), a petition against Foster and the corporation, seeking a declaratory judgment regarding the restriction alleged by Foster and Landry. The Ohlwilers claimed that (1) the document, referred to by Foster and Landry as a “corporate resolution” had been written in 1990, when Robert Ohlwiler was married to his former wife, Linda; (2) at that time, Robert and Linda Ohlwiler were the only shareholders of the corporation; (3) Robert and Linda Ohlwiler had desired that each have a first refusal right with regard to the shares of the other; (4) Robert and Linda Ohlwiler had intended the cited document to apply only to them, and not to any future shareholders; and (5) the document was never signed. Ahearing on the Ohlwilers’ petition was set for January 2003.

Meanwhile, the Ohlwilers proceeded with the sale on November 25, placing the shares and proceeds in escrow. Foster and Landry filed in Case No. 02-CV-510-C a motion for contempt, alleging that the Ohlwilers had ignored the court’s authority to decide the matter. A hearing on the contempt motion was scheduled for the same time as the hearing on the Ohlwilers’ declaratory judgment petition and the hearing on Foster and Landry’s motion for interlocutory injunction. 1

During the consolidated hearing, the document relied upon by Foster and Landry to prove that the Ohlwilers’ shares were restricted was introduced in evidence. The first and second lines of its header were “Corporate Minutes” and “Resolutions August 17,1990,” respectively. The document then pertinently provided:

Whereas, the current stockholder [sic] only consist of Robert H. Ohlwiler and Linda M. Ohlwiler; and
Whereas, the above stockholders consider the ownership of Hidden Valley to be near and dear to each other, and not justifiable to be transferred, sold, inherited or otherwise *373 deserving to anyone else including but not limited to future spouses, relatives, advisors, or friends; with the exception of John Robert Ohlwiler, their son;
Now, therefor, be it resolved, that the following stipulations be agreed upon with respect to transfer of stock.
1. Should any stockholder receive an offer to purchase any of their shares in the corporation all other stockholders will have the option to purchase the stock at the offered price within 90 days of the time the offer is presented to said stockholders. The corporation shall not accept the original offer until the 90 day waiting period, and no right to first refusal options have been exercised.
2.....
3. It is the intention of Robert H. Ohlwiler and Linda M. Ohlwiler to will their stock in Hidden Valley Resorts, Inc. to each other at the time of this resolution, and must inform the other of any intention of change in this esprit de corps or in their respective wills to accommodate . . . considerations regarding the intentions of this resolution.
4. This resolution shall become effective as of January 2, 1991.

Robert Ohlwiler testified at the hearing about what led to his drafting of the document. The company had previously been owned and operated as a sole proprietorship by him and his former wife, Linda. By the late 1980s, the couple had separated and were contemplating divorce. Each spouse had begun a new relationship, and each spouse wanted to guard against finding herself or himself in business with the other spouse’s new companion. However, at that time, neither spouse could afford to purchase the other’s interest. Therefore, to ensure their own control of the future ownership of the company, the couple first incorporated their company, effective January 2,1991. Each spouse owned an equal number of shares. But then, Robert Ohlwiler recalled,

as we went further, we had other issues, so we never really — we never signed the document and — but I was trying to document our intentions at the time with the confusion of what if somebody — now, that we have separate shares, what if one person, you know, dies or whatever, where does that stock go? Those were the kinds of things we’re dealing with.

*374 Robert Ohlwiler testified that he had intended the document to be an agreement only between his former wife and himself; future shareholders had not been contemplated.

Other evidence at the hearing showed that the corporation later issued additional shares of stock. Linda Ohlwiler sold her shares back to the corporation, and various other individuals, including Foster and Landry, became shareholders. None of the shares contained any language restricting transfer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
597 S.E.2d 481, 266 Ga. App. 371, 4 Fulton County D. Rep. 1027, 2004 Ga. App. LEXIS 372, 4 FCDR 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-ohlwiler-gactapp-2004.