Petroleum Enhancer, LLC v. Woodward

690 F.3d 757, 2012 WL 3240334, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 16675
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 10, 2012
Docket11-1167
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 690 F.3d 757 (Petroleum Enhancer, LLC v. Woodward) 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
Petroleum Enhancer, LLC v. Woodward, 690 F.3d 757, 2012 WL 3240334, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 16675 (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

Polar Molecular Holding Corporation (Polar Holding) was, at all times relevant to this lawsuit, a publicly held Delaware corporation and the sole shareholder of Polar Molecular Corporation (PMC), a company engaged in the petroleum-additive business. In 2006, PMC was in default on a loan for which it had pledged valuable intellectual property as collateral, *761 and Polar Holding was in the midst of an internal dispute between two members of its board of directors regarding the business strategy of PMC. This dispute eventually caused one of those directors, Richard Socia, to form a competing company called Petroleum Enhancer (Petroleum) for the sole purpose of acquiring PMC’s promissory note and collateral from the holder of PMC’s loan. Petroleum was incorporated in March 2007, Socia resigned from Polar Holding’s board the following month, and Petroleum acquired PMC’s promissory note shortly thereafter.

In June 2007, Petroleum brought suit in federal district court against Lester Woodward, an escrow agent in possession of PMC’s collateral, alleging that PMC was in default on the payment of its promissory note. Polar Holding and PMC intervened in the lawsuit and filed counterclaims against Petroleum and a third-party complaint against a number of additional parties, including Socia. Both Polar Holding and PMC alleged claims of breach of fiduciary duty, civil conspiracy, and tortious interference. After PMC filed for bankruptcy, its claims became the property of the bankruptcy trustee. Polar Holding’s claims were later dismissed on summary judgment, and it has appealed. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the dismissal of Polar Holding’s tortious-interference claim as addressed by the district court, but REVERSE the dismissal of its breach-of-fiduciary-duty claim against Socia and its civil-conspiracy claim against the individual third-party defendants, and REMAND the case for further proceedings on the latter two claims, as well as on Polar Holding’s tortious-interference claim not addressed below.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual background

The disagreement concerning the business strategy of PMC was between Mark Nelson, Polar Holding’s President, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), and Chairman of the Board, on the one hand, and Socia, on the other. This disagreement eventually created animosity between the two, which came to a head during a January 26, 2007 board meeting of Polar Holding. Both Nelson and Socia were present at the meeting, as were Polar Holding’s three other directors, two of whom were Walter Fay and Robert MacKenzie.

The meeting, which had been called by Socia, opened with Socia attempting to remove Nelson from his positions as President, CEO, and Chairman. But Socia’s motion for removal did not pass, and Nelson then responded in kind. He moved for Socia’s removal as Polar Holding’s secretary and demanded his resignation from the board of directors. These motions passed by a vote of three to two, with the board resolving to “remove Richard Socia as the company’s Secretary” and to “demand Richard Socia’s resignation” from his position on the board. Fay was contemporaneously appointed as Polar Holding’s new secretary.

Three days later, on January 29, 2007, Polar Holding’s board of directors held another meeting. Socia and MacKenzie— the two directors who had voted against Nelson’s motions at the previous meeting — did not attend. Their names appear in the minutes as absent directors. At this meeting, the board voted to appoint Sharon Minnock “to fill a vacancy on the Board of Directors.” The board next passed a motion demanding MacKenzie’s resignation from the board and calling “for the removal of both Richard Socia and Robert MacKenzie from any and all roles with Polar Molecular Holding Corporation, including roles as officer and Board committee members.”

*762 Needless to say, Socia did not take kindly to what had transpired at these meetings. On January 31, 2007, he wrote Nelson a letter that begins as follows:

I think it is time to set the record straight. I am a Director, of Polar Molecular Holding Company, who serves at the pleasure of the shareholders, not you. I want you to produce the written authority — not your interpretation — that gives you and/or your puppets the authority to remove me. I want you to know I have no intention of resigning from this Board.

The letter concludes in similar fashion: “I am going to continue to protect the shareholders.”

Socia reaffirmed these sentiments in a March 5, 2007 letter to Minnock, in which he referred to himself as a director, questioned the legality of Minnock’s appointment to the board, and stated flatly that he “refused to resign” from his position. He also provided an explanation for this refusal: “I refused to resign my post as Director for one reason, Mark [Nelson] duped me and I know I am a representative of shareholders^] not just specific shareholder interests, but all shareholders. I will continue to work to save the products and opportunities that exist at Polar.”

After the board refused to oust Nelson and purported to replace Socia instead, Socia came up with an idea. He knew that PMC had entered into a financing agreement with Affiliated Investments, LLC (Affiliated) in October 2001. Under the terms of that agreement, PMC had received a $600,000 loan from Affiliated, which PMC promised to repay in full by January 2005. But PMC had defaulted on its repayment obligations and remained in default in early 2007. Despite PMC’s default, Affiliated had not yet sought repayment of the loan. Nor had it taken legal action to recover the patents and other intellectual property that PMC had pledged as collateral. Affiliated’s president, Bruce Becker, stated that he had not done so because he “had no knowledge of [the petroleum-additive] industry or what to do with the patents.”

But Socia suffered from no such lack of expertise, and he suggested to Becker a way in which the two could exercise Affiliated’s right to foreclose on the defaulted loan. Socia, Becker, and Carl Hill, the latter being a Polar Holding consultant, would form a new company for the purpose of purchasing the promissory note from Affiliated and then immediately bring a foreclosure action against Polar Holding to secure the collateral. According to Soda’s deposition testimony, he intended for the foreclosure to put pressure on Nelson to make certain business decisions with respect to PMC that Socia thought would make PMC more profitable. A March 16, 2007 email sent by Hill to Socia and Karen Dobleske (Becker’s business manager at Affiliated) provides a glimpse into how the plan unfolded:

Dick [Socia] came up with a thought that I think might make a lot of sense. Since [PMC] owes Affiliated the patents that are new and not included in the escrow arrangement^] ... maybe Affiliated ought to ask for those patents to be put into the escrow account now ... before we make our move through foreclosure. Nelson would have a hard time arguing about the requestf,] ... especially since Affiliated just sent him dough to help with patent registration.

(Ellipses in original.)

Socia, Becker, and Hill incorporated Petroleum on March 22, 2007, with its principal place of business in Essexville, Michigan.

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690 F.3d 757, 2012 WL 3240334, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 16675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petroleum-enhancer-llc-v-woodward-ca6-2012.