McEvoy v. Apollo Global Management, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 10, 2022
Docket3:17-cv-00891
StatusUnknown

This text of McEvoy v. Apollo Global Management, LLC (McEvoy v. Apollo Global Management, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McEvoy v. Apollo Global Management, LLC, (M.D. Fla. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA JACKSONVILLE DIVISION

MICHAEL MCEVOY, on behalf of himself and others similarly situated,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 3:17-cv-891-TJC-MCR

APOLLO GLOBAL MANAGEMENT, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, APOLLO MANAGEMENT VI, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership, and CEVA GROUP, PLC,

Defendants.

AMENDED ORDER1 This putative class action is before the Court on Defendants Apollo Global Management, Inc. (f/k/a Apollo Global Management, LLC), Apollo Management VI, L.P. (collectively, “Apollo”), and CEVA Group PLC’s (“CEVA Group”) Motion for Summary Judgment. Doc. 95. Plaintiff Michael McEvoy filed a response. Docs. 112, 116. The Court previously converted Defendants’ motions to dismiss to a motion for summary judgment and ordered limited discovery on the issue

1 This Order vacates Doc. 122, published on Westlaw as McEvoy v. Apollo Glob. Mgmt., LLC, No. 3:17-CV-891-TJC-MCR, 2021 WL 2661006, at *1 (M.D. Fla. June 29, 2021). of the statute of limitations only. Doc 80. Following the Court’s Order denying the Motion, Doc. 122, the Defendants filed a Joint Limited Motion for

Reconsideration of Order Denying Motion for Summary Judgment. Doc. 125. Plaintiff Michael McEvoy has responded. Doc. 128. Defendants have filed a Reply. Doc. 131. McEvoy has filed a Sur-Reply. Doc. 134. The Court has determined to vacate its order denying the Motion for Summary Judgment,

Doc. 122, and replace it with this Order granting summary judgment. I. BACKGROUND A. CEVA’s Formation and 2013 Restructuring Plaintiff Michael McEvoy began working at Ryder Truck Lines in 1972. Doc. 96-1 at 17:15–18:9. He soon transitioned to a company called Customized

Transportation, which was acquired by CSX, which in turn was sold to TNT Logistics, which Apollo purchased and merged with EGL, Inc. to form CEVA Logistics in 2006. Id. at 18:7–19:4. CEVA Logistics is a subsidiary of CEVA Group, a global freight management and supply chain logistics company.

Doc. 97 at 1–2. CEVA Group itself was 99.9 percent owned by CEVA Investments Limited (“CIL”), a Cayman Islands corporation, until 2013. Id. at 2. Apollo “held the vast majority of CIL’s preferred and common shares . . . .” Id. at 3.

Upon CEVA Logistics’ formation, management-level employees from TNT and EGL, including McEvoy (“Management Investors”), were asked to purchase equity in the Cayman Islands company that became CIL. Doc. 96-1 at 30:18– 20. They did so through a fund called the 2006 Long-Term Incentive Plan (“2006

LTIP”). Id. at 23:2–6. The investment was to “increase [directors and employees’] personal interest in [CIL’s] growth and success . . . .” Doc. 96-2 at 3. McEvoy invested approximately $10,000 in the 2006 LTIP. Doc. 96-1 at 23:6. He received and reviewed the 2006 LTIP Agreement when he invested. Id. at

28:22–29:6. According to Marvin Schlanger, the Chief Executive Officer of CEVA Group from 2012 to 2014, facing financial problems in “mid-2012 into 2013,” “CEVA Group’s management determined that CEVA’s only choice for survival

was a financial restructuring.” Doc. 97 at 2. In April 2013, CEVA Group performed a “major debt-for-equity exchange” (“2013 Transaction”). Id. CEVA Group converted much of CIL’s debt into equity ownership of a new entity called CEVA Holdings, LLC (“CEVA Holdings”), diluting CIL’s ownership of CEVA

Group. Id. The transaction led to the de-valuation of CIL’s ownership of CEVA Group from 99.9 percent to .01 percent, effectively wiping out all previous investment in CIL, including the 2006 LTIP shares’ value. Id. On April 2, 2013, CIL entered provisional liquidation proceedings in the Cayman Islands. Doc. 98

at 1. According to Schlanger’s declaration, “[n]o CIL shareholder, including [Apollo]. . . recovered anything on account of their investment in CIL in the 2013 Restructuring or thereafter,” and a “collateral but inevitable consequence of the 2013 Transaction was the dissolution” of the 2006 LTIP. Doc. 97 at 2–3.

