Schron v. Troutman Sanders LLP

97 A.D.3d 87, 945 N.Y.2d 25

This text of 97 A.D.3d 87 (Schron v. Troutman Sanders LLP) 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
Schron v. Troutman Sanders LLP, 97 A.D.3d 87, 945 N.Y.2d 25 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[89]*89OPINION OF THE COURT

Catterson, J.

In this action, the defendants are seeking to avoid the plain language of an option to purchase a national nursing-home company by incorporating into it a separate loan agreement through the use of parol evidence. Two motion courts correctly rejected this tortured argument and we therefore affirm.

Plaintiff Rubin Schron is a real estate investor who operates through various entities using the names Cammeby’s and Cam-Elm (all managed by Schron and majority-owned by his immediate family). Defendant-appellant Leonard Grunstein , a partner at Troutman Sanders LLP (formerly at Jenkens Gilchrist Parker Chapin LLP), was formerly Schron’s attorney. Defendant-appellant Murray Forman, an investment banker, was formerly Schron’s investment banker.

In December 2004, at Grunstein’s and Forman’s urging, Schron and his companies (sometimes hereinafter referred to collectively as Schron) financed a $1.3 billion acquisition of the assets of Mariner Health Services, Inc., a public company operating numerous nursing homes. Schron paid $14 million to a small investment bank predominantly owned by Forman and Grunstein, who had structured the deal. Grunstein and his law firm (then Jenkens & Gilchrist) drafted the 2004 transactional documents and the 2006 amended refinancing documents.

Schron provided $1.1 billion in cash, lines of credit and mortgages, and effectively guaranteed the remaining loans from a third-party lender. It is undisputed that neither Grunstein or Forman contributed any funds to the transaction.

A Schron entity, SMV Property Holdings LLC (hereinafter referred to as SMV) acquired Mariner’s real estate. Grunstein persuaded Schron to lease the nursing home facilities to Grunstein’s brother; SVCare (managed by Grunstein and Forman) and its operating subsidiary, Sava, were formed for that purpose. Less than two months after the closing, Grunstein’s brother transferred SVCare to Canyon Sudar Partners, LLC, which was wholly-owned by Grunstein and Forman, for the nominal sum of $10.

In connection with the Mariner transaction, a Schron entity, Cammeby’s Funding III, LLC, agreed to make a $100 million loan to SVCare; the loan agreement was amended in 2006. The 2004 loan agreement contained a merger clause, as did its 2006 amendment.

[90]*90Prior to the amendment, the loan had been described as collateral for other loans made to SMV; Grunstein and Forman had certified to third-party lenders that the loan had been made; the loan was reflected in Sava’s audited financial statements; and Grunstein and Forman had their attorneys describe the loan as outstanding in communications with the Department of Justice.

Also in connection with the Mariner transaction, SVCare and Canyon Sudar granted Cammeby’s Equity Holdings LLC (hereinafter referred to as Cam Equity) an option to purchase SVCare. The option, as amended in 2006, had a five-year term permitting its exercise by June 9, 2011.

The consideration for the option was “the mutual covenants and agreements hereinafter set forth, and other good and valuable consideration (the receipt and adequacy of which is hereby acknowledged by the Parties)” (emphasis added). The consideration for exercising the option was $100 million, “all or a portion of which may be paid through assumption, satisfaction or other elimination of [SVCare’s] liability on debt in the dollar amount of the component of the exercise price paid by this method.” The manner of payment was at Cam Equity’s discretion. If, after exercising the option, Cam Equity sold SVCare, any net proceeds over $400 million would be paid to SVCare.

The option agreement also contained a merger clause: it “supersedes and completely replaces all prior and other representations, . . . other agreements and understandings . . . with respect to the matters contained in this Agreement.” It is undisputed that the agreement did not mention the $100 million loan from Cammeby’s Funding III, LLC (an entity separate from option-holder Cam Equity), or that the option was security for a loan from another party.

On March 23, 2010, Grunstein and Forman filed Mich II Holdings LLC v Schron (index No. 600736/2010), seeking, inter alia, to declare the option invalid. In the complaint, Grunstein and Forman alleged that the option agreement is one of the loan documents, the option was granted in consideration for cancellation of the $100 million loan indebtedness, but the option was void because the loan was never made.

On June 22, 2010, Cam Equity gave written notice to SVCare of its intent to exercise the option. In August 2010, Schron filed the amended verified complaint in Schron v Grunstein (index No. 650702/2010), alleging that Grunstein and Forman had structured the Mariner deal, drafted the documents and induced [91]*91him to enter into the transaction, breaching their fiduciary duties and committing related business torts. Schron sought specific performance of the option.

In October 2010, Cam Equity moved in limine in Schron to exclude parol evidence that Grunstein claimed would show that (1) the $100 million loan was the “other good and valuable consideration” for the option, and (2) the loan was not funded, rendering the option void for lack of consideration. Schron also moved in Mich II to dismiss Grunstein’s cause of action to declare the option void. The arguments on the motions are identical and our analysis applies to each motion equally.

Cam Equity relied on the merger/integration clause in the option agreement in support of its argument that no understanding extrinsic to the option agreement could be used to interpret it. It maintained that the “mutual covenants and agreements” constituting the consideration were the promises to pay SVCare $100 million at closing and to pay it the excess above $400 million if Mariner’s operations were sold to a third party.

Cam Equity further contended that the option agreement should be construed against Grunstein, whose (conflicted) law firm had drafted it; it was simply not plausible that they would have omitted $100 million in consideration from the option’s terms. Finally, Cam Equity argued that Grunstein was estopped from denying that the loan funds had never been provided, since Grunstein and his codefendants in Schron had repeatedly acknowledged that the $100 million loan was made.

In opposition, Forman simply reiterated his and Grunstein’s pleadings, that the loan was the consideration for the option and that the option was security for the loan. He averred that Schron had stated that he always understood that the option was merely security for the loan. Although Forman admitted signing papers stating that the loan had been funded, he claimed those statements were not accurate and had only been made under the belief that the funds would be provided; however, he asserted that the funds were never provided.

The motion court (Justice Yates) granted the motion in limine and granted the motion to dismiss Grunstein and Forman’s cause of action to declare the option void. The motion court found the loan and option agreements to be separate, not interdependent, because, although executed and amended on the same date, they had separate “assents,” contained no cross references and had only a partial identity of parties (i.e., since one had Cam Equity and the other had Cammeby’s Funding III, [92]*92LLC).

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.D.3d 87, 945 N.Y.2d 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schron-v-troutman-sanders-llp-nyappdiv-2012.