Maverick Benefit Advisors, LLC Mountain Benefit Associates, LLC Taylor H. Haynes and Elisabeth A. Wasson v. David J. Bostrom Bostrom Enterprises, LLC and Mountain States Review, Inc.

2016 WY 96, 382 P.3d 753, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 122, 2016 WL 5851917
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2016
DocketS-16-0030
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2016 WY 96 (Maverick Benefit Advisors, LLC Mountain Benefit Associates, LLC Taylor H. Haynes and Elisabeth A. Wasson v. David J. Bostrom Bostrom Enterprises, LLC and Mountain States Review, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maverick Benefit Advisors, LLC Mountain Benefit Associates, LLC Taylor H. Haynes and Elisabeth A. Wasson v. David J. Bostrom Bostrom Enterprises, LLC and Mountain States Review, Inc., 2016 WY 96, 382 P.3d 753, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 122, 2016 WL 5851917 (Wyo. 2016).

Opinion

FOX, Justice.

[¶1] The purchasers of a health claims administration company learned that they had not acquired all the assets they contracted to purchase. After continuing to operate the business for 18 months, they stopped making payments on the Promissory Note *755 and commenced an action asserting breach of contract, among other claims. The seller counterclaimed for breach of contract, seeking full payment under the Asset Purchase Agreement, and the purchasers raised the affirmative defense that seller was first to breach. At trial, at the close of the purchasers’ evidence, the district court granted seller’s Rule 50 motion for judgment as a matter of law. It held that the purchasers failed to prove damages, and noted that rescission was no longer available because they elected to seek damages. The district court went on to enter judgment in favor of the seller, ruling that the purchasers’ first-to-breach affirmative defense was no longer available. We conclude that because they continued operating the business long after they had knowledge of the seller’s alleged breach, the purchasers waived the first-to-breach affirmative defense, and we affirm the district court’s order.

ISSUES

[¶2] We consolidate and restate the issues as follows:

1. May the purchasers assert the first-to-breach affirmative defense on the seller’s breach-of-contract counterclaim?
2. Does the seller have a contractual right to its attorney fees on appeal?

FACTS

[¶3] Mountain Benefit Associates, LLC (MBA) is a third-party administrator of health benefit plans for self-insured and partially self-insured employers. David Bostrom started MBA in the mid-1980s. In August or September of 2009, Mr. Bostrom approached Taylor Haynes (Dr. Haynes) regarding his potential purchase of MBA, and over the course of the next few months, Mr. Bostrom; Dr. Haynes; and Elisabeth Wasson, Dr. Haynes’ wife, had a number of discussions and written communications regarding the sale of MBA. During that time, Mr. Bostrom provided Dr. Haynes and Ms. Wasson with information, including enrollment records for the clients of MBA. In addition, Dr. Haynes and Ms. Wasson submitted written questions to Mr. Bostrom.

[¶4] One such question asked for a “[bjrief description of any significant client relationships severed within' the last two years.” In response, Mr. Bostrom identified three groups that had terminated their relationships with MBA over the last two years. Ms. Wasson explained that because the major asset they were purchasing was the client list, or MBA’s book of business, the retention rate of MBA’s clients was significant to her when she evaluated the business. Mr. Bos-trom represented that MBA had a client retention rate of 98 percent.

[¶5] On February 1, 2010, Dr. Haynes and Ms. Wasson’s business, Maverick Benefit Ad-visors, LLC (Maverick), entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement with MBA pursuant to which Maverick was to purchase MBA’s health insurance claims administration business. That agreement contained a provision warranting the information provided by MBA was true:

The representations and warranties of the Seller contained in this Agreement or other instrument furnished by the Seller pursuant to this Agreement do not contain any untrue statement of a material fact and do not omit to state any fact necessary to make any statement herein or therein not misleading or necessary to a correct presentation of all material aspects of the Business and the matters contemplated under this Agreement.

Maverick agreed to pay a total of $4,395,582 for the business. Maverick paid one-half of the purchase price in cash and executed a Promissory Note for the remaining balance of $2,197,791. Maverick’s principals, Dr. Haynes and Ms. Wasson, personally guaranteed the note. In addition, Maverick entered into a Personal Service Contract with Mr. Bostrom, the previous owner of MBA, to secure his assistance with the transition in ownership and management of the business.

[¶6] Ms. Wasson testified that over the next 18 months, she discovered a number of inaccuracies in the information provided by Mr. Bostrom prior to the sale. For example, the 98 percent retention rate provided by Mr. Bostrom was not supported by the facts: over the two years prior to the purchase, MBA had lost 35 percent of its business. At *756 trial, Mr. Bostrom admitted that when he responded to the question of whether MBA had lost any significant clients, he should have included a fourth group, Oftedal Construction Company, which had .approximately 200 members enrolled on average, but that he failed to ■ do so. He also admitted that MBA lost, a number of other clients that he did not consider to be significant and there-, fore did not disclose to Dr. Haynes and Ms. Wasson. In fact, in 2008, MBA lost a total of 19 groups; and in 2009, it lost a total of 15 groups. 1

[¶7] Ms. Wasson and Dr. Haynes also discovered that Mr. Bostrom had failed to disclose information relating to the Wyoming Associated Builders Insurance Trust (WA-BIT) group, MBA’s largest client. The enrollment figures provided by Mr, Bostrom to Dr. Haynes and Ms. Wasson showed that WA-BIT had 780 enrolled members; after the purchase, they learned that WABIT’s enrollment had steadily declined from July of 2009 through closing on the sale of MBA to 300-350 members, roughly half of what had been represented. In addition, in July of 2009, MBA advanced $84,241 to WABIT because WABIT did not have enough money to cover pending claims. MBA made a second advance to WABIT in November of 2009 in the amount of $73,000. 2 Also in November, Mr. Bostrom learned that WABIT had lost a lawsuit and its checking account was being garnished to pay attorney fees. Mr. Bostrom admitted that he did not disclose WABIT’s declining enrollment, the money MBA had advanced to WABIT, or WABIT’s legal and financial trouble to Dr. Haynes and Ms. Was-son.

[¶8] In August of 2009, MBA’s net income was approximately $40,000 per month. Maverick purchased MBA in February of 2010. By the end of 2010, its net income was $5,000 per month. Maverick stopped making payments on the Promissory Note after August of 2011 and filed this lawsuit against Mr. Bostrom; Bostrom Enterprises, LLC; and Mountain States Review, Inc. (hereinafter collectively referred to as Mountain States), seeking damages but not rescission. Mountain States counterclaimed on the Promissory Note and brought a third-party complaint against Maverick, MBA, Dr. Haynes, and Ms. Wasson (hereinafter collectively referred to as Maverick) on the Personal Guaranty. Maverick asserted an affirmative defense that Mr. Bostrom was the first to breach the contract and Maverick is therefore excused from performing its contractual duties.

[¶9] At trial, after Maverick rested its case, Mountain States moved for judgment as a matter of law on all of the pending claims. The district court granted the motion, ruling that Maverick had not proven damages:

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Bluebook (online)
2016 WY 96, 382 P.3d 753, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 122, 2016 WL 5851917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maverick-benefit-advisors-llc-mountain-benefit-associates-llc-taylor-h-wyo-2016.