Ikon Office Solutions Inc. v. Steven Eifert

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 31, 2003
Docket14-01-01104-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ikon Office Solutions Inc. v. Steven Eifert (Ikon Office Solutions Inc. v. Steven Eifert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ikon Office Solutions Inc. v. Steven Eifert, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Reversed and Rendered and Opinion filed July 31, 2003

Reversed and Rendered and Opinion filed July 31, 2003.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-01-01104-CV

IKON OFFICE SOLUTIONS, INC., Appellant

V.

STEVEN EIFERT, Appellee

On Appeal from the 215th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 97-61183

O P I N I O N

A jury found in favor of appellee Steven Eifert on his common law fraud claim against appellant IKON Office Solutions, Inc.  The jury awarded $2 million dollars in actual damages and $2 million dollars in punitive damages, and the trial court rendered judgment on the verdict.  On appeal, IKON presents six issues challenging the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the affirmative findings of fraud, actual damages and punitive damages, and the negative findings on IKON=s defenses of waiver and ratification.  Concluding there is no evidence to support Eifert=s fraud claim, we reverse and render judgment Eifert take nothing.


FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This case arises out of IKON=s 1996 acquisition of Global Services, Inc., a Houston based office products dealership, with sales and leasing interests in the Texas Gulf Coast area.[1]  IKON is a nationwide office products distributor.  In terms of distributors (as opposed to integrated manufacturers like Xerox), Global was IKON=s largest Houston competitor in 1995.  Eifert owned virtually all of Global=s common stock.

The acquisition was structured as a sale/merger in which IKON acquired Eifert=s stock in Global in exchange for payment to Eifert of an amount of IKON=s publicly traded stock valued at $35,838,799 and other consideration.[2]  The transaction was accomplished by means of two contracts: (1) a APlan and Agreement of Reorganization@ (the AAcquisition Agreement@) governing IKON=s acquisition of Global=s stock and (2) an AEmployment and Non-Competition Agreement@ (the AEmployment Agreement@) governing Eifert=s role with IKON after the acquisition.


The negotiations leading up to the acquisition spanned several months.  In late 1995, IKON designed an acquisition strategy called AOperation Preemptive Strike,@ intended to preempt acquisition of copier dealers by competitors.  At the time, IKON was in transformation from being a roll-up company, which acquired dealerships and let them continue operations as essentially independent units competing against each other, to being an integrated operating company under one market president.  Under AOperation Preemptive Strike,@ IKON gave a target company Aa window of opportunity@ to join the IKON organization.  As explained by IKON president Kurt Dinkelacker, IKON was going to start looking more like an integrated operating company, and Ait would be very difficult to bring additional copier dealerships into the fold once we had decided who was going to run a given marketplace.@

In October 1995, Dinkelacker called Eifert to ask whether Eifert would be interested in selling Global.  According to Eifert, Dinkelacker said Eifert=s decision would determine how the Houston market place would be run.  Dinkelacker did not tell Eifert IKON was transforming its operating structure.  Dinkelacker came to Houston to meet with Eifert.  At that meeting Eifert told Dinkelacker he wanted a challenging career for himself and his employees, and Dinkelacker assured Eifert his requirements would be accommodated.  At trial, Dinkelacker also stated he made a commitment to Eifert that Global would be a stand-alone company for two years.  The 1995 meeting concluded with Dinkelacker telling Eifert to expect a call from Mike Dudek, IKON=s vice-president of acquisitions.  In November, 1995, Eifert wrote Dudek to inform Dudek that Global=s attorney, William York, would be handling both the estate tax planning and the documentation of the transaction if it proceeded.

Dudek met with Eifert in Houston in early January 1996.  According to Eifert, Dudek offered Eifert the presidency of IKON=s Houston marketplace in the copier division, a position that involved Aheading up@ Global and the eight or nine Houston-area IKON copier dealers that were then reporting to Charlie Hollis as president.  Eifert agreed to a price of $42 million, a price he found acceptable if they could Aget some other matters arranged.@

On January 24, 1996, IKON sent Eifert a letter of intent incorporating the $42 million purchase price, and Eifert signed and returned the letter. 

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