Gregory Johnson v. Clair Couturier, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 27, 2009
Docket08-17369
StatusPublished

This text of Gregory Johnson v. Clair Couturier, Jr. (Gregory Johnson v. Clair Couturier, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory Johnson v. Clair Couturier, Jr., (9th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

GREGORY JOHNSON; WILLIAM  RODWELL; EDWARD RANGEL; KELLY MORRELL, Plaintiffs-Appellees, and DARLEEN STANTON, Plaintiff, ROORDA PIQUET & BESSEE, INC., Non-party appearing witness, Witness, v. CLAIR R. COUTURIER, JR., No. 08-17369 Defendant, DAVID R. JOHANSON; NOLL  D.C. No. 2:05-cv-02046- MANUFACTURING COMPANY RRB-GGH EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN AND TRUST; PENSCO, INC.; JOHANSON BERENSON LLP; THE EMPLOYEE OWNERSHIP HOLDING CORPORATION, Employee Stock Ownership Plan; N & NW MANUFACTURING HOLDING COMPANY, INC.; NOLL MANUFACTURING COMPANY, Defendants, and ROBERT E. EDDY, Defendant-Appellant. 

9695 9696 JOHNSON v. COUTURIER

GREGORY JOHNSON; WILLIAM  RODWELL; EDWARD RANGEL; KELLY MORRELL, Plaintiffs-Appellees, and DARLEEN STANTON, Plaintiff, ROORDA PIQUET & BESSEE, INC., Non-party appearing witness, Witness, v. CLAIR R. COUTURIER, JR., No. 08-17373 Defendant, ROBERT E. EDDY; NOLL  D.C. No. 2:05-cv-02046- MANUFACTURING COMPANY RRB-GGH EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN AND TRUST; PENSCO, INC.; JOHANSON BERENSON LLP; THE EMPLOYEE OWNERSHIP HOLDING CORPORATION, Employee Stock Ownership Plan; N & NW MANUFACTURING HOLDING COMPANY, INC.; NOLL MANUFACTURING COMPANY, Defendants, and DAVID R. JOHANSON, Defendant-Appellant.  JOHNSON v. COUTURIER 9697

GREGORY JOHNSON; WILLIAM  RODWELL; EDWARD RANGEL; KELLY MORRELL, Plaintiffs-Appellees, and DARLEEN STANTON, Plaintiff, ROORDA PIQUET & BESSEE, INC., Non-party appearing witness, Witness, v. No. 08-17375 CLAIR R. COUTURIER, JR., Defendant-Appellant,  D.C. No. 2:05-cv-02046- and RRB-GGH ROBERT E. EDDY; DAVID R. JOHANSON; NOLL MANUFACTURING COMPANY EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN AND TRUST; PENSCO, INC.; JOHANSON BERENSON LLP; THE EMPLOYEE OWNERSHIP HOLDING CORPORATION, Employee Stock Ownership Plan; N & NW MANUFACTURING HOLDING COMPANY, INC.; NOLL MANUFACTURING COMPANY, Defendants.  9698 JOHNSON v. COUTURIER

GREGORY JOHNSON; WILLIAM  RODWELL; EDWARD RANGEL; KELLY MORRELL, Plaintiffs-Appellees, and DARLEEN STANTON, Plaintiff, ROORDA PIQUET & BESSEE, INC., Non-party appearing witness, Witness, v. No. 08-17631 CLAIR R. COUTURIER, JR., D.C. No. Defendant-Appellant,  2:05-cv-02046- and RRB-GGH ROBERT E. EDDY; DAVID R. OPINION JOHANSON; NOLL MANUFACTURING COMPANY EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLAN AND TRUST; PENSCO, INC.; JOHANSON BERENSON LLP; THE EMPLOYEE OWNERSHIP HOLDING CORPORATION, Employee Stock Ownership Plan; N & NW MANUFACTURING HOLDING COMPANY, INC.; NOLL MANUFACTURING COMPANY, Defendants.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California Ralph R. Beistline, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted May 7, 2009—San Francisco, California JOHNSON v. COUTURIER 9699 Filed July 27, 2009

Before: Procter Hug, Jr., Michael Daly Hawkins, and Richard C. Tallman, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Tallman JOHNSON v. COUTURIER 9703

COUNSEL

Theodore M. Becker (argued), Thomas M. Peterson, Joseph E. Floren, and Elizabeth A. Frohlich, Morgan, Lewis & Bock- ius LLP, for appellant Clair R. Couturier, Jr.

