Loren E Pitsch Jr v. Pitsch Holding Company Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 29, 2018
Docket340402
StatusUnpublished

This text of Loren E Pitsch Jr v. Pitsch Holding Company Inc (Loren E Pitsch Jr v. Pitsch Holding Company Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loren E Pitsch Jr v. Pitsch Holding Company Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

LOREN E PITSCH JR. , and GARY L PITSCH UNPUBLISHED November 29, 2018 Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 340402 Kent Circuit Court PITSCH HOLDING COMPANY, INC., STEVEN LC No. 07-004719-CR B PITSCH, LAURA M PITSCH and LEWIS D PITSCH

Defendants-Appellees.

LOREN E PITSCH JR. , and GARY L PITSCH

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v No. 340494 Kent Circuit Court PITSCH HOLDING COMPANY, INC., STEVEN LC No. 07-004719-CR B PITSCH, LAURA M PITSCH and LEWIS D PITSCH

Defendants-Appellants.

Before: MURPHY, C.J., and O’CONNELL and BECKERING, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

These consolidated1 appeals arise out of a long and bitter dispute over control of a family owned closely held corporation. The parties are five siblings who are shareholders of defendant Pitsch Holding Company, Inc. (“PHC” or “the company”). Both sides in this dispute appeal as of right from a September 18, 2017 final order. In Docket No. 340402, plaintiffs Loren Pitsch,

1 Loren E. Pitsch Jr v Pitsch Holding Co, Inc, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered October 11, 2017 (Docket Nos. 340402, 34094).

-1- Jr., and Gary Pitsch challenge the trial court’s rulings that they did not reach a settlement agreement in December 2006 to sell their stock to defendants and that they were not oppressed minority shareholders. In Docket No. 340494, defendants PHC, Steven Pitsch, Laura Pitsch, and Lewis Pitsch challenge the trial court’s ruling that Laura Pitsch did not hold voting preferred stock in PHC, and its order that PHC pay plaintiffs’ attorney fees during the course of this litigation. In their respective appeals, both sides challenge the trial court’s ruling that PHC may seek reimbursement or use as a setoff some, but not all, of the payments PHC made to or on behalf of plaintiffs over the course of this litigation. Likewise, both parties argue that the trial court did not properly resolve their company’s deadlock. We affirm the trial court’s rulings, but remand the matter to the trial court so that the court may order dissolution of the company.

I. STATEMENT OF RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1958, Loren Pitsch, Sr.,2 started a demolition business that grew into the array of corporate entities at the heart of this case. In 1974, plaintiff Gary Pitsch joined the business on a full-time basis, followed soon after by Lewis Pitsch. Loren Pitsch, Sr., reduced his role in the business in the mid-1980s, and by 1986, the business had been reorganized into a collection of corporate entities. From 1986 until the formation of PHC in 1993, Gary served as president of the various corporate entities. In 1993, the parties signed a subscription agreement and a shareholder agreement, both prepared by attorneys at the law firm representing Pitsch businesses. In relevant part, the subscription agreement gave each Pitsch parent and child shares of non- voting common stock in PHC, and the right to purchase 10 shares of voting preferred stock for $100 ($10 per share). The subscription agreement deemed Gary, Lewis, and Loren Pitsch to have exercised their right, and gave the other Pitsch siblings until December 31, 1997, to exercise theirs. The shareholder agreement addressed the terms and conditions for stock transfers, sales, or purchases.

The family amended the shareholder agreement on January 30, 1996 to acknowledge that the parties’ sister, Kathleen Pitsch, whom the subscription agreement indicated had opted out of PHC, had sold her remaining shares in PHC, and that Steven Pitsch was working fulltime for PHC and was expected to exercise his subscription rights. Steven did indeed exercise his subscription right on May 1, 1996. At this point, the siblings who held voting preferred stock in PHC were Gary, Lewis, Loren, Steven, and Dale Pitsch. Kathleen had opted out of the business from the beginning, as already indicated, and Gloria Pitsch and defendant Laura Pitsch had not expressed their intent regarding exercise of their subscription rights. In 1997, Gloria disclaimed any interest in exercising her right to subscribe to voting preferred stock,3 leaving only Laura Pitsch to express her intentions before the December 31, 1997 deadline.

2 Loren E. Pitsch, Sr., died in 2003. Unless otherwise indicated, as used in this opinion, “Loren” refers to Loren Pitsch, Jr. 3 Gloria expressed her intent sometime around the death of Dale Pitsch in an airplane crash in July 1997. Subsequently, the company purchased the common stock in PHC owned by Gloria and formerly owned by Dale in accordance with the terms set forth in the shareholder agreement.

-2- Steven and Laura testified at one of the bench trials held in this matter that after Dales’ death but before December 31, 1997, Laura, who was working in Sault Ste. Marie for Pitsch Land Development,4 decided to exercise her right to purchase voting preferred stock. She told Steven to deduct the $100.00 from her paycheck, Steven relayed the information to David Cole, the company controller, and Cole so instructed the bookkeeper. It is undisputed that there is no evidence the company took that deduction. Likewise, it is undisputed that at all times relevant to this appeal, there is no evidence that the company issued Laura a certificate for voting preferred stock or registered her in the company’s stock register as holding voting preferred stock. Dale’s death left Gary, Lewis, Loren, and Steven in charge of the company, and they occasionally called upon Laura to cast the tiebreaking vote when they could not agree. Laura moved back to Grand Rapids from Sault Ste. Marie in 2000, after which she was elected a member and officer of the board of directors and took an active role in corporate governance. In 2002, she cast the deciding vote to replace Gary as president of PHC with Steven, and in 2006, she voted with Steven and Lewis to terminate the employment of Gary and, eventually, Loren.

Steven and Gary tried unsuccessfully to work out the terms pursuant to which PHC would buy Gary’s and Loren’s stock in the company. Gary, Loren, and Steven would later testify that the primary sticking point was defendants’ insistence that Gary and Loren release their rights prior to an appraisal of the company. Steven testified that he wanted such release in the event Gary and Loren did not like the appraisal and decided not to sell. Unable to get defendants to authorize an appraisal of the business without the release, Gary and Loren hired a firm in the summer of 2006 to conduct an appraisal. The firm valued the business at $10 million dollars, which defendants thought grossly inflated.5

In an attempt to move things forward, Gary called a shareholders meeting for December 7, 2006, and asked all the shareholders to bring copies of their stock certificates By this time, his research had indicated to him that Laura had never been issued a certificate for voting preferred stock. Gary’s suspicions were confirmed when all the siblings except Laura produced their stock certificates. After the shareholders meeting, the company’s attorney submitted a proposed

4 Pitsch Land Development, Inc., is not one of the Pitsch entities that comprise PHC. 5 Another sticking point between the parties has been the price of plaintiffs’ stock. Defendants have consistently offered plaintiffs $1.1 million for their stock. Plaintiffs have just as consistently insisted that the price should be determined according the provisions set forth in § 5 of the shareholder agreement. Section 5(a)(i) states that purchase price of stock sold under the shareholder agreement shall be determined annually.

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