Goodridge v. Harvey Group, Inc.

778 F. Supp. 115, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11806, 1991 WL 223157
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 23, 1991
Docket82 Civ. 8691(MEL), 82 Civ. 8692(MEL)
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 778 F. Supp. 115 (Goodridge v. Harvey Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodridge v. Harvey Group, Inc., 778 F. Supp. 115, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11806, 1991 WL 223157 (S.D.N.Y. 1991).

Opinion

LASKER, Senior District Judge.

Arnold Goodridge and his company, New Wave Electronics, Inc. (collectively “Goodridge”), bring this action to recover on contracts between Goodridge and his former company, Components Plus, Incorporated (“Old CPI”), which were assumed by Neboc, Inc., a subsidiary of The Harvey Group, Inc., after Neboc acquired Old CPI. 1 Harvey has presented numerous affirmative defenses and counterclaims which essentially allege securities or common law fraud by Goodridge, his former Old CPI co-owner Frank Fernandez, and another former official of Old CPI, Alfonse Daula. 2 This decision follows a bench trial.

For reasons discussed below, Goodridge’s contract claim is granted, while Harvey’s counterclaims and affirmative defenses are dismissed.

I.

The bench trial and this decision culminate a lengthy litigation history in which many factual issues have been ruled upon and many others have been stipulated by the parties. Familiarity with earlier proceedings is assumed, and this opinion adopts the undisputed facts set forth in the decision of summary judgment motions reported at 728 F.Supp. 275 (S.D.N.Y.1990) as well as the stipulated facts submitted in the Joint Pretrial Order dated March 20, 1991.

From September 1979 through January 21, 1981, Goodridge and Fernandez each owned half the Class A Common Stock in Old CPI, a New Jersey corporation which distributed electronic components to industrial customers primarily in the defense industry.

In roughly June 1980, Harvey officials began to consider acquiring Old CPI, which appeared to them to complement Harvey’s existing activities. On July 7, 1980, Goodridge, Fernandez and Harvey’s Chief Executive Officer Harvey Sampson met and discussed the nature and performance of Old CPI. Fernandez and Goodridge informed Sampson that Old CPI had just completed the most successful fiscal year in its history.

Following the July 7 meeting, Sampson made known to Fernandez and Goodridge that because he had had unsatisfactory dealings with Goodridge he would be unwilling to purchase Old CPI if Goodridge were affiliated with the company. Nevertheless, Harvey officials continued to evaluate prospective acquisitions including Old *120 CPI, and on July 21 met with Fernandez but not Goodridge.

Fernandez and Goodridge meanwhile began negotiating a buyout of Goodridge’s shares in Old CPI. Goodridge’s departure was effected on January 21, 1981, when Goodridge and Old CPI closed on a series of agreements including a promissory note, employment agreement, consulting agreement and guarantee and when Goodridge resigned as a director and officer of Old CPI. 3 These agreements, taken as a whole, provided for immediate payment of $1,444,000 and additional payments over the next ten years to Goodridge. The Consulting and Employment Agreements specifically provided that should Old CPI be acquired by any other entity, that entity would assume in a writing acceptable to Goodridge all of Old CPI’s obligations to Goodridge. After January 21, 1981 Goodridge was no longer a stockholder, officer, director or full-time employee of CPI.

The March 31,1981 Audited Consolidated Financial Statement prepared for Old CPI indicated that Old CPI was obligated to Goodridge for $20,000 per year on the Employment Agreement, plus a total of $550,-000 payable to New Wave on the consulting agreement. The statement fixed the present value of those two agreements at $395,000, and noted that under the agreements neither Goodridge nor New Wave was obligated to perform any services under the contracts. The statement also listed “long term debt” of $124,335 owed to Goodridge under the Note.

Merger discussions between Old CPI and Harvey intensified during early 1981. Goodridge took no part in the negotiations. Harvey’s President, Harvey Sampson, told Fernandez that he was concerned by reports or rumors he had heard that Old CPI engaged in unethical business methods, possibly including bribes; Fernandez assured him that was not the case.

On June 26, 1981, Fernandez and Daula entered into a “Merger Agreement” with Neboc, Inc., Harvey’s subsidiary, pursuant to which Neboc was to acquire all shares of Old CPI and was to change its name to Components Plus, Inc. (“New CPI”). The merger closed on August 5, 1981, with Neboc tendering to Fernandez and Daula 311,-972 shares of Harvey stock, valued by management at $1,747,000, and also paying Old CPI’s legal fees of $56,323, in exchange for Fernandez’s and Daula’s stock in Old CPI. At that time, Fernandez and Daula received five-year employment contracts with Neboc. On August 5, 1981 New CPI entered an “Assumption Agreement” by which it assumed all Old CPI’s obligations to Goodridge. Goodridge’s approval was necessary before completion of the merger, and his attorney did review and authorize the merger agreement before the closing. However, Goodridge did not personally review the various closing documents, nor warrant their accuracy. New CPI continued making all payments required by the contracts.

The Merger Agreement of June 26, 1981, pursuant to which the August closing was completed, contained a number of specific representations by Fernandez and Daula. Among these were:

1. That Old CPI’s financial statements of June 30, 1980 and March 31, 1981 “present fairly the consolidated financial position of CPI ..., and the consolidated results of their operations for the nine *121 months then ended, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles ____” Merger Agreement ¶ 3.5.
2. That as of June 30, 1980 and March 31, 1981 “neither CPI nor any Subsidiary was liable for or subject to any material direct or indirect liability ... known or unknown, fixed or unfixed, ... of a kind as would be reflected on, or reserved for or against ... in a consolidated balance sheet of CPI and the Subsidiaries presenting fairly [their] financial position” except as disclosed in the balance sheets for those dates. Merger Agreement 113.6.
3. That “since March 31, 1981 there has been no change in the business, assets, ... or condition (financial or otherwise) of CPI ... which has had or will have a materially adverse effect on its business ____ Merger Agreement ¶ 3.8.
4. That Old CPI had “made timely payment of all taxes ... due and payable____ Provision in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles has been made in the Final Balance Sheet for the payment of taxes accrued and unpaid at March 31, 1981, whether or not yet due and payable and whether or not disputed. [CPI shall not] have any material liability for Taxes ... for or in respect of any period or periods up to and including the Closing Date,” except as reflected in the March 31, 1981 balance sheet. Merger Agreement 113.9.
5.

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778 F. Supp. 115, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11806, 1991 WL 223157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodridge-v-harvey-group-inc-nysd-1991.