Frey, J. v. Gold, B. Appeal of: Slurry

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 31, 2017
Docket1120 WDA 2016
StatusUnpublished

This text of Frey, J. v. Gold, B. Appeal of: Slurry (Frey, J. v. Gold, B. Appeal of: Slurry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frey, J. v. Gold, B. Appeal of: Slurry, (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

J-A16010-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

JOHN R. FREY, ELAINE H. FREY, ROBERT IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF G. FREY, JAMES MILLER, AND ROBIN PENNSYLVANIA MILLER

v.

BONNY GOLD, DENNIS GOLD, SLURRY TECHNOLOGIES OPERATING, LLC, SLURRY TECHNOLOGIES OPERATING, INC., PILGRIM ENERGY COMPANY, PILGRIM COAL COMPANY, CHARLES MUSE, A.C. MUSE, ENSUM PARTNERSHIP NO. 2, SLURRY TECHNOLOGIES, INC., AGGREGATE SOLUTIONS, INC., ALBERT C. MUSE/REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF CHARLES H. MUSE, JR., DECEASED, ALBERT C. MUSE/REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF CHARLES HOWARD MUSE, JR..

APPEAL OF: SLURRY TECHNOLOGIES OPERATING, INC., PILGRIM ENERGY COMPANY, PILGRIM COAL COMPANY, CHARLES MUSE, A.C. MUSE, ENSUM PARTNERSHIP NO. 2, SLURRY TECHNOLOGIES, INC., AGGREGATE No. 1120 WDA 2016 SOLUTIONS, INC., ALBERT C. MUSE/REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF CHARLES H. MUSE, JR., DECEASED, ALBERT C. MUSE/REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF CHARLES HOWARD MUSE, JR.

Appeal from the Judgment Entered July 6, 2016 In the Court of Common Pleas of Venango County Civil Division at No: 2002-00232 J-A16010-17

BEFORE: STABILE, J. FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E. , and STRASSBURGER,* J.

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED OCTOBER 31, 2017

Appellants1 appeal from the judgment entered on July 6, 2013 in favor

of Appellees, John R. Frey, Elaine H. Frey, Robert G. Frey, James Miller, and

Robin Miller. We affirm.

The trial court summarized the pertinent facts in its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a)

opinion:

Plaintiff H. Elaine Frey (“Elaine or Elaine Frey”) invested in an entity known as Slurry Technologies Operating, LLC in 1997, hereinafter referred to as “STO.” Defendant Bonny Gold was the 60% capital stock holder or majority owner of STO and Elaine Frey was the 40% owner and minority stock holder. Bonny Gold’s husband and co-Defendant, Dennis Gold, was the president of STO. Plaintiff John Frey, the husband of Elaine, was employed at STO as an engineer.

STO provided water purification technology in the coal mining industry. More specifically, the company was involved in the sale, design, construction and operation of equipment for the processing of industrial slurries. Dennis Gold contributed his patents for purification and Elaine Frey agreed to pay $150,000 to help capitalize the company. Bonny Gold and Elaine Frey entered into a Pre-Incorporation Agreement dated November 15,

____________________________________________

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. 1 We refer to these parties collectively as Appellants: Slurry Technologies Operating, Inc., Pilgrim Energy Company, Pilgrim Coal Company, Charles Muse, A.C. Muse, Esum Partnership No. 2, Slurry Technologies, Inc., Aggregate Solutions, Inc., Albert C. Muse/Representative of the Estate of Charles H. Muse, Jr., Deceased, Albert C. Muse/Representative of the Estate of Charles Howard Muse, Jr.

-2- J-A16010-17

1996. The two entered into an Operating Agreement a short time thereafter.

On February 16, 1999, Pilgrim Coal Company made a loan to both STO and a separate company named Slurry Technologies Operating Inc., hereinafter “STI”, in the amount of $250,000.00.1 1 Pilgrim Coal Company later rebranded as “Pilgrim Energy Company.” Together, they are hereinafter referred to simply as “Pilgrim.”

