John F. Valinote v. Stephen R. Ballis

295 F.3d 666, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 12672, 2002 WL 1370005
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 2002
Docket01-3768
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 295 F.3d 666 (John F. Valinote v. Stephen R. Ballis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John F. Valinote v. Stephen R. Ballis, 295 F.3d 666, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 12672, 2002 WL 1370005 (7th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.

Omnibus Financial Group L.L.C. fell short of its founders’ hopes. Formed by four investor-members in 1996, it was down to two (John Valinote and Stephen Ballis) by mid-1997, and in 1999 Valinote stopped participating in the firm’s management. Early in 2000 Valinote decided to withdraw from the foundering concern and asked Ballis for an “exit strategy.” This led Ballis to initiate the buy-sell clause of Omnibus’s operating agreement. This procedure, common in closely held businesses, allows one investor to set a price on the shares (for an LLC, the membership interests); next the other investor decides whether to buy the first investor’s interest, or sell his own, at that price. The possibility that the person naming the price can be forced either to buy or to sell keeps the first mover honest.

Nothing in the operating agreement prescribes how investments are to be valued for this purpose. (A mechanical valuation for use in the event of a member’s death or. resignation does not apply to voluntary transactions among members.) Ballis named a price of -$1,581.29 for each 1% interest in Omnibus, implying a total of -$79,064.25 for the 50% stake that each of the two held. Valinote then decided to sell his interest to Ballis at that price — effectively paying Ballis $79,064.25 to take his 50% off his hands. At the time (surely this was no coincidence), Omnibus owed Valinote exactly that sum to repay a loan that Valinote had made to the firm. So the bottom line was that in March 2000 Valinote surrendered his interest to Ballis, who became the sole owner of Omnibus Financial Group. No money changed hands. Valinote could have acquired Bal-lis’s interest on the same terms but must have thought that the real value was even lower than the negative price that Ballis had specified.

Later events confirmed the dim estimate of the venture’s prospects. In December 2000 Omnibus defaulted on a $200,000 debt to a bank. The bank then collected on the guarantees of this debt that Valinote and Ballis had made. Valinote demanded that Ballis indemnify him for his $100,000 share and for any future payments that Valinote may be required to make. (Omnibus has at least one other bank loan of $400,000, though it may be secured by real estate.) Ballis refused, and the district court — acting through a magistrate judge on the parties’ consent, see 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), in this suit under the diversity jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) — held that Ballis is under no obligation to do so. 2001 WL 1135871, 2001 U.S. Dist. Lexis 15339 (N.D.Ill. Sept. 24, 2001). The magistrate judge concluded that the purchaser in a buy-sell transaction under Omnibus’s operating agreement acquires the seller’s membership interest, and that any obligations of the seller to the firm are extinguished, see ¶ 10.C.2 (the buying member must “[ajssume and become liable for all obligations of the selling Member to the Company”), but that obligations (such as guarantees) to third parties are unaffected. *668 That’s the implication of language dealing with obligations to the firm while omitting' other obligations. Paragraph 9.J of the operating agreement requires members to indemnify each other for obligations under guarantees, but the court held that this refers to current members, not to former members such as Valinote.

The operating agreement offers some succor to former members: ¶ 9.E.1 requires indemnification of any “person” for liability reasonably incurred while that person was a member. That covers payment on a guarantee that enabled Omnibus to raise operating capital. But the indemnitor under ¶ 9.E.1 is “[t]he Company”, which is to say Omnibus, and Omnibus is broke. Likewise Valinote’s right to indemnity under the law of suretyship — by paying on the guarantee, Valinote stepped into the bank’s shoes and acquired its $100,000 claim — is a right against Omnibus. What Valinote wants, however, is indemnity from Ballis, who unlike Omnibus remains solvent. That claim lacks support in ¶ 9.E.1 and the law of suretyship, and it runs up against the principle that corporate shareholders or LLC members are not liable for the venture’s debts. That’s the point of limited liability: people put at risk the amounts they invest (or contract for explicitly, as by guarantees) but not their full personal wealth. Omnibus’s operating agreement makes this explicit: ¶ 9.D says that members “shall look solely to the assets of the Company for the return of their capital ... [and] shall have no recourse against the Members, or any Member ... except as specifically provided in this Agreement.”

Valinote does not contend that anything in the operating agreement “specifically” requires indemnity from Ballis. Instead he insists that it is so strongly implicit in the buy-sell procedure that it should be treated as if explicit. First, he observes, the buy-sell procedure allows a member to extricate himself from the company; that can’t be done unless all financial entanglements are wrapped up. Otherwise a departing member remains at risk for things that have passed beyond his control; the firm might be sound at the time of withdrawal and be driven to ruin by the remaining members, triggering the guarantees. That uncompensated and uncontrollable risk should be eliminated by an indemnity requirement, Valinote insists. Second, Valinote contrasts the operation of the buy-sell procedure with the consequences of an outright resignation. Under ¶ 11.C a resigning member receives the mechanically computed value of each interest and “shall ... forfeit all further interest in the Company, but shall not be relieved of or released from any personal guarantees or other personal covenants”. No such provision appears in ¶ 10, which covers the buy-sell procedure; this implies to Valinote that sellers under ¶ 10 are relieved of guarantees. Why would he have sold to Ballis at a negative price under ¶ 10 when he could have resigned under ¶ 11 and demanded repayment of the $79,000 loan, unless the ¶ 10 procedure shifted the financial burden of the guarantees? Third comes the coup de grace: because Omnibus was a limited liability company, membership interests cannot be worth less than zero. Shares of a bankrupt corporation trade for a positive price as a result of limited liability, for shares are worth at worst the scrap value of the paper, and the firm might recover. Yet Ballis valued each 1% interest in Omnibus at -$1,581.29. This must mean, Valinote insists, that Ballis was covering in advance the risk of indemnity on any guarantees. How else could the price go negative?

There is some force to these observations, but not enough to justify overriding the venerable principle of limited liability, *669 which may be vital to a business’s ability to raise capital. Especially not when the operating agreement reinforces that principle by proscribing personal liability “except as specifically provided in this Agreement.” The argument that “strongly implicit” is as good as “explicit” is equivalent to a plea that the real explicit language of the agreement — particularly the clause limiting personal liability — be overridden.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 F.3d 666, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 12672, 2002 WL 1370005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-f-valinote-v-stephen-r-ballis-ca7-2002.