Haart v. Scaglia

CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Haart v. Scaglia (Haart v. Scaglia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haart v. Scaglia, (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2023).

Opinion

Haart v Scaglia (2023 NY Slip Op 50143(U)) [*1]
Haart v Scaglia
2023 NY Slip Op 50143(U)
Decided on February 27, 2023
Supreme Court, New York County
Borrok, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on February 27, 2023
Supreme Court, New York County


Julia Haart, Plaintiff,

against

Silvio Scaglia, PAOLO BARBIERI, JEFFREY FEINMAN, DDK & COMPANY, LLP, FREEDOM HOLDING, INC., Defendant.




Index No. 652373/2022

Plaintiffs by:
Anderson Kill, P.C., 1251 Avenue of the Americas, 42nd Floor, New York, NY 10020

Defendants by:
Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP, 51 W 52nd St, New York, NY 10019
Hodgson Russ LLP, 605 Third Avenue, Suite 2300, New York, NY 10158 Andrew Borrok, J.

The following e-filed documents, listed by NYSCEF document number (Motion 005) 74, 75, 76, 77, 91, 93, 94, 95, 96 were read on this motion to/for DISMISS.

The following e-filed documents, listed by NYSCEF document number (Motion 006) 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 92, 97, 98, 99 were read on this motion to/for DISMISS.

Upon the foregoing documents, Silvio Scaglia and Freedom Holding, Inc. (hereinafter, collectively, the Scaglia Defendants)'s motion (Mtn. Seq. No. 005) must be granted to the extent that Julia Haart's claims predicated on an alleged promise to make her a 50% owner of Freedom must be dismissed. This lawsuit is one of five between the parties, one of which was decided in Delaware after a two-day trial, and another of which is currently pending before another Justice of this court. Certain of the pending motions may be decided based on prior findings or rulings in those other actions.

As discussed below, the Delaware court (Zurn, Vice-Chancellor) has already considered Ms. Haart's claim that Silvio Scaglia promised to make her a 50% owner of Freedom Holdings, Inc. (Freedom) and rejected it because Ms. Haart failed to prove any actionable promise to make her a 50% partner:

Haart's defenses of ratification and acquiescence both fail because there was nothing to ratify or to which Scaglia could acquiesce Haart argues that by signing the ERA, and by his other statements, Scaglia ratified or acknowledged the parties' agreement to evenly split Freedom's shares. Her position is built on her incorrect reading of the ERA and [*2]other documents. Haart has not proven any agreement to evenly split Freedom's shares or voting power. Haart has failed to carry her burden to show that Scaglia ever transferred her half of Freedom's preferred shares or made an actionable promise to do so. She offers no transaction that Scaglia could ratify or acknowledge

(NYSCEF Doc. No. 31, at 42-43 [emphasis added]). In entering judgment for Mr. Scaglia on all counts following a two day trial that included over 300 joint exhibits, live testimony from three witnesses and deposition testimony from two other witnesses, the Court held that "the evidence reveals that Haart never owned an equal stake of Freedom's preferred stock" (id., at 3). As discussed below, the Delaware court considered nearly all of the allegations at issue in this lawsuit and made very specific factual findings which compel dismissal of the lion share of Ms. Haart's claims.

Dismissal of Ms. Haart's fraud claims is also required because the Stock Power (hereinafter defined) by its express terms indicates that it does not convey 50% of Freedom's preferred stock and that as such she can not have reasonably relied otherwise:

FOR VALUE RECEIVED, I, SILVIO SCAGLIA, residing at 70 Vestry Street, PHS, New York, NY 10013, do hereby sell, assign and transfer unto:
JULIA HENDLER HAART, residing at 70 Vestry Street, PHS, New York, NY 10013, Sixty One Thousand Eight Hundred Thirty Two (61,832) Shares of the One Hundred Twenty Three Thousand Six Hundred Sixty Five (123,665) Shares of the Preferred Stock of FREEDOM HOLDING, INC., standing in my name on the books of said Corporation represented by Certificate(s) No.(s) 101 herewith, and do hereby irrevocably constitute and appoint JEFFREY FEINMAN, CPA, as attorney-in-fact to transfer the said certificate on the books of the within named Corporation, with full power of substitution.in-the premises


(NYSCEF Doc. No. 58, ¶ 90 [emphasis added]). For completeness, Ms. Haart also is not entitled to assert fraud claims based on allegations that Mr. Scaglia never told her about the existence of the preferred stock and/or Mr. Scaglia retaining control over Freedom. As discussed below, having never made an actionable promise to make her a 50% partner of Freedom, it simply does not matter whether she knew about the preferred stock. In addition, on the record before the Court (and as discussed below and extensively in the Delaware Lawsuit), Mr. Scaglia transferred pre-marital assets to Freedom in exchange for voting control. Ms. Haart became CEO of EWG knowing this — i.e., that all of the assets came from Mr. Scaglia and received common stock after the parties were married. Thus, it does not matter that she found out about the preferred stock in the context of a potential SPAC or other deal with Gabelli Group Partners (Gabelli), Jeffries or someone else who did not include her in the negotiations because these companies had no plan of retaining her if the transactions were successful. (NYSCEF Doc. No. 31 at 12).

Put another way, the fraud claims which are predicated on this "promise" are not actionable because (x) the Delaware Court already held that there was no actionable promise, (y) there could be no reasonable reliance on the Stock Power because by its express terms it does not convey 50% of Freedom's preferred shares and (z) given the foregoing transfers by Mr. Scaglia, there simply was not actionable deception.

Therefore, based on collateral estoppel or res judicata the claims in this action for [*3]fraudulent inducement (first cause of action), fraudulent concealment (second cause of action), breach of contract (sixth cause of action) and promissory estoppel (tenth cause of action) against Mr. Scaglia must be dismissed. The Court notes additionally that Ms. Haart is not entitled to damages seeking a transfer of equity to make her a 50% partner in Freedom given that this is exactly the relief rejected by the Delaware court.

Mr. Scaglia is not however entitled to dismissal of the cause of action (fifth cause of action) seeking a declaration that Ms. Haart owns 61,832 shares (49.9995957%) of the preferred stock. The Delaware court specifically did not reach this issue because it did not have to do so. Having found that Ms. Haart is not a 50% owner, and having rejected the argument that the Stock Power ratified a promise to make her an equal partner (because Ms. Haart failed to prove an actionable promise to make her a 50% partner), there could be no deadlock or dissolution predicated on deadlock. As such, resolving whether the Stock Power otherwise was effective according to its terms in conveying stock to Ms. Haart was not relevant or necessary to the determination of the claims asserted in that action. Thus, it can not be said that Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
Haart v. Scaglia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haart-v-scaglia-nysupct-2023.