Nelson v. Quarles & Brady LLC

2018 IL App (1st) 171653
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 19, 2018
Docket1-17-1653
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2018 IL App (1st) 171653 (Nelson v. Quarles & Brady LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Quarles & Brady LLC, 2018 IL App (1st) 171653 (Ill. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

2018 IL App (1st) 171653

No. 1-17-1653

Filed: September 27, 2018

Fourth Division ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST DISTRICT

______________________________________________________________________________

KENNETH A. NELSON, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant ) Cook County ) v. ) No. 16 L 5627 ) QUARLES & BRADY, LLP, ) Honorable ) Lorna E. Propes,

Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE BURKE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice McBride and Justice Ellis concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Following a bench trial, the circuit court entered judgment in favor of defendant Quarles

& Brady in this legal malpractice claim. The claim was predicated on Quarles & Brady’s

representation of plaintiff Kenneth Nelson in the federal district court in his suit against his

former business partner in two automobile dealerships (the “Underlying Litigation”). The district

court ruled against Nelson, but that decision was reversed on appeal by the Seventh Circuit Court

of Appeals. Rather than pursue further litigation in the federal court on remand, the parties

settled, and Nelson subsequently filed this legal malpractice action against Quarles & Brady. The

circuit court found that Nelson had failed to establish that Quarles & Brady’s representation No. 1-17-1653

deviated from the standard of care or that Quarles & Brady’s representation proximately caused

him any damages. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 A. The Underlying Litigation

¶4 1. Nelson and Curia’s Written Agreements and Stock Purchase Options

¶5 Prior to 1989, Nelson was the sole shareholder in two automobile dealership

corporations: Ken Nelson Auto Plaza, Inc. (Plaza), located in Dixon, Illinois, and Ken Nelson

Auto Mall, Inc. (Mall), located in Sterling, Illinois. The two dealerships carried vehicles from

Toyota, General Motors (GM), Nissan, and Chrysler. In 1989, Nelson hired Richard Curia as

general manager, and the two entered into a stock purchase agreement (1989 SPA) whereby

Curia would be able to acquire a 100% ownership interest in both corporations pursuant to a

series of options. Under the 1989 SPA, Curia would initially pay $100,000 for 1000 shares in

Plaza and 144 shares in Mall. The 1989 SPA also provided Curia with options to purchase

additional shares. The first option permitted Curia to purchase an additional 1000 shares of Plaza

and 144 shares of Mall for an additional $100,000. Under the second option, Curia could

purchase 2009 shares of stock of Plaza and 300 shares of Mall, “which shares with previous

purchased shares would represent 49% of the issued and outstanding shares of capital stock in

said corporations.” This option provided a formula for the purchase price of these shares, which

was based on the corporations’ net worth, accumulated depreciation, “LIFO (last in first out)

reserve,” and the total number of shares in each corporation. To determine the metrics for this

formula, the parties would reference the monthly operating reports issued by GM and Nissan.

¶6 The third and final option provided that “[a]fter exercising the first two options to

purchase as provided in this Agreement, [Curia] shall have a third option to purchase from

-2­ No. 1-17-1653

[Nelson] the remaining 4,171 shares of stock in [Plaza] and 612 shares of stock in [Mall]

provided that [Curia] also offer to purchase the land and four buildings of the [Plaza] dealership

*** at its appraised value.” The third option also provided that the purchase price of the shares

would be based on a valuation formula similar to the formula outlined in the second option. The

1989 SPA required Curia to provide written notice of his election to exercise each option.

¶7 In 1993, Nelson and Curia entered into another agreement intended to modify the 1989

SPA (1993 Modification). The 1993 Modification provided that “a mutual mistake of fact was

made by Nelson and Curia in determining the fair market value of the capital stock of [Plaza and

Mall.]” The 1993 Modification was therefore intended to “modify the [1989 SPA] to reflect the

re-evaluation of the minority interest *** and to correct the mutual mistake of the parties.” The

1993 Modification also included a new formula for calculating the price of the shares Curia

could purchase from Nelson. Paragraph 5 of the 1993 Modification was titled “Purchase of

Additional Shares” and provided that:

“Curia shall have the right to purchase additional shares of stock in said

corporations upon those terms and conditions subsequently agreed upon by the parties

hereto. The purchase price for said additional shares of stock shall be determined by

adding to the total net worth of each corporation a figure representing the accumulated

‘LIFO’ (last in first out) reserve and dividing the total sum thereof by the number of

shares of each corporation.”

Nelson testified that in entering into this modification, he and Curia intended to eliminate the

options contained in the 1989 SPA, and that they had the understanding that if Curia wanted to

purchase additional shares, they would be required to enter into a separate agreement. Curia

testified that, at the time they entered into the 1993 Modification, he did not understand what the

-3­ No. 1-17-1653

word “subsequently” meant in the first sentence of the Purchase of Additional Shares section.

Curia testified that the 1993 Modification was not intended to eliminate the 1989 SPA options

and that he believed that the 1993 Modification, in conjunction with the options in the 1989 SPA,

would permit him to purchase all of Nelson’s shares. He testified that the parties entered into the

1993 Modification because he believed he had paid too much for the shares he received in the

1989 SPA.

¶8 The parties entered into subsequent written agreements in 1997 (1997 Harkness

Agreement) and 2000 (2000 Agreement). The 1997 Harkness Agreement was drafted when

Harkness purchased shares of Mall in 1997. The 1997 Harkness Agreement provided that it

“supersede[d] all prior agreements and understanding between Nelson and Curia referring to

future purchases of stock of [Mall.]” Harkness subsequently left Mall, and Mall repurchased his

shares.

¶9 In 2000, Nelson and Curia entered into another agreement (2000 Agreement), titled

“Amendment to Modification Agreements.” The 2000 Agreement was drafted, at least in part, to

delineate Curia and Nelson’s intent with respect to the transfer of shares if either of them died.

The 2000 Agreement also provided that Nelson and Curia “had previously entered into [the 1989

SPA] and [the 1993 Modification],” and copies of both were attached as exhibits. The 2000

Agreement provided that if Nelson died while the 1989 SPA and 1993 Modification were “in

force,” Curia must immediately purchase from Nelson sufficient shares in Plaza to make Curia

the majority shareholder. The 2000 Agreement also set out another formula for the purchase

price of those shares and Nelson’s remaining shares, which differed from the formula in the 1989

SPA and 1993 Modification. The 2000 Agreement provided that it was “not a new modification

agreement, but an amendment to the [1989 SPA] and the [1993 Modification].”

-4­ No.

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