Randall, Stacy v. Widen, Reed

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 16, 2024
Docket3:22-cv-00400
StatusUnknown

This text of Randall, Stacy v. Widen, Reed (Randall, Stacy v. Widen, Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randall, Stacy v. Widen, Reed, (W.D. Wis. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

STACY L. RANDALL,

Plaintiff, v. OPINION and ORDER

REED C. WIDEN, MICHAEL KIESLER, 22-cv-400-jdp WIDEN ENTERPRISES, LLC, AND WINDY WATERS, INC.,

Defendants.

Faced with financial difficulties, plaintiff Stacy Randall sold her 20 percent interest in in the family business, Windy Waters, Inc., to the company for $1.3 million in May 2020. The price for Randall’s shares was set by the company’s treasurer, defendant Michael Kiesler, using the same price-per-share formula that the company had used for nearly two decades whenever it bought or sold its stock, including past transactions with Randall. But about 16 months after Randall redeemed her stock, her brother, defendant Reed Widen, sold the company’s main asset, Widen Enterprises, LLC, for $162 million.1 Had Randall still been a shareholder of Windy Waters, her 20 percent interest would have garnered a payout of about $32 million. Understandably upset, Randall obtained counsel, who examined the books and records of Windy Waters and Widen Enterprises and communications among its top management. The investigation revealed that the actual sale of Widen Enterprises had not been in the works when Randall redeemed her shares. But Randall learned that years before her stock redemption, Widen Enterprises’ CEO Matthew Gonnering had estimated that Widen Enterprises’

1 The court will refer to Reed Widen by his first name, to avoid confusion with Widen Enterprises. unrealized market value was many times greater than that suggested by the price-per-share formula used to calculate Randall’s redemption price; in August 2018, he had estimated that the company’s market value was $80 million. Randall also discovered that in late 2019, Gonnering had told Reed and Kiesler that the companies should buy out the shares of the

passive shareholders at the “low” formula valuation, and then, once there were no longer any passive shareholders, explore whether there were tax benefits to be gained by compensating Reed and another employee with dividend payments rather than wages. She also learned that Reed had paid himself annual compensation of $1.5 million in 2019 and $2 million in 2020, more than three times the CEO’s compensation, even though Reed was not directly involved in the day-to-day management of Widen Enterprises. Randall sued Reed, Kiesler, and the two companies, asserting several causes of action: securities fraud under section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b–5;

state-law securities fraud; breach of fiduciary duty; misrepresentation; and civil theft. She alleges that Reed and Kiesler misstated and withheld material information that, if revealed, would have affected her decision to sell. She contends that Reed and Kiesler deprived her of the benefits of her ownership by funneling corporate profits to Reed in the form of excess compensation and bonuses that she did not receive, and by forging her signature on corporate documents. She asks the court to find her stock redemption agreement void and unenforceable on various grounds, including fraudulent inducement, unconscionability, and duress. Defendants deny that they lied to Randall or that they failed to disclose anything

relevant to the price they offered Randall for her shares or her decision to sell. They contend that they truthfully disclosed everything she needed to know to decide whether the redemption price was calculated properly under the company’s standard formula, and that if she wanted more information about the company, she could have asked. As defendants see it, this is nothing more than a case of seller’s remorse. Cross-motions for summary judgment are now before the court. Randall moves for partial summary judgment—on defendants’ affirmative defenses of release, ratification, and

waiver, and on her breach of fiduciary duty and securities fraud claims. Dkt. 59. Defendants have moved for summary judgment on the entire complaint. Dkt. 62. The motions for summary judgment raise issues in three main categories. The first category involves the release agreement that Randall signed when she redeemed her stock. The issues are whether that release precludes her claims, and whether Randall’s acceptance of payments after she learned about the alleged fraud constitutes waiver or ratification of the release agreement. The court will grant Randall’s motion for summary judgment on waiver and ratification. The payments Randall accepted were payments for her stock, not consideration

she received in return for agreeing to release claims against defendants. But the court will deny summary judgment to both parties on whether the release precludes Randall’s claims, because there are genuine disputes of fact relevant to Randall’s duty to investigate potential claims prior to signing the release. The second category concerns Randall’s main claims for federal and state-law fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. These turn largely on two key disputes: first, whether Kiesler made affirmative misrepresentations to Randall; and second, whether, regardless of any alleged misrepresentations, defendants nonetheless had a duty to disclose financial and other

information about Widen Enterprises’ value to Randall before buying her shares. Randall has no evidence that defendants misrepresented or omitted facts regarding a specific plan to sell Widen Enterprises, so the court will grant summary judgment to defendants on Randall’s claims insofar as they are based on alleged misrepresentations and omissions about the sale consummated in 2021. But there are genuine disputes of fact about other alleged misrepresentations and omissions that preclude summary judgment to either party. The third category concerns the enforceability of the stock redemption agreement. If

Randall proves her claims for common-law fraud or breach of fiduciary duty, then she will be able to rescind the redemption agreement, which would open the door to a range of equitable remedies. But Randall has not shown that any of her alternative grounds for voiding the redemption agreement apply (the federal Exchange Act § 29(a), unconscionability, duress, and public policy). The court will grant summary judgment to defendants on those claims. Because of the length of the opinion, the court provides a table of contents.

BACKGROUND .......................................................................................................................... 5 A. Corporate history ............................................................................................................. 6 B. Windy Waters’ stock price formula ................................................................................. 9 C. Randall’s 2020 request for funds ...................................................................................1 1 D. Randall’s May 6 conversations with Kiesler .................................................................. 12 E. Kiesler updates the calculation and has documents prepared ...................................... 15 F. Kiesler contacts Randall on May 13 .............................................................................. 16 G. Defendants’ post-redemption activities .........................................................................1 9 H. Reed decides to sell; Acquia buys Widen Enterprises for $162 million ....................... 20 SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD .................................................................................. 21 CATEGORY 1 ISSUES: RELEASE AND RATIFICATION ....................................................2 2 A. The release ...................................................................................................................... 22 B. Rescission or ratification of the stock redemption agreement ......................................

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Randall, Stacy v. Widen, Reed, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-stacy-v-widen-reed-wiwd-2024.