Mona v. McKay

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedOctober 12, 2023
Docket8:21-cv-01017
StatusUnknown

This text of Mona v. McKay (Mona v. McKay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mona v. McKay, (D. Md. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

Vincent P. Mona *

Plaintiff, eo * Civil No. PJM 21-ev-1017 v. : David F. McKay, = *

Defendant. *

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiff Vincent P. Mona (“Mona”), former sole shareholder of Mona Electric Group (“MEG”), has sued David F. McKay (“McKay”), former President of MEG, who represented Mona and MEG, in the sale of MEG to ArchKey Intermediate Holdings, Inc. (““ArchKey”)}. Mona’s essential claim is that McKay breached his duty of loyalty to Mona/MEG by providing inappropriate, harmful information about Mona and MEG to ArchKey throughout the sale process and possibly after.

. On June 28, 2023, Mona, through counsel, sent a letter to the Court requesting that it order McKay’s counsel to provide Mona with a privilege log of documents and communications relating to the Common Interest Agreement (“the Agreement”) McKay. executed with ArchKey on November 9, 2021. ECF No. 97. On August 31, 2023, the Court held a Tcleconference with counsel to address, among other things, Mona’s request. At the end of the Teleconference, □□□□ Court ordered defense counsel to produce all documents and communications dated between April 30, 2021 and November 9, 2021, that were exchanged between McKay or McKay’s counsel and . ArchKey or ArchKey’s employees or representatives, including ArchKey’s counsel; provided that

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McKay’s counsel was given leave to assert a privilege as to any such documents or communications by furnishing a privilege log to Mona’s counsel. See ECF No. 117. On September Mi, 2023, McKay produced the log (“the September Log”), asserting attorney-client and/or work product privilege over virtually all the documents the Court ordered □ McKay’s counsel to produce, See ECF No. 119. Mona responded in Opposition, ECF No. 120, and McKay replied, ECF No. 122, For the following reasons, the Court finds that none of the documents and communications in defense counsel’s September Log are privileged. Nor are any documents and communications shared between McKay and ArchKey on the privilege log McKay's counsel produced in June (“the June Log”). All the documents must be produced to Mona’s counsel within seven calendar days.

I. BACKGROUND As indicated, this case involves claims brought by Mona against McKay stemming from McKay’s alleged misconduct in handling the sale of Mona’s company, MEG, to ArchKey in 2020. See Compl. {{ 58-82. From 2009 until the sale, McKay was the President and CEO of MEG. No. 102-1 at 7. In 2019, Mona, as founder, sole shareholder, and Chairman of the Board of MEG,

. “directed McKay to lead, manage, and execute a strategy to sell MEG,” Compl. 8; see also ECF No. 102-1 at 6-7. McKay and Mona agreed that upon closing, Mona would provide McKay a bonus, calculated as a percentage of the sales price, to be paid directly by ArchKey to McKay. Jd. at 21. On February 1, 2020, Mona sold his MEG shares to ArchKey for $21 million. Jd. at 21-22. McKay received $714,727 from ArchKey as his “Transaction Bonus”. fd. at 21. The final sales price, however, was subject to what is known as a true-up; that is, after nine months, after the purchaser would be in a better position to evaluate the true value of the sale assets, the purchase

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price would increase or decrease accordingly.’ After a nine-month adjustment period, ArchKey, as Purchaser, took the position that the true value of MEG was $8.375 million. Jd. at 6, 22. After the sale of MEG, Mona resigned from MEG’s Board of Directors. fd. at 22. McKay remained an employee of MEG, now in the possession of ArchKey, retaining the title of CEO but not that of President. Jd, About a year later, on March 5, 2021, McKay retired from MEG. Then on March 23, 2021, Mona sued McKay, alleging that during the sales process, “McKay deceptively manipulated offer communications from prospective buyers, failed to accurately convey opportunities to [Mona], and exploited his position of trust . . . for personal financial gain.” Compl. 12. Mona further alleged “that McKay colluded with ArchKey in breach of his duties to Mona before, during, and after the sale of [MEG] to ArchKey.” ECF No. 120 at 2. About one month later, on April 30, 2021, ArchKey sued Mona in the Delaware Court of Chancery for his alleged failure to reimburse a portion of the purchase price based on what ArchKey believed was the correct true-up value of MEG. See ECF No. 18. Mona counterclaimed in that litigation on June 18, 2021. See ECF No. 119 at 2. McKay then filed a Motion to Stay the action in this Court pending resolution of the Delaware action, which this Court denied on October 15, 2021. ECF No. 36.7 On November 9, 2021, unbeknownst to Mona or his counsel, counsel for McKay and ArchKey executed a “Common Interest Agreement” to “discuss the[ir] defense of Mona’s claims and counterclaims in the [present litigation and the Delaware litigation], without

‘1 Section 2.6 of the Stock Purchase Agreement details how the Purchaser would calculate the value of the company at the end of the Adjustment Period, including (1) that the Purchaser would liquidate any _ investments and the net proceeds would be reflected as an asset on the Adjusted Closing Balance Sheet, (2) prepaid expenses would be shown only as the amount actually realized during the Adjustment Period, and (3) any accounts receivable that were collected by the end of the Adjustment Period would be written off and assigned to the Company or Seller. See ECF No. 113-48 at 4. 2 The Delaware litigation apparently remains unresolved as of this time.

waiving or releasing any privileges.” ECF No, 118, Ex. 85 at 1. The Agreement states that it is intended to be retroactively effective to May 6, 2021, Id. . ‘Mona only learned of the existence of the Agreement on October 26, 2022 when his counsel deposed ArchKey’s corporate representative, Patrick Kriegshauser, in the Delaware litigation. ECF No. 119 at 2; ECF No. 91 at 4. At a Teleconference with this Court on April 11, 2023, Mona argued that McKay should have disclosed the Agreement in response to Mona’s written discovery requests as well as to direct questions posed to McKay at McKay’s deposition in the present action that preceded the Kriegshauser deposition, but that — deceptively —- McKay had not done so. See ECF No. 108 at 18; see also ECF No. 91 at 4, Eventually, however, pursuant to the Court’s order at the Teleconference, defense counsel produced a copy of the Agreement to Mona’s counsel on June 2, 2023. Defense counsel also provided a privilege log of, among other things, documents and communications relating to the Agreement dated through April 30, 2021.3 See ECF No. 97. Still, McKay’s counsel refused to produce documents dated after April 30, 2021, on the basis of his belief that they were outside the “relevant period” as defined by Mona’s discovery requests. ECF No. 98. Mona therefore moved to compel McKay to provide a privilege log of documents and communications relating to McKay’s Agreement with ArchKey from April 30, 2021, through November 9, 2021, the date the Agreement was executed. See ECF No. 97. After hearing argument on the issue at the Teleconference, the Court ordered McKay to produce such documents and communications, allowing, however, that McKay’s counsel could attempt to assert a privilege as to any of the documents by providing a privilege log to Mona’s counsel. ECF No. 117. McKay thereafter produced a privilege log, after asserting privilege over all entries. See ECF No. 119.

3 Defense counsel apparently has produced some but not all documents dated prior to April 30, 2021. As to other documents prior to that date, defense counsel asserts privilege. But, as will be described infra, these other documents, insofar as they represent exchanges with ArchKey, must now also be produced.

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Mona v. McKay, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mona-v-mckay-mdd-2023.