Perry v. Wolaver

506 F.3d 48, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 25144, 2007 WL 3121585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedOctober 26, 2007
Docket06-2270, 06-2271
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 506 F.3d 48 (Perry v. Wolaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Wolaver, 506 F.3d 48, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 25144, 2007 WL 3121585 (1st Cir. 2007).

Opinion

HOWARD, Circuit Judge.

This case involves the sale of a business which went awry. Plaintiff-sellers Peter P. Perry and Michael T. Bordick (we will refer to them hereafter collectively as “Perry”) brought this action against defendant-buyers John and Barbara Wolaver (“the Wolavers”) seeking to enforce various default provisions under the relevant agreements. The district court granted summary judgment largely in favor of the Wolavers, and both sides appealed.

I.

The basic facts are essentially undisputed. Perry sought to sell two businesses, Perry Transport, LLC and Perry Transport Logistics Services, LLC (“the companies”), and the Wolavers agreed to purchase the companies. The parties signed a letter of intent which outlined the essential terms of the transaction and acknowledged that Perry would retain the cash and certain personal vehicles (as well as certain liabilities) from the companies after sale. The parties closed on the transaction on February 27, 2004, and they executed several agreements, which are the focus of this dispute. The Purchase and Sale Agreement (“PSA”) provided for a purchase price of $715,000, with $400,00 to be paid in cash at closing and the balance provided by a promissory note (“Note”) for $315,000. Further, the PSA provided for an adjustment of the actual sale price after closing to reflect changes in the net assets on the balance sheet between year-end and the date of closing. This purchase price adjustment (“PPA”), which the parties were required to agree upon within 30 days of closing, would be determined as follows:

(a) ... The Purchase Price shall be adjusted (i) upward by the excess, if any, of the total value of the assets net of liabilities on the books of [the companies] as of the Closing Date (the “Net assets”) exceeds Three Hundred Sixty-Six Thousand Nine Hundred Fifty-Six Dollars ($366,956) (the “Baseline Amount”), or (ii) downward by the excess, if any, of the Baseline Amount over the Net Assets....

The Note required the Wolavers to pay Perry $6,163.36 on the first of every month until March 1, 2009, when the remaining balance was due. The Note provided for a range of consequences if the Wolavers failed to make payments as scheduled, including late fees 1 and increased interest. 2 *51 The most significant sanction under the Note, however, was acceleration of principal:

If any installment under this Note is not paid within fifteen (15) days of its due date or Borrowers fail to perform any of the terms, agreements, covenants or conditions contained in the Pledge Agreement and/or Commercial Lease Agreement between these same parties, and/or a certain Promissory Note from [the Wolavers] to Holders in the amount of $107,748.43, all of near or even date herewith, or other instruments given as security for this Note, not cured within any applicable cure period, a Default shall be deemed to have occurred under this Note, and then, or at any time thereafter during the continuance of any such Default, the entire unpaid balance of the Note together with any interest accrued thereunder, shall, at the election of the Holders, and without Notice of such election and without Demand or Presentment, become immediately due and payable, and the principal balance together with any interest accrued thereunder shall thereafter bear the simple interest at the Default Rate until paid. The failure of the Holders to promptly exercise their rights to declare the indebtedness remaining unpaid hereunder to be immediately due and payable or the acceptance of one or more installments from any person shall not constitute a waiver of any of Holders’ rights while any Default continues nor a waiver of Holders’ rights in connection with any subsequent Default. The Holders may exercise this option to accelerate during any Default by the undersigned regardless of any prior forbearance.... (Emphasis in original).

Under “Additional Terms,” Perry also reserved broad rights to modify the Note’s terms, including reducing the payments, extending the term, or otherwise modifying the Note’s provisions. The Note in turn was secured by the Pledge and Security Agreement (“Pledge”).

The Pledge gave Perry a security interest in 100% of the membership units of the companies. The Pledge also contained what the parties have characterized as a “cure provision,” which required Perry to provide “fifteen (15) days prior written notice to” the Wolavers after a default before utilizing any remedy under the Pledge. The most significant default under the Pledge was “failure to pay any of the obligation secured hereby [the Note] when due not cured within any applicable cure period.... ” The most significant remedy under the Pledge was the transfer of ownership of the membership units back to Perry.

In late March, Perry’s broker calculated the PPA, but he disregarded the formula provided for in the PSA. The broker instead recalculated the assets (not including cash and cash equivalents) and liabilities as of year-end and closing, determined the change in each, and concluded that there was an increase in net assets of $41,151. The broker’s error was not noticed at the time, and the parties accepted this figure and entered into an oral agreement for the Wolavers to pay off the PPA in monthly *52 installments to Perry. 3

For approximately a year, all went smoothly. However, in early 2005, the Wolavers discovered the error in the calculation of the PPA and concluded that a proper calculation would have resulted in a substantial reduction in purchase price. The parties began negotiating the matter.

During the negotiations, the Wolavers paid both the April and May 2005 payments after the 15-day grace period each month, and neither payment included late fees or the increased default-rate interest. Perry accepted these payments without comment. However, when the June payment did not arrive on time, Perry sent a notice letter, dated June 27, 2005, stating that the Wolavers were in default under the Note: “because [the Wolavers] failed to make [their] June 1, 2005 [payment] on a timely basis.” The notice letter also advised that:

Interest on that note is now increased to twelve percent (12%) per annum, the default interest provided in the note. Additionally, you now owe late fees for that note for the months of March, April, May and June as the note provides.

Lastly, the notice letter cautioned that:

your default of your obligations on the promissory note also constitute [sic] a default of the Pledge and Security Agreement dated February 27, 2004, securing the promissory note. This letter shall serve as your fifteen (15) day notice to cure under that Agreement. Your failure to cure within the cure period will trigger all of my clients’ rights to the membership interests in both limited liability companies.

(emphasis in original).

Further negotiation yielded a ten-day extension to the cure period, and the Wol-avers tendered the June and July checks within the extended cure period. But Perry did not cash them because they failed to include late fees and default-rate interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
506 F.3d 48, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 25144, 2007 WL 3121585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-wolaver-ca1-2007.