Christopher J. Rillo, Lars C. Golumbic, and Dipal A. Shah, Groom Law Group Chartered, for appellant David R. Johan- son.

Gary D. Greenwald (argued), Ron Kilgard, and Gary A. Gotto, Keller Rohrback, PLC, and Terence J. Devine, Devine, Markovits & Snyder, LLP, for the appellees.

Carol A. De Deo, Deputy Solicitor of Labor, Timothy D. Hauser, Associate Solicitor, Plan Benefits Security Division, Elizabeth Hopkins (argued), Counsel for Appellate and Spe- cial Litigation, and Robyn M. Swanson, Trial Attorney, U.S. Department of Labor, for the Secretary of Labor as amicus curiae supporting appellees.

OPINION

TALLMAN, Circuit Judge:

In his capacity as president of Noll Manufacturing Com- pany (“Noll”) and its successors, Clair R. Couturier, Jr., together with his fellow directors, diverted almost $35 million 9704 JOHNSON v. COUTURIER of corporate assets—at least a third of the corporation’s value, even in Couturier’s own estimation—to his own possession through the buyout of deferred compensation agreements. Plaintiffs, all of whom are participants in Noll’s employee stock ownership plan (“ESOP”), filed suit against Couturier and two other directors alleging, inter alia, breach of fidu- ciary duties under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”). This case requires us to consider whether the district court abused its discretion when it enjoined advancement of defense costs and froze Couturier’s assets. We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion, but remand to allow the district court, in the first instance, to set the terms and conditions of a surety bond suf- ficient to secure Couturier and the other defendants against any harm that might wrongfully befall them as a result of the issuance of each injunction.

I

A

Noll, a closely held corporation founded in 1942, manufac- tured and sold galvanized sheet metal products. Through restructuring, Noll was succeeded first by N&NW Holding Company (“N&NW”) in 2001, and then by The Employee Ownership Holding Company (“TEOHC”) in 2004.

Noll’s founder, who died in 1980, established the ESOP in 1977 to give the company’s employees an opportunity to share in its success. His will reflects an intent that the ESOP own the entire company. However, for reasons we cannot dis- cern from the record, the ESOP did not acquire full ownership of Noll until 2001.

Clair R. Couturier, Jr., became President of Noll in 1999. Noll’s Board of Directors designated Couturier the sole trustee for the ESOP as of April 24, 2001. Attorney David R. Johanson, who had previously represented the ESOP in con- JOHNSON v. COUTURIER 9705 nection with its leveraged purchase of all remaining Noll stock, was appointed a Noll director on June 20, 2001, joining Couturier and Noll’s general counsel on the Board. However, after the transfer of ownership to N&NW later that year, Cou- turier and Johanson remained as the sole directors.

This litigation traces its genesis to the sizeable deferred compensation awarded to Couturier during his tenure as presi- dent of Noll and its successors. Prior to 2001, retired Noll executives were entitled to continue receiving 75 percent of their base salary, with an adjustment made every three years, under a Compensation Continuation Agreement (“CCA”). In 2001, however, Johanson drafted three documents that tied deferred executive compensation to company value: (1) an Equity Incentive Plan (“EIP”) establishing an incentive stock option plan for key management personnel; (2) an Incentive Stock Option Agreement (“ISO”) granting Couturier 80,000 shares at a strike price of $34;1 and (3) a Value Enhancement Incentive Plan (“VEIP”) creating additional synthetic equity. At the time these plans were enacted, one director reportedly opined that this “is not too good” for the ESOP; they were nonetheless approved by the Board on June 13, 2001.2

After the reorganization of Noll under N&NW, Johanson and Couturier, remaining as the sole directors, orchestrated additional incentive agreements in February 2002. The 2002 EIP allowed for issuance of up to 110,000 shares, with no more than 93,500 shares being awarded to a single grantee. The 2002 ISO again granted to Couturier 80,000 shares at a strike price of $34 per share. The 2002 VEIP created addi- tional synthetic equity for Couturier. Couturier and Johanson 1 The effect of the 2001 ISO is unclear; the governing EIP allowed for issuance of only 50,000 shares, with a grant to any single employee not exceeding 25,000 shares. 2 Although the board minutes reflect that all three directors, including Couturier, voted to approve these compensation programs, one director later claimed that he had abstained from the vote. 9706 JOHNSON v.

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Gregory Johnson v. Clair Couturier, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-johnson-v-clair-couturier-jr-ca9-2009.