G. I. Joe's, Inc. v. Nizam

50 P.3d 1282, 183 Or. App. 116, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 1191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 31, 2002
DocketCCV 99-03-185; A112653
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 P.3d 1282 (G. I. Joe's, Inc. v. Nizam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G. I. Joe's, Inc. v. Nizam, 50 P.3d 1282, 183 Or. App. 116, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 1191 (Or. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

*118 LINDER, J.

Plaintiff G. I. Joe’s, Inc. brought this judicial appraisal action to determine the fair value of defendant’s stock after defendant exercised his right to dissent from a proposed merger. See ORS 60.551 to ORS 60.594. The central factual dispute at trial was the existence of certain stock options in favor of Norm Daniels, the president of G. I. Joe’s. Plaintiff presented testimony from Daniels and others that, although certain merger documents omitted any reference to the options, that omission was inadvertent and the options did, in fact, exist. Defendant, relying exclusively on those merger documents, argued that the options did not exist and that, even if they did, Daniels was contractually precluded from exercising them. The trial court believed plaintiffs witnesses, concluded that the options did exist at the time of the merger, and valued defendant’s shares accordingly. Defendant now appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in that conclusion. We affirm.

The undisputed facts reveal that the proposed merger that gave rise to defendant’s right to dissent pursuant to ORS 60.554 was one part of a multi-part transaction, the purpose of which was to allow Daniels to acquire majority control of G. I. Joe’s by buying out the previous majority shareholder. The transaction took place in three parts. First, the company attempted to redeem all of its outstanding shares, except those held by Daniels, who would then own a majority of the company’s shares. Second, Daniels created a holding company called N.D. Holdings, Inc., to temporarily hold all of Daniels’s shares as well as $9.5 million in subordinated debenture notes issued by G. I. Joe’s to partly finance the stock redemption. Finally, N.D. Holdings and G. I. Joe’s merged, giving Daniels majority control of the new G. I. Joe’s corporation.

All shareholders were given the opportunity to redeem their shares. Before the redemption, Daniels owned 92,330 shares of G. I. Joe’s stock. Daniels kept his shares as part of his plan to gain majority control of the company. Defendant and another shareholder (Lindquist) did not redeem their shares. At the end of the first stage of the transaction, therefore, Daniels, Lindquist, and defendant were the *119 only remaining shareholders, with Daniels owning a majority of the outstanding shares. After acquiring majority ownership, Daniels formed N.D. Holdings, which then held Daniels’s stock and the notes, thus completing the second stage of the transaction.

The third stage, when N.D. Holdings and G. I. Joe’s merged into one company, required shareholder approval. Daniels and Lindquist voted in favor of the merger; defendant dissented. Thereafter, pursuant to ORS 60.554, plaintiff determined that the fair value of defendant’s 18,720 shares plus accrued interest was $153,756.81; plaintiff then tendered that amount. Defendant countered by asserting that the fair value of his shares was $203.95 per share, for a total of $3,818,000.

In light of that dispute, plaintiff instituted this appraisal proceeding pursuant to ORS 60.591. That statute provides that, when a demand for payment pursuant to ORS 60.587 remains unsettled, the corporation “shall commence a proceeding” and petition the court “to determine the fair value of the shares and accrued interest.” ORS 60.591(1). The court may then appoint an appraiser to assist in valuing the shares. ORS 60.591(4). Here, the court appointed Corporate Valuation, Inc. Because the parties could not agree about the existence of Daniels’s stock options, Corporate Valuation prepared alternative appraisals, one including and the other disregarding Daniels’s options.

The case then went to trial, where the central dispute was the existence of Daniels’s options. Plaintiff presented testimony that the options existed at the time of the merger but that, through inadvertence, plaintiffs counsel failed to reference the options in any of the merger documents. Specifically, plaintiffs chief outside counsel testified that the options existed up to the point of the merger, although Daniels had agreed to surrender them at the time of the merger as part of his consideration for acquiring majority control of the company. The merger was a “rush job.” While he was preparing for the merger, plaintiffs corporate counsel focused on how G. I. Joe’s capital structure would look as of the effective date of the merger, not the date relevant to the fair value of defendant’s shares, which was immediately *120 before the merger. 1 The merger documents therefore made no reference to Daniels’s options, which were to disappear simultaneously with the completion of the merger. Plaintiff elicited similar testimony from G. I. Joe’s chief financial officer, its accountant, and Daniels. The main thrust, then, of plaintiffs evidence was that the options existed as of the date relevant to determining the fair value of defendant’s shares despite the fact that the merger documents did not reflect their existence.

Defendant did not present any witnesses to refute plaintiffs evidence. Rather, defendant’s evidence consisted of a number of exhibits, most of which were the merger documents that failed to disclose Daniels’s options. Based on what defendant calls that “unambiguous” documentary evidence, he urged the trial court to disregard the testimony offered by plaintiffs witnesses as self serving and to conclude, based on the documentary evidence, that the options did not exist. Additionally, defendant argued that, even if the options did exist, Daniels was precluded by the merger agreement from exercising them, so they should not be considered in determining the fair value of defendant’s shares.

The trial court found that Daniels “held written stock options entitling him to purchase an additional 291,500 shares of G. I. Joe’s stock”; that certain of the merger documents “failed to include the Daniels options”; that “this was an error committed by the company’s principal outside attorney”; and that “Daniels was not contractually precluded from exercising the options.” The court separately concluded that “the evidence overwhelmingly supports the finding of the existence of the options.” Consistently with its factual findings, the trial court took those options into account when it calculated the value of defendant’s shares, ultimately concluding that defendant’s shares were worth a total of $160,618. Consequently, the trial court entered a money judgment in favor of defendant in the amount of $6,861 plus interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 P.3d 1282, 183 Or. App. 116, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-i-joes-inc-v-nizam-orctapp-2002.