Penn, LLC v. Prosper Business Development Corp.

600 F. App'x 393
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 2015
Docket14-3107
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 600 F. App'x 393 (Penn, LLC v. Prosper Business Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penn, LLC v. Prosper Business Development Corp., 600 F. App'x 393 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

COOK, Circuit Judge.

A lengthy arbitration and a series of state lawsuits over the management and dissolution of Plaintiff-Appellant BIGre-search, LLC, the joint venture of Plaintiff-Appellant Penn, LLC and Defendant-Ap-pellee Prosper Business Development Corporation, culminated in this civil action. Penn sued Prosper for, among other things, breaching its fiduciary duty as BIGresearch’s managing entity and majority stakeholder. Prosper asserted counterclaims of its own, including one for abuse of process. After three years of motion practice and a sixteen-day jury trial, the district court entered judgment in favor of Prosper on Penn’s conversion, unjust enrichment, and breach of fiduciary duty claims as well as Prosper’s abuse of process counterclaim. Penn filed a post-trial motion for judgment as a matter of law or, alternatively, a new trial, which the district court denied. Penn appeals, challenging three of the district court’s adverse rulings on the parties’ motions for judgment as a matter of law and a handful of evidentiary and procedural rulings that Penn claims warrant a new trial. For the following reasons, we REVERSE in part and AFFIRM in part the district court’s judgment.

I.

In October 2000, Penn and Prosper formed BIGresearch, a Delaware limited liability company dedicated to consumer research. BIGresearch’s board consisted of three individuals: one representative of Penn and two representatives of Prosper. Although Penn and Prosper each owned 50% of BIGresearch at the time of formation, BIGresearch later sold a 5.22% stake to outside investors, leaving Penn and Prosper each with a 47.39% ownership interest. Prosper later purchased many of these outside investors’ shares and obtained a 50.71% majority stake in BIGre-search.

By 2004, the relationship had soured. Prosper used its majority-owner authority to pass resolutions removing Penn’s representative from the board and divesting Penn of its membership in BIGresearch. Penn challenged the legality of Prosper’s “freeze out” and demanded arbitration. In September 2008, the arbitrator ruled against Prosper, invalidating the offending resolutions and appointing a special master to determine the amount in distributions Penn’s shares would have earned during the “freeze-out” years.

Although the arbitrator restored Penn’s membership and seat on BIGresearch’s board, Prosper’s owners still occupied the other two board positions. And in December 2009, while the special master was preparing his report, the Prosper-controlled board voted to dissolve BIGre-search. Penn responded by seeking to enjoin BIGresearch’s dissolution in an Ohio court. In December 2011, the state court decided that Prosper properly dissolved BIGresearch and granted partial summary judgment to Prosper and BIGre-search. Penn voluntarily withdrew its remaining claims the following month.

Meanwhile, the arbitrator charged with determining the amount of loss Penn suf *396 fered from the “freeze-out” adopted the special master’s recommendation in May 2010 and ordered BIGresearch to pay Penn $1,488,000. The award equaled the total distributions that Prosper received from BIGresearch between 2001 and 2008. The arbitrator’s decision prompted BIGre-search — under the direction of Prosper— to file its own Ohio action seeking modification of the award.

In the midst of these arbitral and state-court proceedings, the parties discussed a global settlement. In late July 2010, Defendant-Appellee James E. Arnold, Prospers attorney in the pending state and arbitral proceedings, extended a settlement offer to Richard Cochran, the Illinois-based attorney representing Penn in the arbitration. Prosper offered to pay Penn the value of BIGresearch’s assets calculated after dissolution, then estimated at $1.25-$1.5 million, in exchange for a release from all liability. Penn countered at $1.75 million to settle all claims, which Prosper rejected.

Weeks later, Cochran telephoned Arnold to both remind him of Penn’s $1.75 million settlement offer and to inform Arnold that Penn intended to file a new complaint against Prosper — the action on appeal— unless it accepted the proposal.

Two weeks later, Cochran reiterated Penn’s settlement offer, this time adding the unwelcome specter of including Arnold and his firm, Defendant-Appellee James E. Arnold & Associates, as co-defendants in the intended federal complaint unless Prosper agreed to Penn’s global settlement offer.

A month after this third settlement conversation, the court presiding over Prospers lawsuit seeking modification found that the arbitrator’s award violated Delaware law because compliance would render BIGresearch insolvent. The court issued a judgment modifying the award and ordered Prosper to return $777,917.13 to BIGresearch for redistribution to Penn as a “true up.” Prosper promptly repaid BIGresearch, which redistributed the money to Penn.

Four days after the state court’s judgment, Penn filed the instant action on its own behalf and derivatively on behalf of BIGresearch. 1 Penn alleged RICO violations, fraud, conversion, unjust enrich-. ment, and breach of fiduciary duty against Prosper, its principals, Arnold, and his firm.

After filing the federal action, Cochran again called Arnold to discuss settlement. In light of the $777,917.13 “true up” from BIGresearch, Penn offered to accept the assets of BIGresearch after dissolution-then estimated at approximately $900,000-in exchange for a global release. As Arnold recalls the conversation, Cochran stated that “he was doing [Arnold] a favor by trying to get this case settled.” (R. 303-1, Trial Tr. at 223.) But Arnold refused the offer because it “wasn’t materially different from what [Cochran had] already demanded on behalf of Penn” and because global resolution “was not possible” with Penn “having now sued [Arnold] and [his] firm.” (Id.)

Prosper responded to Penn’s overture by filing counterclaims for breach of fiduciary duty and abuse of process. And all the defendants moved to dismiss Penn’s complaint. Six months later, the district court dismissed all Penn’s claims against Arnold and his firm as well as the RICO *397 and fraud claims against Prosper. 2 Then, after more than two years of contentious discovery and motion practice, the remaining claims and counterclaims went to trial.

At the close of evidence, the district court granted Prosper’s motion for judgment as a matter of law on Penn’s conversion and unjust enrichment claims. It denied Penn’s motion for judgment as a matter of law on Prosper’s abuse of process counterclaim, but granted judgment to Penn on Prosper’s breach of fiduciary duty counterclaim.

This left Penn’s breach of fiduciary duty claim and Prosper’s abuse of process counterclaim for the jury to resolve. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Prosper on both claims and awarded Prosper and its owners $1.25 million in compensatory and punitive damages. Post-trial, Penn renewed its motion for judgment as a matter of law and, in the alternative, requested a new trial. The district court denied Penn’s motions and entered judgment on the jury’s verdict. This appeal followed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
600 F. App'x 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-llc-v-prosper-business-development-corp-ca6-2015.