Koshy v. Sachdev

477 Mass. 759
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 2017
DocketSJC 12222
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 477 Mass. 759 (Koshy v. Sachdev) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koshy v. Sachdev, 477 Mass. 759 (Mass. 2017).

Opinion

Lenk, J.

We are called upon in this case to construe for the first time G. L. c. 156D, § 14.30, the corporate dissolution statute. That statute allows a shareholder to petition a judge of the Superior Court to dissolve a corporation in the event of a deadlock between its directors. See G. L. c. 156D, § 14.30 (2) (i).

George T. Koshy and Anupam Sachdev are the sole shareholders and directors of Indus Systems, Inc. (Indus). After years of deepening dissension and acrimony between the two, Koshy filed a petition in the Superior Court in 2012, pursuant to the corporate dissolution statute, seeking to dissolve Indus. Koshy also brought claims against Sachdev for breach of fiduciary duties and, after a jury-waived trial had taken place, but prior to the issuance of the judge’s decision, filed a separate claim for contempt of court. The judge rejected all of Koshy’s claims and Sachdev’s counterclaims, and dismissed Koshy’s complaint for contempt. Koshy appealed, and we transferred the matter to this court on our own motion.

We conclude that the utter impasse as to fundamental matters of corporate governance and operations shown to exist in these circumstances gave rise to a state of “true deadlock” such that the remedy of dissolution provided by the statute is permissible. See comment to G. L. c. 156D, § 14.30, 25A Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. at 71 (Thomson/West 2005). Since dissolution is a discretionary remedy, however, we remand the matter to the Superior Court for a determination whether it is the appropriate remedy in these circumstances. In addition, because a number of the claims in the complaint for contempt were not raised at trial, we vacate and set aside the judgment dismissing that complaint, and we remand the matter for consideration of the allegations in the complaint concerning conduct that occurred after the trial. 2

*761 1. Background. We recite the facts found by the trial judge, 3 supplemented with references to undisputed facts in the record.

a. Formation and growth of Indus. As one of the motion judges observed, “[tjhis case concerns the demise of a long-standing business relationship between two men who were once close friends.” The parties formed Indus in April, 1987, after working together for several years at another company. Indus provides ‘“computer aided design” (CAD) services, creating and storing digital renderings of ‘“existing manual drawings, sketches and other information supplied by client organizations.” Koshy and Sachdev each own fifty per cent of Indus’s shares and serve as its sole directors. They are both authorized to act on the company’s behalf.

After a few years of growing pains, Indus developed a steady market for its services. By the end of 1997, the company was generating revenues of approximately $700,000 annually. In June, 1999, Indus was awarded a United States Government Services Administration contract, which allowed it to bid on projects for agencies of the Federal government. To help meet the new wave of demand created by this contract, the parties established eSystems Software Pvt. Ltd. (eSystems), an Indian corporation, to provide support services to Indus. 4

Building upon its success, Indus obtained a Federal ‘“streamlined technology acquisition resources for services” contract (STARS contract) in 2004. It allowed government clients to purchase products and services from Indus without having to go through a competitive bidding process. The STARS contract, which was effective through November 30, 2011, gave Indus access to a new client base and provided approximately sixty per cent of the company’s revenue from 2004 to 2010. By 2007, Indus’s revenues exceeded $2 million annually.

b. Parties’ dispute. Sometime in the late 2000s, the relationship between the parties began to fall apart. They developed a fundamental difference of opinion concerning the future of Indus. While Koshy wanted the company to focus primarily on its existing services for government agencies, Sachdev believed that it should explore new markets. Both parties viewed their coun *762 terpart’s vision of Indus’s future as gravely flawed. Koshy saw Sachdev’s efforts to develop new markets as quixotic and costly, while Sachdev considered Koshy’s focus on existing clients myopic and shortsighted. This difference in viewpoints bred growing distrust as well, as is evident from a dispute arising around 2010 in connection with payments made from Indus to eSystems. While Sachdev preferred to make prepayments to eSystems for services to be performed, Koshy favored payments only for services rendered. Koshy believed that prepayments, which could not easily be recovered due to jurisdictional obstacles, provided Sachdev with a means clandestinely to direct company resources into new projects. Notwithstanding Koshy’s stated concerns, Sachdev routinely made prepayments to eSystems without consulting with Koshy.

As these disagreements strained the parties’ relationship, an incident in the fall of 2011 furthered its disintegration. At that time, Indus had approximately $1.4 million in retained earnings. Koshy wanted this money to be paid out to himself and Sachdev as a distribution, while Sachdev did not. In November, 2011, Koshy wrote himself a check from Indus’s corporate account, in the amount of $690,000, as a distribution, without Sachdev’s consent. Koshy encouraged Sachdev, who was in India at the time, to take a matching distribution. Sachdev instead reacted by effectively locking Koshy out of the company. He initiated a lawsuit against Koshy on behalf of Indus, seeking a return of the distribution; stopped payment of Koshy’s salary; terminated his company credit cards; and changed the locks on the door of Indus’s offices. He also refused to consent to a tax distribution to the parties, as had been the practice in prior years. Koshy subsequently placed the $690,000 in an escrow account.

As this dispute was ongoing, each party offered to buy out the other, based on evaluations of Indus’s worth created by consultants that each had hired. Sachdev offered to purchase Koshy’s shares for $480,000. Koshy rejected that offer and tendered his own offer to purchase Sachdev’s shares for approximately $2.8 million; Sachdev rejected that proposal. Ultimately, the $690,000 was returned to Indus, and in June, 2012, the complaint was dismissed. Koshy’s salary, company credit cards, and access to his office were restored. The relationship between the parties, however, continued to spiral downward.

The parties’ welling antipathy for and toxic distrust of each other inevitably began to impinge upon the day-to-day operations *763 of Indus. In December, 2011, without consulting Koshy, Sachdev hired Michael Xifaras to help with the company’s sales. Xifaras replaced Roger Geilen, a long-time Indus salesperson, who had worked largely with Koshy. Koshy and Xifaras did not get along, as Koshy believed that Sachdev had hired Xifaras, in effect, as his replacement. The hostility between the two broke out into open conflict when Xifaras sent an extremely critical electronic mail message to Koshy, with a copy to Sachdev, which included a variety of insults. 5

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477 Mass. 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koshy-v-sachdev-mass-2017.