B. CIL’s Communications to McEvoy In December 2012, CEVA Logistics informed McEvoy that due to general cutbacks, he would be laid off in March 2013. Doc. 96-1 at 24:14–18. He exercised his put rights to sell his 2006 LTIP shares at their present value on

January 21, 2013, and was informed the following day that CEVA could purchase them back on April 1, 2013, and that their most recent value was approximately €50 per share. Doc. 112-35 at 5–6. His last day at CEVA was March 31, 2013. Id. at 7. CEVA Logistics temporarily re-hired him as an

independent contractor from October through December 2013 to help start a new logistics contract. Doc. 96-1 at 136:20–37:16, 137:23–25. CIL informed McEvoy of the 2006 LTIP dissolution and CIL’s lack of value via registered letter dated April 5, 2013, stating that “[t]he directors of

[CIL] have received advice from valuation and restructuring professionals that [CIL’s] shareholding in CEVA is now without value, in consequence of the financial condition of CEVA. You may have seen, or shortly will see, press announcements concerning the proposed restructuring of CEVA.” Doc. 96-3 at

2. The letter further stated that “[i]n light of [CIL’s] and CEVA’s financial condition, we have been advised that it is unlikely that there will be any recoveries for shareholders of [CIL] in their capacities as shareholders.” Id. at 3. CIL sent another letter announcing the appointment of Joint Provisional Liquidators (“JPLs”) as part of the Cayman Islands liquidation proceedings on

April 8, 2013. Doc. 98-1. On April 17, 2013, the JPLs sent a letter to twenty to thirty Management Investors who had contacted the JPLs with questions. Doc. 112-29 at 125. The document has a question and answer section on CIL’s condition and the 2006 LTIP, confirming to Management Investors that the

company had no value, and that “no alternative investment is being offered to the [s]hareholders, nor is there any exchange offer being offered to the [s]hareholders.” Doc. 98-2 at 4. The letter explained that the liquidation was performed “pursuant to the irrevocable proxy and power of attorney granted to

Apollo Management VI, L.P.” in the 2006 LTIP Agreement. Id. at 3. Schlanger instructed the attorneys drafting the letter to exclude “reference to any new equity plans . . . [because the] letter [would be] going to a lot of people who no longer are with the Company and have nothing to do with any new plans.” Doc.

97-7 at 3. This was, he explained in his declaration to the Court, to avoid creating an “impression that those former employees were eligible to participate in the 2013 CEVA Holdings LTIP” (discussed below). Doc. 97 at 6. While McEvoy does not recall reading the question and answer document, he received

an email with an identically named attachment. Doc. 96-1 at 88:23–90:1. The JPLs sent another letter on June 14, 2013 informing Management Investors that CIL was insolvent, listing the names of the Management Investors who had been represented as part of the bankruptcy proceedings, and stating that there was an involuntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding taking

place against CIL in the Southern District of New York. Docs. 98-3; 112-39. On March 4, 2014, McEvoy corresponded with the JPLs, now the Joint Official Liquidators, asking for documentation that his “investments [were] worthless” for “US tax purposes.” Doc. 98-4 at 4. They confirmed with

documentation, and McEvoy claimed a $10,000 loss in his tax returns for 2013. Docs. 96-7 at 2; 98-4. Between 2013 and 2015, McEvoy discussed his investment in the 2006 LTIP multiple times. In 2013 he had a “casual conversation” with a friend who

was an attorney who advised him not to pursue a case against CEVA. Doc. 96-1 at 69:19–71:2, 121:19–21.

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