ICD Holdings S.A. v. Frankel

976 F. Supp. 234, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14382, 1997 WL 563209
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 5, 1997
Docket96 CIV. 2499(LAK)
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 976 F. Supp. 234 (ICD Holdings S.A. v. Frankel) 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
ICD Holdings S.A. v. Frankel, 976 F. Supp. 234, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14382, 1997 WL 563209 (S.D.N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAPLAN, District Judge.

The plaintiff in this case was the purchasing vehicle in a 1994 management buyout of ICD, Inc. (“ICD”), a large international dealer in petrochemical based commodities. It brings this action against Alfred M. Frankel and Jacques Leviant, who sold the ICD shares to plaintiff, and Richard A. Eisner & Co. (“Eisner”), certified public accountants who prepared certain materials contemplated by the purchase agreement for use in determining the price. Ml defendants move to dismiss the complaint.

Facts

This is the second action concerning this transaction, the first having occasioned three opinions by this Court that set out the pertinent aspects of the purchase agreement and the nature of the dispute between the buyer and the sellers. 1 There is, in consequence, no need to repeat any of that discussion here, and the Court will assume familiarity with the prior opinions. It is important, however, to focus on the nature and procedural history of the prior action in view of the former adjudication arguments raised by the defendants here.

The Prior Action

In brief summary, the plaintiff in this case, ICD Holdings S.A. (“Holdings”), purchased all of the shares of ICD from Frankel and Leviant for (1) $5 million in promissory notes, and (2) cash equal to the Book Value, as defined by the purchase agreement, less $5.9 million. The notes were guaranteed by Holdings’ two shareholders, Messrs. deGeus and Loffelhardt. The overall purchase price was subject to a post-closing adjustment in which the buyer or the sellers, as the case might be, would pay to the other any amount necessary to adjust the consideration transferred at the closing to an amount equal to the adjusted purchase price.

*237 A dispute concerning the purchase price developed following the closing. Holdings then defaulted on the notes. In consequence, Frankel and Leviant sued Holdings and deGeus and Loffelhardt on the notes and guarantees, respectively, in New York Supreme Court. Holdings, deGeus and Loffelhardt removed that prior action to this Court.

The prior action was commenced not by the filing of a complaint, but by the service of a motion for summary judgment in lieu of complaint as permitted in such cases by Section 3213 of the New York Civil Practice Law and Rules. As there was no complaint, Holdings, deGeus and Loffelhardt filed no answer. 2 Rather, they responded to the motion for summary judgment, contending, by way of defense, that Frankel and Leviant fraudulently had overstated the purchase price.

In Frankel I, this Court held that Holdings, by the terms of the notes it had signed, waived the defense of fraud in the inducement of the notes. 3 While it held that deGeus and Loffelhardt had not waived such a defense to the guarantees, it went on to conclude that they had not raised a genuine issue of fact as to the existence of any material overstatement of the purchase price and therefore granted summary judgment on the notes and guarantees. 4 It is important, moreover, to focus on- the precise nature of the fraudulent inducement defense asserted by deGeus and Loffelhardt and on the basis for the Court’s ruling.

The structure of this buyout transaction was complex. The purchase agreement, which is the document that obliged deGeus and Loffelhardt to execute their guarantees at the closing, conditioned their obligation to do so (as well as the obligation of Holdings to proceed with the purchase) on the receipt of a preliminary balance sheet showing the Estimated Cash Purchase Price — the Book Value as defined less $5.9 million — to be within ten percent of $67.8 million. 5 In other words, if the Estimated Cash Purchase Price, determined in accordance with the purchase agreement, had been less than $61.02 million or more than $74.58 million, Holdings, deGeus and Loffelhardt would have had the right to walk away from the deal. The accountant’s statement that was delivered at or prior to the closing — and that allegedly was overstated — showed an Estimated Cash Purchase Price of $64.9 million and thus fell within the range in which the buyer and guarantors were obliged to proceed with the transaction.

In order to defeat the buyers’ motion for summary judgment on the guarantees, Frankel I held, deGeus and Loffelhardt were obliged to adduce evidence sufficient to raise a genuine issue of fact as to the existence of a material overstatement of the Estimated Cash Purchase Price. 6 It concluded that they had not done so, “principally because the evidence is insufficient to permit the inference that properly prepared balance sheets as at September 30, 1993 would vary materially from those [the accountant] prepared.” 7

DeGeus and Loffelhardt sought relief from the judgment under Rule 60(b)(2), relying on additional accounting evidence in support of their position that there had been a material overstatement. Among the evidence proffered was an opinion of a Price Waterhouse *238 & Co. accountant, solicited after the date of the decision in Frankel I, to the effect that there had been an overstatement of the Estimated Cash Purchase Price of $5.4 million. 8 The Court, however, denied the motion on the alternative grounds that (i) the evidence had been available to deGeus and Loffelhardt when the original motion had been litigated and, (ii) in any case, was immaterial given the structure of the purchase agreement. The Court noted “the Guarantors can avoid their guarantees ... only if they can establish that they would not have signed the guarantees if they had known the true state of affairs.” 9 They were obliged by the purchase agreement to execute and deliver the guarantees provided the Estimated Cash Purchase Price fell anywhere within a broad range. The Court went on to say that the amount of the overstatement alleged by Price Waterhouse was less than the $6.78 million that the Court regarded as necessary to have given Holdings, deGeus and Loffelhardt the right to walk away from the deal. 10 The Court indicated also, however, that a smaller “error might well give [the Guarantors] a claim for a refund of part of the purchase price ...” 11

The Complaint in this Action

This action was commenced during the pendency of the prior action. 12 The amended complaint, unsurprisingly, tells essentially the same story that Holdings, deGeus and Loffelhardt advanced in their effort to defeat summary judgment on the notes and guarantees save that Eisner here is a party to the suit. The complaint contains ten causes of action.

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Bluebook (online)
976 F. Supp. 234, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14382, 1997 WL 563209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/icd-holdings-sa-v-frankel-nysd-1997.