KINGSLEY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC v. Sly

820 F. Supp. 2d 1011, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120555, 2011 WL 5008520
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedSeptember 30, 2011
DocketCV10-02243-PHX-NVW
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 820 F. Supp. 2d 1011 (KINGSLEY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC v. Sly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KINGSLEY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC v. Sly, 820 F. Supp. 2d 1011, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120555, 2011 WL 5008520 (D. Ariz. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER

NEIL V. WAKE, District Judge.

I. Background..............................................................1014

II. Personal Jurisdiction......................................................1017

III. Arbitration...............................................................1018

A. Defendants Sly and Brian Sly & Company................................1019

1. Trustee Standing.................................................1019

2. PosL-Filing Buy-In to the Arbitration Clause........................1019

B. Arbitration by Estoppel................................................1020

1. MS Dealer, the Narrow Approach, and the Broad Approach............1020

2. MS Dealer and the Ninth Circuit...............■....................1021

3. Carlisle and the Return to State Law ...............................1021

4. Federal Law Based On “Traditional Principles of State Law”...........1023

a. “Traditional Principles” of Equitable Estoppel....................1023

b. MS Dealer’s Broad Approach Compared to “Traditional

Principles”.................................................1023

c. The Narrow Approach Compared to “Traditional Principles”.......1024

d. The Facts of this Case Compared to “Traditional Principles”.......1024

5. State Law.......................................................1025

C. Arbitration through Agency............................................1025

1. Arbitration and Agency Generally..................................1026

2. Defendant Huffs Agency Relationship ..............................1026

3. Defendant Bean’s Agency Relationship..............................1027

D. Unconseionability.....................................................1028

IV. Attorney Fees............................................................1028

V. Conclusion ...............................................................1028

Before the Court are (1) “Defendants Thomas Cunningham and Jane Doe Cunningham’s Motion to Dismiss or Alternatively, Motion to Compel Arbitration and Stay Litigation” (Doc. 22) and (2) “Defendants Brian Nelson Sly, Brian Sly and Company, Inc., Brian Sly and Company, Wilbur Anthony Huff, and Thomas J. Bean’s Motion to Compel Arbitration and Stay Litigation” (Doc. 23). The parties have since stipulated to dismiss Defendant Jane Doe Cunningham, thus resolving that part of the Cunninghams’ motion (see Docs. 47-48). The motions to compel arbitration will be granted as to Defendant Bean, but denied as against the other Defendants. The motion to dismiss Thomas Cunningham for lack of personal jurisdiction will be denied.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Kingsley Capital Management is an Arizona limited liability company con *1015 trolled by Dr. Bruce Kingsley, an Arizona resident. Plaintiff Bruce Paine Kingsley MD IRA Rollover is a trust for which Kingsley is the trustee. Kingsley himself is not a plaintiff, but at all times relevant to this action, Plaintiffs acted at Kingsley’s direction. For purposes of this order, there is no need to distinguish between Plaintiffs’ actions and Kingsley’s actions. The Court’s use of “Kingsley” below therefore refers to actions taken by Bruce Kingsley himself, as well as the actions he caused Plaintiffs to take.

According to Kingsley’s complaint, he met Defendant Brian Sly in 1994. A friendship resulted. In 2005, Sly began pitching certain investments to Kingsley. One such investment involved an air filter company. Kingsley did not invest, and the air filter company apparently failed.

Sly followed up with another investment opportunity, this one involving workers’ compensation insurance. This investment took the form of membership interests in certain limited liability companies. Sly did not personally own such, membership interests, but had invested through two trusts for which he is trustee. Many of these LLCs changed their names during the course of relevant events, but most of them had a name related to the words air or oxygen — perhaps a holdover from the defunct air filter business. Distinguishing between the various LLCs is not important for purposes of this order, and the Court will therefore generically refer to Sly’s workers’ compensation investment and the LLCs that effectuated it as “Oxygen.”

Supposedly, Sly and other Oxygen investors (who, like Sly, invested indirectly through trusts or business arrangements) had acquired a workers’ compensation carrier and hoped to expand its business. Expanding its business, however, required increased reserves. Sly therefore pitched to Kingsley the chance to invest in Oxygen. If Kingsley invested, Oxygen would add his investment to its insurance reserves, and Kingsley would receive investment returns based on insurance premiums collected. Sly told Kingsley that Sly’s Oxygen investment had been earning 20% returns.

Kingsley did not invest in Oxygen immediately. He was wary of Sly’s main business partner in the Oxygen investment, Defendant Wilbur Anthony Huff. Kingsley knew that Huff had once been convicted of mail fraud. 1 Sly explained that Huff had never really done anything wrong, but felt compelled to plead guilty in the face of prosecutorial threats that his father would also be charged in the same case. Kingsley nonetheless maintained his distance from Oxygen.

In January 2008, Sly invited Kingsley to attend an upcoming “investor reward trip” at the Phoenician Resort in Phoenix. This trip would bring Oxygen investors up-to-date on the progress of the investment and would also provide an opportunity for a more detailed pitch of the Oxygen investment to potential investors such as Kingsley.

Kingsley attended the investor reward trip at the Phoenician, which took place in March 2008. All of the Oxygen investors attended, as did one other potential investor whom the complaint does not name. As described by Kingsley, this investor meeting focused mostly on pitching Oxygen to the potential investors. Sly described Oxygen’s structure and also introduced various other investors and principal actors. These included Huff, described as “the man who makes it happen”; Defendant Thomas J. Bean, supposedly “in charge of operations”; Defendant Charles *1016 J. Antonueci, Sr., “the President of Park Avenue Bank of New York and [Oxygen’s] banker”; and Defendant Thomas Cunningham, “the accountant.” (Doc. 1-3 at ¶ 51.) Each of these Defendants presented a rosy picture of Oxygen’s prospects.

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Bluebook (online)
820 F. Supp. 2d 1011, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120555, 2011 WL 5008520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingsley-capital-management-llc-v-sly-azd-2011.