Charles H. Muse, Jr. was the president and director of Pilgrim Coal Company at the relevant time for this proceeding. Albert C. Muse was Vice-President of Pilgrim Coal Company at the relevant time for this proceeding and was Charles H. Muse Jr.’s first cousin. Collectively, Albert C. Muse and Charles H. Muse Jr. would from time to time capitalize business under the trade name of “ENSUM Partnership No. 2.” The Loan Agreement in question (the “Pilgrim Loan Note”) was signed by Dennis D. Gold, as Vice Chairman of STO, Dennis D. Gold, as President of STI, and Charles H. Muse, Jr., President of Pilgrim Coal Company. Elaine Frey and Bonny Gold signed a Certificate of Authorization by the Members of STO to the Loan Agreement. The Pilgrim Loan would eventually be defaulted on in 2001.

Plaintiffs G. Robert Frey and Sue Frey, the parents of John Frey, agreed to offer a $50,000.00 Certificate of Deposit (“CD”) account as collateral for a loan for STO. The Note therefore was signed on behalf of STO by Dennis Gold on November 6, 2000.

On October 3, 2001, John and Elaine Frey instituted an action against Dennis Gold, Bonny Gold, and STO asserting causes of action for violations of the Pennsylvania Wage Payment and Collection Law (hereinafter “WPCL” see 43 P.S. §§ 260.1—260.12), for breach of contract, for wrongful termination, for unjust enrichment, for breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing, for breach of fiduciary duty, for an accounting, for freeze out, for fraudulent misrepresentation, for repayment of loans, for civil conspiracy and for a declaratory judgment. Around the same time, Robert and Sue Frey also instituted an action against STO and Dennis Gold alleging breach of contract, breach of security agreement, fraudulent misrepresentation and requesting the imposition of a

-3- J-A16010-17

constructive trust. Both of these suits were eventually consolidated with the instant action.

On November 30, 2001, a meeting occurred between Albert and Charles Muse with John and Elaine Frey in Pittsburgh. The content of the discussion that took place at that meeting is disputed, but essentially the Muse Defendants offered to provide John and Elaine Frey a limited interest in an STO successor company, provided that the Freys would in return cease their litigation against the Defendants. John Frey, believing the settlement offer to be inadequate for various reasons, declined.

As previously mentioned, STO defaulted on the Pilgrim Loan Note in 2001. On November 5, 2001, Pilgrim filed a confession of Judgment against STO, STI, and Dennis and Bonny Gold in the amount of $365,627.23 pursuant to the terms of the Pilgrim Loan Note. The Gold Defendants took no steps to defend against the judgment nor did they attempt to delay the execution of the sheriff’s sale. Accordingly, a sheriff’s sale was held on December 19, 2001. The sale took place at the offices of STO. At that sale, Pilgrim purchased all the physical assets of STO and/or STI. These assets include several service contracts, the most notable of which was the “Hanson Contract,” an agreement to provide STO’s slurry-processing services to an energy company located in Texas.

The instant action was initiated pursuant to the Writ of Summons of John and Elaine Frey [as] of February 22, 2002. Though this action asserts many different rights of redress under a variety of legal theories, perhaps the core allegation by the Plaintiffs is that the Gold and Muse Defendants acted in concert to deprive John and Elaine Frey of their respective employment and ownership positions at STO such that the Muse and Gold Defendants could enjoy the fruits of the water purification business to the exclusion of John and Elaine Frey. In particular, they allege that the Gold Defendants did not contest the acquisition of STO (the primary asset of which was the Hanson contract) at the time of the sheriff’s sale. In exchange for that cooperation, the Muse Defendants agreed to reward the Gold Defendants both with employment and an ownership stake in STO’s successor company. Indeed, it is uncontested that the Muse Defendants did employ Dennis Gold at STI following their acquisition of the company, that this employment occurred in the exact office space utilized by STO prior to the sheriff’s sale,

-4- J-A16010-17

and that STO and STI share remarkably similar monikers. STI would eventually rebrand as “Aggregate Solutions, Inc.”

Trial Court Opinion, 10/7/16, at 2-5.

This case proceeded through a lengthy discovery period, during which

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