Mann v. Estate of Meyers

61 F. Supp. 3d 508, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 163560, 2014 WL 6629667
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedNovember 21, 2014
DocketCiv. No. 11-1679 (KM)(SCM)
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 61 F. Supp. 3d 508 (Mann v. Estate of Meyers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mann v. Estate of Meyers, 61 F. Supp. 3d 508, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 163560, 2014 WL 6629667 (D.N.J. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

KEVIN McNULTY, District Judge.

I. Introduction

Thomas Mann worked at Paramus Auto Mall (“PAM”), a car dealership, from December 1995 through April 2010. The majority shareholder and dealer-operator of the PAM dealership was Eugene Meyers, who is now deceased. Mann claims that Meyers and his successors took several actions that damaged Mann either as an employee or as a shareholder of PAM. As an employee, Mann alleges that Meyers wrongfully terminated him because of his [514]*514age. As a shareholder of PAM, Mann alleges that Meyers and his successors transferred PAM’s Hummer franchise to another corporation, usurping an opportunity that rightfully belonged to PAM; that Meyers purchased the real estate on which PAM was located, usurping another corporate opportunity; that Meyers diverted to another corporation certain bonuses that PAM received from General Motors; and that Meyers’s heirs wrongfully withheld a profit distribution owed to Mann in 2010.

Many of the same allegations were made in a prior lawsuit1 filed in 2008 by another minority shareholder who worked for PAM, Ronald Barna. Barna was largely successful in his lawsuit. The arbitrator found that Meyers and his successors were liable to Barna and to PAM. See Sections I.C, III.A.2, infra. Mann, however, was not a party to the Barna lawsuit. He instead filed this action in March of 2011.

Before this Court are four motions for summary judgment. The motions concern two topics: Mann’s claims of age discrimination, and the potential collateral estoppel effect of the prior judgment in Barna’s lawsuit.

In the ag.e discrimination motions, Meyers’s estate argues that Meyers, an individual, is not a proper defendant under federal discrimination laws. Meyers’s estate and PAM also argue that Mann does not qualify as an “employee,” and therefore possesses no viable claim for age discrimination. In addition, Meyers’s estate and PAM argue in separate motions that they should be granted summary judgment on the merits with respect to the age discrimination claims.

In the collateral estoppel motions, Mann seeks to use findings from the Barna litigation against the defendants in this case. The Fernandez defendants, too, argue that certain findings from the Barna litigation should collaterally estop Mann here.

II. Factual Background2

A. Employment and shareholder status

Meyers recruited Mann to work at Para-mus Auto Mall in December 1995. See [515]*515Mann 2013 Deposition, 7. Initially hired as a finance and insurance manager, Mann eventually became general manager and general sales manager. See Mann 2013 Deposition, 7,14.

Over the course of his employment, Mann also came to own nearly 10% of the shares of PAM. See Mann 2009 Deposition, 15-16, 30-33. Mann did not pay cash for any of his shares; they were “awarded” to him by Meyers. See Mann 2009 Deposition, 15-16 and 31-32; Mann Stmt. Undisputed Facts, ¶ 12. Until his death in 2010, Meyers was the majority shareholder of PAM, always owning at least 67% of the outstanding shares. See Mann Stmt, of Undisputed Facts, ¶ 7-14.

B. Background of Mann’s Claims as a Shareholder

1. Hummer franchise

PAM was a General Motors dealership-which, until about 2002, sold Chevrolets. In 2001 or 2002, GM granted PAM a second franchise that entitled it to sell GM’s Hummer vehicles. See Interim Award, 4; Mann 2013 Declaration, ¶¶ 14-15. For that purpose, Meyers formed a corporation called Paramus Hummer, LLC, of which he owned 50%, and Mann and Ronald Bar-na each owned 25%. See Mann 2013 Declaration, ¶ 15. Mann and Barna operated the new Hummer franchise, managing it much as they had managed the Chevrolet business. See Mann 2013 Declaration, ¶¶ 14-17. Hummer became the “highest grossing vehicle on PAM’s lot” and “one of the most successful Hummer dealerships in the United States.” See Interim Award, 4.

In January of 2007, Meyers transferred the Hummer franchise to a new corporate entity called Hummer of Mahwah, LLC. Meyers dissolved Paramus Hummer LLC. PAM received no compensation in connection with the transaction. Meyers thereafter stopped selling Hummers at PAM, and instead sold them from a new location in Mahwah, New1 Jersey. See Interim Award, 5-6.

[516]*516GM had an incentive program wherein it provided cash awards to dealerships that had exemplary Hummer sales and customer satisfaction. See Interim Award, 6-7. From 2004 through the end of 2006, GM issued $1,355,000 in such “Standards for Excellence” or “SFE” bonuses based on Hummer sales at the PAM dealership. See Interim Award, 6-7, 17. GM held the bonus money in escrow pending the completion of the new Mahwah Hummer dealership. See Interim Award, 7. After Meyers moved the Hummer operations to Mahwah in 2007, GM released the SFE bonus money to Mahwah Hummer. See Interim Award, 7. None of the bonus money was paid to PAM. Interim Award, 7.

2. 194 Realty

PAM is located at 194 Route 17 in Para-mus, New Jersey. See Interim Award, 7. Although the dealership itself is owned by PAM, the property on which the dealership is located was formerly owned by a subsidiary of General Motors. Id. In 2007, GM “expressed an interest in selling the property.”' Id. at 18. Meyers purchased the property through an entity called 194 Realty, LLC. Id. at 7. Meyers did not offer or share the opportunity to purchase the property with PAM or with its shareholders. Id. at 7-8. The purchase price of the property in 2007 was $6.9 million; by August 2009, the property was appraised at $13.3 million.

3. 2010 bonuses

PAM paid a bonus to Mann every year from 2002 through 2009, and to Barna from 1995 through 2009. See Interim Award, 26-27, 10. In 2010, after Meyers’s death, PAM was being run by Melody Patón, the executrix of Meyers’s estate and co-trustee of his trust. Id. at 9. In December 2010, Patón announced that there would be no bonuses that year. GM, she explained, was requiring improvements to the PAM facility, and she would need to devote a substantial amount of cash to that. Id. at 10. That same year, however, Patón arranged a $2 million loan from PAM to the Meyers estate, with which the estate paid “its estate and income tax liabilities.” Id. at 11.

C. Background of Collateral Estop-pel Claims: Barna Lawsuit

Like Mann, Ronald Barna worked at PAM and held a minority interest in the corporation. In 2008, Barna brought suit against Meyers and others alleging various causes of action arising from the transactions described above. See Barna Complaint. Barna also alleged that his termination in April 2010 was wrongful, although, unlike Mann, he did not allege age discrimination. Id. That suit was referred to, and ultimately decided by, an arbitrator. See Interim Award. The arbitrator issued an “interim” award and three “Post Arbitration Motion Opinion[s].” See 73-2, Exhs. C, D, E.

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Bluebook (online)
61 F. Supp. 3d 508, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 163560, 2014 WL 6629667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-estate-of-meyers-njd-2014.