Holmes v. Perry (In Re Holmes)

296 B.R. 567, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 922, 2003 WL 21905207
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedAugust 8, 2003
Docket19-30147
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 296 B.R. 567 (Holmes v. Perry (In Re Holmes)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Perry (In Re Holmes), 296 B.R. 567, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 922, 2003 WL 21905207 (Ga. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT F. HERSHNER, Jr., Chief Judge.

William K. Holmes, Plaintiff, filed on May 7, 2003, a motion for summary judgment. James E. Perry, Jr. 1 (hereafter “Defendant”) and J.E. Perry Farms, Inc. filed on May 8, 2003, a motion for summary judgment. The Court, having considered the motions, the record, and the arguments of counsel, now publishes this memorandum opinion.

Plaintiffs ancestors, around 1820, owned some 7,000 acres of land in Laurens County and Bleckly County, Georgia (hereafter the “Coley Place”). Parts of the Coley Place, over the years, were acquired by third parties.

Plaintiffs “dream” was to reassemble the Coley Place under his ownership and to develop a quail hunting plantation. *569 Plaintiff began acquiring parts of the Coley Place in 1985.

James E. Perry, Sr. is Defendant’s father. Defendant’s father owned a 368 acre tract (the “Perry Place”) 2 located in Laurens County and Bleckly County. The Perry Place had been part of the Coley Place. Defendant farmed about one-half of the Perry Place. 3 The remainder of the Perry Place was timberland. Plaintiff wanted the buy the Perry Place. Plaintiff approached Defendant on a number of occasions over a number of years. Defendant declined to sell. 4

Plaintiff sent the “Perry Family” a letter dated June 24, 1998, which states, in part: “It [the Perry Place] has become the most important physical thing in my life outside of my family. It will absolutely tear me up inside and break my heart if I’m not able to get it back into the old family land. This is not your fault, that is just the way it is. You are all absolutely fine people and that is why [I] am bearing my soul in my last desperate attempt to buy the land.”

Plaintiff, in the letter, made a “cash offer” of $960,000 for the Perry Place. Plaintiff also offered to let Defendant take part or all of the sale proceeds in World-Com stock. 5 Plaintiff offered to guarantee that the stock’s value would double within three years. Plaintiff offered to “legally secure this guarantee”. Plaintiff, in his deposition, testified that he, rather than Defendant, came up with the idea of offering WorldCom stock. Defendant again declined to sell.

Defendant, in the fall of 1998, decided to sell the Perry Place. 6 Plaintiff made a written offer dated January 22, 1999. Plaintiff offered to buy 35 acres 7 for $211,000 or the entire Perry Place, some 368 acres, for $1,110,000. Plaintiffs written offer stated that Defendant could take part or all of the sale proceeds in World-Com stock and that Plaintiff would guarantee that the stock would double in value within three years. Defendant made a counteroffer to sell the 35 acres for $250,000 or the entire Perry Place for $1,500,000. Plaintiff decided to buy the entire Perry Place for $1,500,000.

Defendant’s father held record title to the Perry Place. Defendant and his father consulted with an attorney and an accountant. They were advised that, for tax purposes, Defendant’s father should convey title to the Perry Place to J.E. Perry Farms, Inc. Defendant’s father and his wife owned one-half of the stock of J.E. Perry Farms, Inc. and would receive one-half of the sale proceeds, $750,000. Defendant and his wife, Edith W. Perry, owned the other one-half of the stock of J.E. Perry Farms, Inc. and would also receive $750,000.

Defendant decided to take $350,000 in cash and $400,000 in WorldCom stock. 8 *570 Plaintiff and Defendant had agreed to “cap the value” of the stock at $80 per share. Thus, Defendant and his wife would receive $850,000 in cash and 5,000 shares of WorldCom stock. Plaintiff agreed to guarantee that the value of the stock would double within three years. Plaintiff also agreed to secure his guarantee by giving Defendant and his wife a first priority deed to secure debt on the Perry Place. Plaintiff, in his deposition, testified that nothing prevented him from just saying “no” to the transaction other than his desire to acquire the Perry Place. Plaintiff also testified that he believed “the stock was going to go up and it [his guarantee] was going to be covered anyway”.

Plaintiff was the sixth largest shareholder of WorldCom, Inc. 9 WorldCom stock was worth some $80 per share in March of 1999. 10

The closing on the Perry Place occurred on March 10, 1999. Plaintiffs attorney handled the closing. Defendant’s father signed a warranty deed conveying title to the Perry Place to J.E. Perry Farms, Inc. Defendant as president, and Defendant’s wife as corporate secretary, signed a warranty deed conveying title to the Perry Place from J.E. Perry Farms, Inc. to Plaintiff. Plaintiff paid $1,500,000 for the Perry Place. Plaintiffs attorney, as the closing attorney, distributed from his escrow account, the sale proceeds to Defendant’s father and his wife, and to Defendant and his wife. 11 Defendant then gave Plaintiff a check for $400,000 for 5,000 shares of WorldCom stock. Plaintiff telephoned and told his stock broker to transfer 5,000 shares of WorldCom stock to Defendant. Thus, Defendant and his wife received $850,000 in cash 12 and 5,000 shares of WorldCom stock.

Plaintiff signed a Conditional Guarantee Agreement dated March 10, 1999, in favor of Defendant and his wife. In the agreement, Plaintiff guaranteed that Defendant’s WorldCom stock 13 would be worth at least $800,000 at some point between March 10, 1999 and March 9, 2002 (i.e. double in value within three years). If the stock failed to double in value, Plaintiff agreed to pay Defendant the difference between $800,000 and the “highest value for which [the stock] was traded at ... on March 9, 2002.” Plaintiff, in his deposition, testified that “the purpose of the whole concept when I brought it up was to guarantee him [Defendant] that the stock that he [Defendant] took would double in value.... All my intent was to guarantee him another $400,000.” Defendant could sell any or all of his stock during the three year period without changing the guarantee agreement. Plaintiff secured his “pos *571 sible indebtedness” by giving Defendant and his wife a first priority deed to secure debt dated March 10, 1999 on the Perry Place. The Conditional Guarantee Agreement provides that it was “part of the inducement for the sale, conveyance and delivery” of the Perry Place.

Plaintiff signed a deed to secure debt dated March 10, 1999, in favor of Defendant and his wife.

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296 B.R. 567, 2003 Bankr. LEXIS 922, 2003 WL 21905207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-perry-in-re-holmes-gamb-2003.