Richbell Information Services, Inc. v. Jupiter Partners L.P.

280 A.D.2d 208, 723 N.Y.S.2d 134, 2001 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3013
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 20, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 280 A.D.2d 208 (Richbell Information Services, Inc. v. Jupiter Partners L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richbell Information Services, Inc. v. Jupiter Partners L.P., 280 A.D.2d 208, 723 N.Y.S.2d 134, 2001 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3013 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Ellerin, J.

In this action plaintiffs allege that defendants conspired by fraudulent and tortious conduct to misappropriate their interest in a joint venture, and to ruin plaintiffs financially so as to prevent them from obtaining redress in the courts. The precise question on appeal is . whether the complaint should have been dismissed on the ground that plaintiffs’ assignment of their claims to an entity financially able to sustain the litigation violated Judiciary Law §489. We hold that the motion to dismiss should have been denied because a determination as a matter of law that the assignment was champertous cannot be made on the record at this procedural juncture.

The Allegedly Fraudulent Scheme

Plaintiff David Elias, a citizen of the United Kingdom, owns and controls plaintiff The Richbell Group Limited (Richbell Group), which owns, inter alia, plaintiff Richbell Information Services, Inc. (RIS). In 1994 Richbell Group, and defendants Jupiter Partners L:P. (Jupiter) and RIT Capital Partners pic (RIT) formed H-G Holdings, Inc. (H-G), a corporate vehicle for carrying out a joint venture to acquire Gelco Payment Systems, Inc. (Gelco) and combine it with The Harpur Group Limited (Harpur), which was then, owned indirectly by Elias and Rich-bell Group. Harpur’s primary business was the operation and processing of corporate charge cards for fuel for company car fleets. Gelco offered expense and payment processing and management information services.

Plaintiffs allege that, in early 1996, despite the fact that their performance had earned them the right to an increase in [210]*210their share of H-G, Jupiter determined to force them to accept a smaller share. Knowing that plaintiffs needed the funds to meet other financial obligations, Jupiter blocked an initial public offering (IPO) of H-G’s shares, even while acknowledging that an IPO was in the best interests of H-G and its stockholders, and refused to allow plaintiffs to sell or borrow against their H-G shares. In April 1996, to break the impasse, plaintiffs entered into an agreement with Jupiter and RIT (the April 1996 Agreement) pursuant to which the parties would proceed with the IPO within six to nine months, and, pending the IPO, RIT, through its wholly owned and controlled subsidiary defendant Atlantic and General Investment Trust Limited (AGIT), would provide plaintiffs with a $30 million bridge loan, secured by RIS’s H-G shares, which allegedly were worth more than $240 million at the time. Plaintiffs also agreed to reduce their equity holding in H-G, which increased Jupiter’s equity holding by the same amount, and to pay interest on the loan of 25 per cent per annum.

Jupiter and, later, RIT then allegedly orchestrated plaintiffs’ eventual default on the loan by continuing to block the H-G IPO in violation of the April 1996 Agreement, by delaying, until after the due date of the loan, the closing on the sale of certain H-G assets from which plaintiffs would have received more than they needed to satisfy the loan, and by entering into a secret bid-rigging agreement to assure that, upon plaintiffs’ default, Jupiter and RIT would purchase RIS’s shares in H-G for the artificially low price of the amount due on the loan, thereby depriving plaintiffs of more than $200 million of equity in H-G.

Plaintiffs commenced this action in November 1997 alleging 12 causes of action for fraudulent inducement, breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, promissory estoppel, tortious interference with contract, interference with prospective advantage, conversion, and corporate waste. In February 1998, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint. Plaintiffs’ counsel refused to defend the motion unless its fees were paid, and successfully cross-moved to be relieved.

Financing the Suit

With plaintiffs unable to finance the suit themselves, on April 24, 1998, a committee of individuals who had invested in Rich-bell Group companies sent a circular soliciting funds for the litigation to the shareholders and creditors of Richbell Information Holdings, Inc. (RIH) and Verulam Group Limited. RIH owned stock in the parent company of plaintiff RIS, and Veru[211]*211lam owned stock in RIH. Their shareholders and creditors, according to plaintiffs, were invited to invest in Richbell 1998 to protect their interests in these Richbell Group companies, which they stood to lose if this action were not successful. The investors would control the litigation and share in its proceeds on a priority basis through a company formed for these purposes and eventually named Richbell 1998 Ltd. The circular suggested that, as an incentive to contribute, investors would receive repayment of the costs of the litigation funding, “together with a premium equal to 20 times such funding.”

Their shareholders and creditors, according to plaintiffs, were invited to protect their interests in these Richbell Group companies, which they stood to lose if this action were not successful, by investing in a company formed for this purpose and eventually named Richbell 1998 Ltd. The investors would control the litigation and share in its proceeds on a priority basis through Richbell 1998. On the same day, the Board of Directors of RIS approved a similar assignment of its interests to Richbell 1998, and had drafts prepared of an agreement between Richbell 1998 and RIS (the RIS Agreement) and an agreement between Richbell 1998 and plaintiffs (the MultiParty Agreement). However, RIS was required to apply to the English High Court of Justice for approval of the funding agreements, since it was in bankruptcy in the United Kingdom and a liquidator had not yet been appointed. In an affidavit to the High Court, Malcolm Sweeting, a member of the Steering Committee set up to represent the interests of investors in Richbell Group companies, stated that Richbell 1998 “was formed solely for the purpose of acting as a clean vehicle for the Investors to acquire the interests of [RIS], [Richbell Group] and Mr. Elias in the US Action, and to progress those proceedings.” Peter Stuart-Buttle, a director of RIS, stated in an affidavit that the investors had made it clear to him that they would not continue to fund the litigation unless they received a proportionate share of its proceeds. AGIT opposed the application on the ground, inter alia, that an assignment would violate Judiciary Law § 489. On July 17, 1998, the High Court approved an alternative funding arrangement that was not an assignment, expressly leaving open the question of whether the arrangement violated United States or United Kingdom champerty laws.

The High Court had ordered Richbell Group liquidated in March 1998, upon a petition filed by defendant Harpur, and in October 1998 the appointed liquidators executed an “Assign[212]*212ment Agreement” transferring Richbell Group’s claims to Rich-bell 1998. The RIS Agreement and the Multi-Party Agreement were executed in December. The latter provided that any money or other assets recovered in this action by Richbell, Elias, and RIS, after it paid its creditors, would be placed into a trust for the benefit of, and promptly paid to, Richbell 1998. From the trust, Richbell Group would receive 15 per cent of the first $50 million, 10 per cent of amounts between $50 million and $75 million, and 5 per cent of amounts higher than that.

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Bluebook (online)
280 A.D.2d 208, 723 N.Y.S.2d 134, 2001 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richbell-information-services-inc-v-jupiter-partners-lp-nyappdiv-2001.