Radovich v. L.P. YA Global Investments, L.P.

570 F. App'x 203
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2014
Docket13-3722
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 570 F. App'x 203 (Radovich v. L.P. YA Global Investments, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radovich v. L.P. YA Global Investments, L.P., 570 F. App'x 203 (3d Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

CHAGARES, Circuit Judge.

Radul Radovieh and several entities he controls appeal the District Court’s dismissal of his complaint on res judicata grounds. For the following reasons, we will affirm.

I.

Because we write solely for the benefit of the parties, we recount only the facts relevant to our disposition. Radovieh and entities he controls 1 owned a substantial amount of shares in a pharmaceutical corporation called Cobalis. Radovieh was also the chairman of its board. Cobalis’s shares were publicly traded on domestic over-the-counter markets. Cobalis needed money to help finance its operations and product development. It reached out to YA Global Investments, L.P. (‘YAGI”), formerly known as Cornell Capital Partners, L.P., a hedge fund that specialized in making private investments in public equity (“PIPE transactions”). 2 Radovieh’s son, Chaslav Radovieh, who was Cobalis’s president, began negotiating on behalf of Co-balis and Radovieh, and according to the complaint “was at all times acting as agent for the Plaintiffs.” Appendix (“App.”) 363.

Chaslav Radovieh and YAGI agreed to terms and entered into a “structured” PIPE transaction on December 20, 2006. YAGI agreed to lend $3.85 million to Co-balis in the form of debentures that could convert to shares if certain conditions came to pass. YAGI’s loan was convertible into common shares at a conversion price that automatically adjusted downward should Cobalis’s share price fall. As collateral for the loan, Radovieh agreed to place 8.4 million of his Cobalis shares in an escrow account with defendant David Gon *205 zalez as the escrow agent. These shares were secured by a Pledge and Escrow Agreement, which allowed for the transfer of these shares to YAGI if Cobalis suffered an “event of default.” App. 81-83. The Pledge and Escrow Agreement was signed by Radovich, Mark Angelo on behalf of YAGI, Chaslav Radovich on behalf of Co-balis, and David Gonzalez as the escrow agent.

Radovich claims that the structure of the PIPE transaction concerned him because it gave YAGI a “strong incentive” to sell shares of Cobalis short, thereby driving down their market price, reducing the price at which YAGI could convert its loan into shares, and ultimately leaving it with more shares. App. 363. To assuage his concerns, he contends that YAGI made numerous assurances — mostly oral, but at least one written — that YAGI would not “engage in transactions that would have the effect or potential to depress the price of Cobalis stock.” App. 366. Despite these assurances, Radovich claims that YAGI shorted Cobalis stock, thereby driving down its price and preventing Cobalis from raising additional money through share sales.

At some point between April and July 2007, YAGI also became aware that a third party obtained a judgment against Cobalis in an unrelated matter and attempted to enforce it against Cobalis. YAGI allegedly considered this an event of default and Radovieh’s shares were “wrongfully released” from escrow. App. 374.

Cobalis’s business failed and YAGI filed an involuntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California against Cobalis on August 1, 2007. By this point, Cobalis’s share price had declined from $0.75 per share at the time that the PIPE transaction closed to about $0.05 per share. Although the bankruptcy was ultimately converted into a voluntary Chapter 11 case, conflicts abounded between Cobal-is, who remained a debtor-in-possession, and YAGI. On November 9, 2009, while still in bankruptcy, Cobalis filed an adversary complaint in the bankruptcy court against YAGI seeking to void all of the documents associated with the PIPE transaction (the “Bankruptcy Adversary Action”). Cobalis claimed that YAGI breached oral and written assurances that it would not short Cobalis shares and that by shorting Cobalis shares, YAGI drove down their price and prevented Cobalis from raising additional money in the stock market. It also claimed that YAGI committed securities fraud by deceiving Rado-vich and Chaslav Radovich into entering into the transaction. App. 189. It sought “rescission of all of the Transaction Documents” that comprised the PIPE transaction (defined to include, inter alia, the Pledge and Escrow Agreement). App. 183.

The bankruptcy court dismissed Cobal-is’s complaint. Cobalis then amended its complaint in the bankruptcy court four times, and each time the bankruptcy judge again dismissed it. In its fifth complaint, Cobalis specifically alleged not only that YAGI breached promises to not short Co-balis stock, but that it “wrongfully became beneficial owners of the 8.4 million shares” in escrow. App. 327. Part of its final order dismissing the fifth complaint with prejudice specifically addressed the Pledge and Escrow Agreement, rejecting the notions that YAGI wrongfully became the beneficial owners of the 8.4 million shares in escrow, and that YAGI had broken any promises or breached any of the transaction documents. App. 350-51. Cobalis did not appeal the dismissal.

Before the ink on the bankruptcy judge’s final dismissal was dry, Cobalis brought an action in the District of New *206 Jersey on August 18, 2011 relating to the same events as the Bankruptcy Adversary Action and seeking a temporary restraining order (“TRO”) that would enjoin YAGI from exercising rights that it had under the transaction documents. The complaint in this first District Court of New Jersey action again recounted the history behind the PIPE transaction, defined the relevant transaction documents to include the Pledge and Escrow Agreement, and sought “Rescission Of All Instruments.” App. 415. The district court denied Cobal-is’s TRO application, largely because Co-balis could not overcome res judicata, and thus could not show a likelihood of success on the merits. It then dismissed the action, and Cobalis again did not appeal.

Instead, Radovich and several entities under his control brought the instant action on October 25, 2012. Its allegations mimic those made in the Bankruptcy Adversary Action (that were largely repeated in the first New Jersey action). The complaint recounts the history of Cobalis’s PIPE transaction and then alleges that Radovich was fraudulently induced into signing the Pledge and Escrow Agreement, that YAGI broke its oral assurances that it would not short Cobalis shares, and that YAGI misappropriated the 8.4 million shares that Radovich put in escrow.

The District Court again dismissed the instant action on res judicata grounds. It held that Radovich was relying on the same underlying events, facts, and theories, as Cobalis did in the Bankruptcy Adversary Action. It further held that the disposition of the Bankruptcy Adversary Action bound Radovich (who admittedly was not a party to it) because he was in privity with Cobalis. That Chaslav Rado-vich was Radovich’s agent in negotiating the PIPE transaction, Radovich owned a substantial block of Cobalis shares, and Radovich was Cobalis’s chairman created a sufficient identification of interests for res judicata purposes. Radovich timely appealed.

II.

The District Court had diversity jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
570 F. App'x 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radovich-v-lp-ya-global-investments-lp-ca3-2014.