Michael W. Ayotte v. Margaret Janet Bruno

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedJune 17, 2024
Docket2:22-cv-07667
StatusUnknown

This text of Michael W. Ayotte v. Margaret Janet Bruno (Michael W. Ayotte v. Margaret Janet Bruno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael W. Ayotte v. Margaret Janet Bruno, (C.D. Cal. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

CIVIL MINUTES - GENERAL Case No. CV 22-7667 MRW Date June 17, 2024 Title Ayotte v. Bruno

Present: Hon. Michael R. Wilner, U.S. Magistrate Judge Eddie Ramirez n/a Deputy Clerk Court Reporter / Recorder Attorneys for Plaintiff: Attorneys for Defendant: n/a n/a Proceedings: FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW FRCP 52

1. The Court conducted a bench trial in this matter on May 21, 2024. At issue was Plaintiff Ayotte’s contention that he was entitled to a portion of the proceeds of Defendant Bruno’s stock sale as part of his contingency fee for legal services he provided several years earlier. 2. The Court concludes that Mr. Ayotte certainly provided advice and lawyering that benefitted Ms. Bruno considerably. However, a fair reading of the parties’ fee contract does not make clear that they agreed that the lawyer would receive a portion of the client’s stock sales in the future. As a result, the Court enters judgment in favor of the defense. Background and Key Facts 3. The parties are familiar with Ms. Bruno’s underlying employment dispute with her former employer and her interactions with Mr. Ayotte to resolve that fight. The Court takes the relevant — and relatively undisputed — facts from the parties’ direct testimony declarations (Docket # 40, 43), the live cross-examination and additional in- court questioning of Mr. Ayotte and Ms. Bruno,! and the key documents. The parties stipulated to the admission of all exhibits. The ones mentioned in their testimony (and to which the Court attributes significance) are the parties’ e-mails and texts (Exhibits 9, 11.

1 The declarations of Mrs. Ayotte (confirming the gist of a call between her husband and Ms. Bruno) and Mr. Aguilar (another employment lawyer involved in an early stage of the matter) didn’t add much to the Court’s understanding of the dispute. The Court and the parties jointly agreed that no cross-examination was needed of those witnesses. CV-90 (10/08) CIVIL MINUTES - GENERAL Page 1 of 7

CIVIL MINUTES - GENERAL Case No. CV 22-7667 MRW Date June 17, 2024 Title Ayotte v. Bruno

13, 14, 16, 17, 19, 21, 23), the attorney-client fee agreement (Exhibit 1), and the final separation agreement between Ms. Bruno and her former employer (Exhibit 8). 4. At bottom, Ms. Bruno and her former employer had a dispute regarding her termination from the company. Ms. Bruno sought to negotiate a separation based on various financial and non-financial concerns. She first consulted informally with Mr. Ayotte (a family friend who was and is an experienced employment attorney) for advice in her dealings with the company. When those dealings didn’t advance, she formally hired Mr. Ayotte to represent her directly in further proceedings against the company. kE* 5. The parties negotiated and signed a written fee agreement. (Ex. 1.) Under the March 2019 agreement, Ms. Bruno hired Mr. Ayotte in advance of anticipated litigation or arbitration. The agreement specifically stated that Ms. Bruno sought legal services regarding her “termination from her executive position” with the company “and surrounding matters.” The agreement listed those matters as Ms. Bruno’s “unpaid performance bonus,” a “severance” payment, and “negotiation concerning valuation and amount owed executive under equity agreement.” (Id.) 6. That third item related to Ms. Bruno’s ownership of stock in the company. According to her earlier employment agreement, she received an amount of stock that vested over a five-year period of time. In preliminary discussions with the company, there was a dispute about (a) the amount (discussed in terms of a percentage of the five-year grant) of stock she owned and (b) the value of those shares if the company was to buy them from her. The parties agree that the company had the ability to purchase those shares from Ms. Bruno at a price the company set during a 210-day period following her departure from the company. After that, the price would be subject to negotiation, tender offer, or some other pricing mechanism beyond the company’s unilateral control. 7. The attorney fee agreement then discussed Mr. Ayotte’s “hybrid” fee structure. The parties agreed to a minimal retainer and hourly fee for work performed. “In addition,” Mr. Ayotte was “entitled to a percentage [understood to be 25%] of the ‘total recovery” of “all amounts received by settlement” before litigation. The total recovery also included “the reasonable value of any non-monetary proceeds.” The parties further agreed that Mr. Ayotte’s services would conclude upon “completing the services covered by this agreement, or by discharge or withdrawal.” At that time, “all unpaid charges for fees [ | CV-90 (10/08) CIVIL MINUTES - GENERAL Page 2 of 7

CIVIL MINUTES - GENERAL Case No. CV 22-7667 MRW Date June 17, 2024 Title Ayotte v. Bruno

will be due and payable immediately.” (Id. at 4-5.) The parties entered into this agreement shortly before Mr. Ayotte began to interact directly with the company’s litigation lawyers. 8. In Mr. Ayotte’s closing argument to the Court (which, given his pro se status in the litigation, the Court took to be an additional statement or testimony under oath), the lawyer candidly acknowledged that he had not previously represented a client who held a stock position in the manner of Ms. Bruno. Rather, he regularly represented employees of hedge funds (or, as he put it, “private equity” people) who received large bonus / profit-sharing payoffs when their employment terminated. Mr. Ayotte rightly viewed the settlement of those types of claims — with an immediate payment to his client — as falling within the contingency fee agreement. ke * 9. Within a few weeks, Mr. Ayotte negotiated and finalized Ms. Bruno’s separation agreement from the company. The highlights on the May 2019 contract: she received a sizable bonus payment, a payment for a statutory “waiting time penalty” (Gin lieu of a severance payment), and an acknowledgement that she retained 80% of her original stock grant. (Ex. 8 at 1, 2.) The agreement also included favorable statements that Ms. Bruno was terminated “not for cause” and the company would confirm dates of employment for a prospective employer.? (Id.) 10. The separation agreement had specific provisions regarding the timing and manner of the company’s payments to / for Ms. Bruno. The agreement detailed that the payments to Ms. Bruno were to be mailed to Mr. Ayotte’s office. So too was a check payable to the lawyer representing the 25% contingency payment to him.? (Id. at 1.) Notably, the agreement did not discuss the manner of future payment for Ms. Bruno’s shares in the company. It also did not refer to any other payment to Mr. Ayotte (under the contingency fee agreement, or otherwise) regarding her equity in the company.

2 The “not for cause” language likely helped ensure that Ms. Bruno maximized her ownership of the company stock. The “employment confirmation” provision had no obvious financial benefit, but clearly would help her obtain when she looked for a new job. 3 The lawyer received $27,500, which represented 25% of the $100,000 gross payout to Ms. Bruno. CV-90 (10/08) CIVIL MINUTES - GENERAL Page 3 of 7

CIVIL MINUTES - GENERAL Case No. CV 22-7667 MRW Date June 17, 2024 Title Ayotte v. Bruno

kE* 11. In March 2022, Ms. Bruno told Mr. Ayotte that her former employer had been bought out. As a result, she was able to sell her vested shares for about $1.8 million. (Ex. 9 at 30.) That was vastly above the figures that were bandied about during her negotiations with her former employer. 12. Shortly afterward, Mr. Ayotte asserted to Ms.

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Michael W. Ayotte v. Margaret Janet Bruno, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-w-ayotte-v-margaret-janet-bruno-cacd-2024.