Lotspeich v. Golden Oil Co.

1998 NMCA 101, 961 P.2d 790, 125 N.M. 365
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1998
Docket18248
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1998 NMCA 101 (Lotspeich v. Golden Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lotspeich v. Golden Oil Co., 1998 NMCA 101, 961 P.2d 790, 125 N.M. 365 (N.M. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

DONNELLY, Judge.

{1} Defendant Golden Oil Company appeals from an order awarding summary judgment to Plaintiff on his complaint alleging breach of contract, and dismissing Defendant’s counterclaim alleging fraud. Defendant argues that there are two reasons why summary, judgment was improperly granted on its counterclaim: (1) that Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment was not directed at Defendant’s counterclaim for fraud; and (2) that material issues of fact exist concerning the matters alleged in Defendant’s counterclaim. We hold that there is a material issue of fact as to whether Defendant was justified in relying on Plaintiffs alleged misrepresentations, and reverse.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE

{2} Plaintiff was the chief executive officer of Cobb Resources Corporation (Cobb), as well as a director and principal shareholder from the 1970s through the early 1990s. In late 1990 Defendant was successful in its campaign to obtain a controlling interest in Cobb, and Defendant ultimately obtained 39.3% of Cobb’s outstanding common stock. Defendant forced Plaintiff out of his position as Cobb’s chief executive officer and chairman of the board, in part because Defendant asserted it was uncomfortable with alleged self-dealing that it discovered between Plaintiff and Cobb. Ralph T. McElvenny, Jr., who was Defendant’s chief executive officer, chairman of the board, and president, assumed those same positions for Cobb.

{3} On April 5, 1991, Defendant entered into a complex asset purchase agreement, contingent upon the approval of Cobb’s shareholders. Under the terms of the agreement, Defendant acquired Cobb’s oil and gas interests in exchange for common stock of Defendant corporation. In negotiating the purchase agreement, Cobb’s board of directors, including McElvenny who served as its chairman, were aware that Cobb also owned certain mining interests. Cobb’s shareholders approved the asset purchase agreement on March 18, 1992, and Cobb distributed to its shareholders 90% of the stock in the Defendant corporation that it received pursuant to the asset purchase agreement.

{4} As part of the asset purchase agreement with Cobb, Defendant agreed to assume certain compensation claims that Plaintiff asserted were owed to him by Cobb. On February 12, 1993, the parties completed negotiation of a settlement of Plaintiffs compensation claims. At the same time that Plaintiff and Defendant were negotiating their settlement, Defendant was also negotiating with some principal Cobb shareholders to trade back their distributed stock in the Defendant corporation in return for Cobb stock owned by Defendant.

{5} According to affidavits filed by Defendant, in the course of their review of the value of Cobb’s stock, McElvenny and Darryl L. Emmert, Defendant’s vice president, requested information from Plaintiff regarding two assets that had been virtually written off on Cobb’s balance sheet: an interest in a copper mine known as the Copper Flats Project in Sierra County, New Mexico, and common stock held in American Boulder Gold, an Australian mining company. Since the 1960s, Plaintiff had intermittently been a stakeholder in the Copper Flats Project and he had a working knowledge of the mining industry in that region. At the time of Defendant’s inquiry, Cobb owned 51% of the Copper Flats Project and Plaintiff owned the remaining 49% through his ownership of Hydro Resources Corporation. Additionally, by virtue of Plaintiff’s relationship with Cobb, he had been directly involved in the London Mine Venture, a joint mining venture between Cobb and a subsidiary of American Boulder Gold. In early 1992 Defendant was aware both that (a) the Copper Flats Project included proven reserves and (b) there were only minimal ongoing operations in connection with the London Mine Venture and the mine had environmental water discharge problems.

{6} According to McElvenny and Emmert, Plaintiff informed them that Cobb’s interests in the Copper Flats Project and the American Boulder Gold stock were worthless. Defendant asserts that it relied on Plaintiff’s statements in its negotiations of the terms of settlement of his compensation claims against Cobb. Several months later, the Copper Flats Project and the American Boulder Gold stock generated over $400,000 in income for Cobb, and the value of Cobb’s shareholders’ equity rose by 350%. Subsequently, Defendant alleges Plaintiff admitted to McElvenny that, at the time he told Defendant’s officers that Cobb’s interests in the Copper Flats Project and the American Boulder Gold securities were worthless, he was aware of the imminent likelihood of the deals pertaining to those interests that later proved to be of great benefit to Cobb. McElvenny alleged that if he had known the true value of Cobb’s assets, based on the deals that Plaintiff had not disclosed, he would not have negotiated the same terms with Plaintiff in order to settle his compensation claims against Cobb, nor would he have negotiated the same terms with Cobb shareholders to trade back their stock in Defendant in return for Cobb stock owned by Defendant.

{7} Defendant refused to comply with the terms of the parties’ 1993 compensation claims agreement, and Plaintiff filed suit in 1996. Defendant counterclaimed that Plaintiffs misrepresentations as to the value of the Copper Flats Project and the American Boulder Gold stock constituted fraud. Upon motion of Plaintiff, and after a hearing, the trial court granted summary judgment for Plaintiff, stating in a letter opinion that Defendant’s claim of fraud was not viable in that, as a matter of law, it could not claim reliance on Plaintiffs valuation of Cobb’s interests because (a) Defendant knew that Plaintiff had a substantial ownership in the Copper Flats Project and American Boulder Gold, (b) the compensation agreement that is the basis of Plaintiffs claim for breach of contract was an arm’s length transaction and was negotiated over a period of time, (c) Defendant had a majority interest in the property, and (d) Defendant was a sophisticated and successful business owner. The trial court also stated that the assertion in affidavits submitted by Defendant that Plaintiff committed fraud against Defendant was merely “an attempt to manufacture a material issue of faet[,]” and that a mere assertion cannot defeat a motion for summary judgment absent other evidence of fraud. Defendant takes this appeal from the order granting summary judgment to Plaintiff and dismissing its counterclaim.

WHETHER THE MERITS OF DEFENDANT’S COUNTERCLAIM WERE PROPERLY BEFORE THE TRIAL COURT

{8} Defendant argues that summary judgment with respect to its counterclaim for fraud was improper because (1)' Plaintiffs memorandum in support of his motion did not assert that no issue of material fact existed with respect to the counterclaim, see Rule 1-056(D)(2) NMRA 1998; and (2) Plaintiff failed to file any evidentiary materials contravening Defendant’s claim that Plaintiff made false statements to McElvenny and Emmert. We need not address this contention because, as explained below, we determine that the award of summary judgment should be reversed on other grounds.

WHETHER SUMMARY JUDGMENT WAS PROPERLY GRANTED ON DEFENDANT’S COUNTERCLAIM OF FRAUD

{9} Defendant contends that summary judgment was improper because there were genuine issues of material fact concerning its counterclaim of fraud.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1998 NMCA 101, 961 P.2d 790, 125 N.M. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lotspeich-v-golden-oil-co-nmctapp-1998.