Jeffrey Bailey v. Shirley Bailey

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 24, 2018
Docket17-20014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jeffrey Bailey v. Shirley Bailey (Jeffrey Bailey v. Shirley Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffrey Bailey v. Shirley Bailey, (5th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Case: 17-20014 Document: 00514441778 Page: 1 Date Filed: 04/23/2018

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit No. 17-20014 FILED April 23, 2018 Lyle W. Cayce JEFFREY C. BAILEY; RIG-UP SERVICES, L.L.C., Clerk

Plaintiffs - Appellants

v.

SHIRLEY BAILEY; ROGER BAILEY; BAILEY CONSULTING, L.L.C.; RIG- UP ELECTRICAL SERVICES, INCORPORATED,

Defendants - Appellees

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas USDC No. 4:12-CV-1711

Before DAVIS, HAYNES, and COSTA, Circuit Judges. GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge:* A near decade-long family dispute involving Jeffrey Bailey and his parents, Shirley and Roger Bailey, is before us a second time. Jeffrey 1 purchased the assets of his parents’ company in 2008. Before that sale, Jeffrey was in charge of the company’s operations. From the first quarter of 2007 until

* Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R. 47.5.4. 1 Because this case involves three family members with the same last name (Shirley,

Roger, and Jeffrey Bailey), we will refer to the parties by their first names. Case: 17-20014 Document: 00514441778 Page: 2 Date Filed: 04/23/2018

No. 17-20014 the execution of the purchase agreement, the company failed to forward its employees’ payroll taxes to the IRS. After the sale, Jeffrey sought a declaratory judgment that his parents are responsible for the unpaid taxes. In the parties’ earlier visit to this court, we held that the sales agreement required the parents’ company to pay any tax liabilities accruing before the sale. But we remanded because Shirley and Roger had argued “the Agreement was unenforceable because Jeffrey Bailey induced it through fraud.” Bailey v. Bailey, 584 F. App’x 220, 221 (5th Cir. 2014). The district court then held a bench trial on that fraudulent inducement defense. It concluded that Jeffrey fraudulently induced his parents into entering into the sale because he knew about the outstanding liability but did not disclose it to them. As a result, the court declared Jeffrey responsible for the unpaid tax liability. Jeffrey now argues that a jury should have decided the issue, that the evidence did not support a finding of fraudulent inducement, and that in any event the inducement defense would not support an order requiring Jeffrey to pay the presale taxes. We reject his first two contentions and thus uphold the finding of fraudulent inducement. But we agree that a finding of fraudulent inducement does not allow a court to rewrite the contract that made the parents liable for those taxes. So we remand to allow Shirley and Roger to elect whether they want to rescind the contract, which is the remedy they originally sought in asserting fraudulent inducement. I. We recite the facts in the light most favorable to Shirley and Roger because the factfinder ruled in their favor. They owned Rig-Up Electrical Services, Inc. (Electrical), an Arkansas corporation with a satellite location in Channelview, Texas. Shirley served as Electrical’s president, while her son Jeffrey served as Executive Vice President of the Texas location. In 2007, Shirley and Roger were considering retirement and no longer wanted to 2 Case: 17-20014 Document: 00514441778 Page: 3 Date Filed: 04/23/2018

No. 17-20014 manage Electrical’s operations. They left Jeffrey in charge of managing the company. Although Shirley retained the title of President, she assumed a smaller function at the company and even stopped paying herself. Michelle Reed, Electrical’s bookkeeper, was responsible for handling the company’s books, including calculating its weekly payroll, tax deposit, and operating expenses. With Jeffrey in charge of managing the company, Shirley’s only remaining role was to make weekly draws on Electrical’s line of credit at an Arkansas bank based on information provided by Reed for the amounts needed to cover the company’s expenses. After Shirley would transfer the funds needed on a weekly basis from the Arkansas bank to another bank in Texas, Reed would disburse the money from the Texas account. In January 2008, Jeffrey, who started a new company under the name Rig-Up Services, L.L.C. (Services), expressed interest in purchasing Electrical’s assets. To help secure financing, Jeffrey hired Roy Johnson to serve as Electrical’s Chief Financial Officer. Jeffrey and Johnson then hired Harris Arthur, a certified public accountant, to review Electrical’s financial records and provide accurate financial reports that a lender would accept. Electrical’s payroll and required tax deposits were computed on a weekly basis using accounting software. In April or May of 2008, Arthur realized that the software showed that payroll taxes had been sent to the IRS when bank records showed they had not. This concerned Arthur because the “apparent tax liability looked awful[ly] high.” He first asked Reed if she had made the payments. After not receiving a satisfactory answer, he then talked to Jeffrey and Johnson about the tax liability he had discovered. On July 29, with the issue still not resolved, Arthur sent a letter to Jeffrey asking him to sign a power of attorney so a request could be sent to the IRS for information showing Electrical’s history of payroll tax 3 Case: 17-20014 Document: 00514441778 Page: 4 Date Filed: 04/23/2018

No. 17-20014 payments. He confirmed with the IRS a few days later that Electrical owed over a million dollars in unpaid payroll taxes. Meanwhile, the IRS sent two letters to Shirley and Roger requesting Electrical’s tax returns for both unemployment and payroll taxes because they had not been timely filed. After receiving the second tax return request in late July, Shirley immediately faxed it to Jeffrey at the Channelview office. During a phone conversation, Jeffrey assured her that he had taken care of the problem. On August 12, Jeffrey and his parents executed the asset purchase agreement. Shirley sold Electrical’s assets at an $8 million discount ($4 million when the asking price on the market was $12 million) to her son because of the family tie and her trust in him to run the business. Soon after the sale, Arthur sent a letter to Shirley explaining that Electrical had been withholding funds from its employees’ paychecks but not transferring the money to the IRS. This information had been kept from Shirley until after the deal closed. In an email sent six days before the execution of the agreement, Johnson instructed Arthur to “[f]ocus on the Cash Flow Budget for Wells Fargo now” and to “leave the tax thing alone for now.” Shirley thus was surprised to learn that Electrical had an outstanding payroll tax liability. She testified that neither Reed nor her son had told her about it. Once everyone knew about the problem with the payroll taxes, the parties disputed who had to pay them. Jeffrey filed this diversity suit in federal court seeking a declaratory judgment that the obligation belongs to Shirley, Roger, and Electrical. Under the terms of the agreement, only certain preexisting “liabilities and obligations” of Electrical transferred to Services. Those specified liabilities did not include payroll taxes, so we held in the first appeal that Services and Jeffrey were not contractually liable for the outstanding payroll taxes. See Bailey, 584 F. App’x at 221–22. But we 4 Case: 17-20014 Document: 00514441778 Page: 5 Date Filed: 04/23/2018

No. 17-20014 remanded for consideration of the parents’ defense that they would not have sold the assets to Jeffrey at the steep discount had they been told about the tax liability. Id. On remand, the district court agreed after a bench trial that Jeffrey fraudulently induced the sale.

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Jeffrey Bailey v. Shirley Bailey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffrey-bailey-v-shirley-bailey-ca5-2018.