Lozinsky v. Georgia Resources Management, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedSeptember 3, 2010
DocketCivil Action No. 2007-0377
StatusPublished

This text of Lozinsky v. Georgia Resources Management, LLC (Lozinsky v. Georgia Resources Management, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lozinsky v. Georgia Resources Management, LLC, (D.D.C. 2010).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ______________________________________ ) DANIEL LOZINSKY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Civil Action No. 07-377 (JDB) v. ) ) GEORGIA RESOURCES ) MANAGEMENT, LLC, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) ______________________________________)

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

In early 2006, Daniel Lozinsky invested $180,000 in Global Methane Partners, Inc.

("Global Methane") and Georgia Resources Management, LLC ("Georgia Resources"),

companies involved in extracting and selling methane in the Ukraine and the Republic of

Georgia. Dissatisfied with his investment, Lozinsky asked for his money back. When the two

companies refused, Lozinsky sued them for unjust enrichment. Georgia Resources, contending

that Lozinsky reneged on a commitment to invest an additional $165,000, has counterclaimed for

promissory estoppel. The Court held a two-day bench trial on June 17-18, 2010. Upon

consideration of the testimony and exhibits presented at trial and the parties' proposed findings of

fact and conclusions of law, and having made credibility findings as necessary to resolve any

material discrepancies in the relevant testimony, the Court makes the following findings of fact

and conclusions of law.

-1- FINDINGS OF FACT1

1. In mid-February 2006, Daniel Lozinsky met with John Onufrak and Herman Hohauser --

Global Methane's managing director and principal investor, respectively -- to discuss a

potential investment in that company. See Trial Tr. ("Tr.") 71:15-72:22 (Lozinsky).2 The

three men also discussed a potential investment in Georgia Resources, a company which

was to be "created just for the purpose of receiving Mr. Lozinsky's investment." Tr.

270:20-271:1 (Onufrak); see Defs.' Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

("Defs.' Proposed Findings") [Docket Entry 51], at 8-9 ("[Georgia Resources] was

intended by Defendants to have been an entity created specifically for the purpose of

funding and operating [Global Methane's] businesses in the Republic of Georgia. It was

never formally created and does not legally exist as an independent entity.").

2. At this meeting, Onufrak and Hohauser explained to Lozinsky the companies' plans to

remove methane gas from coal mines in the Ukraine and the Republic of Georgia, see

Tr.75:18-20 (Lozinsky), which the companies would then sell, see Tr. 77:14-21

(Lozinsky). They described projects they intended to develop, including planned pilot

1 The Court's findings of fact are based on the testimony of Daniel Lozinsky, Michael Mannix, Ernest Stern, and John Onufrak, as well as on the exhibits and deposition transcripts introduced at trial. These findings discuss only the evidence necessary to the Court's legal analysis. Where the parties have presented conflicting evidence, the Court will make credibility determinations as relevant to resolve the parties' claims. As a general matter, however, the Court found Mannix credible, Lozinsky credible on most matters, Onufrak not credible on several key issues, and Stern's testimony largely unhelpful, since he recalled few specifics. 2 Onufrak has worked with Global Methane since the early- to mid-1990s, see Tr. 253:5- 25 (Onufrak), although the company was only formally incorporated in "maybe 2003 or '5," Tr. 206:13-14 (Onufrak). Onufrak was working full-time for Global Methane at all times relevant to this action. See Tr. 272:25-273:2 (Onufrak). Hohauser has been Global Methane's primary investor since its inception in the 1990s. See Tr. 254:1-3 (Onufrak).

-2- programs in two Ukrainian coal mines. See Tr. 77:12-13 (Lozinsky); 126:24-127:18

(Lozinsky). They told Lozinsky that, in support of these two anticipated pilot projects,

the Overseas Private Investment Corporation ("OPIC"), a U.S.-government agency bank,

was prepared to loan $15.3 million to a consortium in which Global Methane had an

interest. See Tr. 75:25-76:6 (Lozinsky); 77:6-15 (Lozinsky). And they presented

Lozinsky with a Project Information Memorandum that this consortium had prepared for

OPIC in support of its loan application. See Defs.' Ex. 2 (Project Information

Memorandum); Tr. 136:11-137:25 (Lozinsky); 213:3-9 (Onufrak); 233:9-21 (Onufrak).

3. Onufrak and Hohauser insisted to Lozinsky that they needed an investment right away, as

they were just about to leave on a business trip. See Tr. 74:8-12 (Lozinsky). Lozinsky

committed to invest at least $40,000. See Tr. 74:13-17 (Lozinsky); 129:5-18 (Lozinsky).

4. A day or two after this initial meeting, Lozinsky wired a $40,000 investment in

defendants3 to Vancom Financial Services, Inc., a company wholly owned by Hohauser.

See Tr. 76:19-23 (Lozinsky); 238:23-239:1 (Onufrak); Defs.' Ex. 3 (Wire Transfer

Details).

5. One week later, following further conversations with Onufrak and Hohauser, Lozinsky

wired Vancom an additional $40,000 investment in defendants. See Tr. 130:12-14

(Lozinsky); 216:3-20 (Onufrak). Lozinsky wired Onufrak another $50,000 payment in

3 The evidence is conflicting as to whether this $40,000 was intended as an investment in Global Methane, Georgia Resources, or both. It is also unclear precisely what percentage of the companies that Onufrak told Lozinsky, and Lozinsky believed, he would receive for his money. The same is true for subsequent investments that Lozinsky made. These issues do not affect the Court's legal analysis, however, which turns on the fact of Lozinsky's investment, and not its terms.

-3- mid-March, see Tr. 90:15-18 (Lozinsky), and a final $50,000 investment in mid-April.

See Tr. 76:21 (Lozinsky).

6. All of Lozinsky's $180,000 investment went to Global Methane; none went to Georgia

Resources. See Tr. 272:5-11 (Onufrak). Global Methane used this money to pay salaries

-- including Onufrak's -- and other expenses. See Tr. 272:12-24 (Onufrak); 292:22-

293:19 (Onufrak).

7. At some point during the spring of 2006, Lozinsky committed to invest an additional

$165,000 in Georgia Resources. See Tr. 153:5-6 (Lozinsky); 223:25-224:10 (Onufrak).

Onufrak testified that, based on this promise, he represented to Georgia's ministries of

energy and the environment that the company "would be sufficiently capitalized to go

forward" with a methane extraction project in Georgia. Tr. 224:13-12; Tr. 241:20-242:1.

8. Shortly before Lozinsky's final wire transfer in mid-April, Onufrak told him that the

OPIC loan -- which Lozinsky had expected to be finalized in the middle of May -- was

being delayed. See Tr. 134:22-135:19 (Lozinsky). Lozinsky grew suspicious and hired

an attorney, Michael Mannix, to investigate his investment. See Tr. 20:20-22 (Mannix)

("[O]ur initial task was to understand the nature of the investment and the nature of the

companies that were involved in those two endeavors."); 44:20-21 (Mannix) ("[Lozinsky]

provided me whatever he had, which I think, if I remember at the time, was nothing, and

asked me what he should do.").

9. Mannix wrote to Ernest Stern, defendants' attorney who had set up the initial meeting

between Lozinsky, Onufrak, and Hohauser. He stated that Lozinsky had hired him "to

review his potential investment in [Global Methane and Georgia Resources]," and

-4- explained that his "goal is to determine the circumstances of each company and the terms

under which [Lozinsky] might be willing to make an additional investment." Pl.'s Ex. 1

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