Spirit Partners, LP v. Stoel Rives LLP

157 P.3d 1194, 212 Or. App. 295, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 562
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 25, 2007
Docket0211-11290; A125873
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 157 P.3d 1194 (Spirit Partners, LP v. Stoel Rives LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spirit Partners, LP v. Stoel Rives LLP, 157 P.3d 1194, 212 Or. App. 295, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 562 (Or. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*297 ORTEGA, J.

This appeal arises from plaintiffs purchase of warrants in audiohighway.com (“Audiohighway”), a company that has declared bankruptcy. Plaintiff sued defendant, a law firm that represented the managing underwriter of Audio-highway’s initial public offering, for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of fiduciary duties. Applying Oregon law, the trial court granted summary judgment to defendant on statute of limitations grounds. Plaintiff appeals, contending that the trial court erred in applying Oregon law rather than California law or, as to one claim, New York law; plaintiff also argues that, even if Oregon law applies, there is a genuine issue of material fact regarding when plaintiff discovered its claims against defendant.

We view the record in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the nonmoving party, and determine whether defendant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. ORCP 47 C. Because we conclude that the trial court correctly applied Oregon’s statute of limitations and that there is no genuine issue of material fact, we affirm. 1

Most of the following facts are undisputed, although the parties have dramatically different views regarding the consequences of the facts. Audiohighway, a California corporation, engaged in an initial public offering (IPO) of its stock on the NASDAQ® stock market in 1998. Each unit sold consisted of one share of common stock and one warrant. Each warrant entitled its holder to purchase, during a certain period, one additional share of Audiohighway common stock for $9.75.

Audiohighway retained Paulson Investment Company (Paulson) as the managing underwriter for the IPO. Paulson’s main office is in Portland, and it also has offices in California and New York. Paulson hired defendant, a law firm whose main office is in Portland, to represent the underwriters in the IPO. Audiohighway’s preliminary prospectus, dated August 14, 1998, and its final prospectus, dated *298 December 17, 1998, both stated that certain legal matters in connection with the IPO would “be passed upon for the [Underwriters by [defendant], Portland, Oregon.” Defendant’s work with respect to the IPO was performed by persons who work from its Portland office. During the relevant time period, defendant had no California offices.

Audiohighway appointed U.S. Stock Transfer Corporation, a California corporation, to act as its warrant agent. Under the terms of the warrant agreement, the warrant agent was responsible for keeping records of the ownership of the warrants. The warrant agreement contained a choice-of-law provision stating that the warrant agreement and warrant certificates would be deemed California contracts and construed in accordance with California law. Like the final prospectus, the warrant agreement was dated December 17, 1998.

Plaintiff is a broker-dealer that specializes in trading warrants. Plaintiff identifies itself as a limited partnership organized under New York law, with its principal office in New York City. Plaintiff alleges that, before Audiohighway called the warrants, it had bought and sold Audiohighway warrants and held 44,200 warrants.

The dispute in this case revolves around the terms under which the warrants would be called. The warrant agreement provided that, when Audiohighway called the warrants, warrant holders would be required either to exercise their warrants to purchase stock or to allow Audiohighway to redeem the warrants at a price of 25 cents per warrant. Audiohighway’s preliminary prospectus and the warrant agreement stated that the company could call its warrants if the stock price exceeded a certain price (identified in the preliminary prospectus only as 200 percent of the IPO price and specifically identified in the warrant agreement as $13) for 20 consecutive trading days. However, the final prospectus set different call provisions: it provided that warrants could be called if the stock price equaled or exceeded $13 for 10 calendar days. Thus, the call provision in the warrant agreement did not match that in the final prospectus.

Audiohighways IPO took place on December 18, 1998. In an e-mail message dated January 14, 1999 (“ ‘fix it’ *299 e-mail”), Audiohighway’s counsel wrote to an attorney in defendant law firm who had worked on the matter:

“In reviewing the copy of the [w] arrant [a]greement * * *, I see that the redemption provision was never updated to reflect the final deal: It should read that [Audiohighway] may call the [w]arrants if the Daily Price (defined as the closing bid) equals or exceeds $13.00 (200% of the IPO price) for 10 consecutive days. I think we should fix it so that the [w] arrant [a]greement in the final documents is correct. * * * Could you please take care of that and send it around to Grant and [the warrant agent], with a copy to me? Thanks much.”

The attorney changed the warrant agreement accordingly.

The attorney described the change as unexceptional “post closing cleanup.” In plaintiffs view, however, the change was made without following applicable amendment procedures and was a significant misrepresentation that forms the basis of all of plaintiffs claims. In keeping with those divergent views, plaintiff refers to the document including the change as “the Backdated Warrant Agreement,” and defendant refers to it as “the corrected warrant agreement.” Preferring a less loaded term, we refer to it as “the disputed warrant agreement.”

On January 20, 1999, Audiohighway announced that it was calling the warrants. By the terms of the warrant call, warrants were to be exercised by delivery of the warrant certificates and payment to the warrant agent in California. Plaintiff sought to stop the call based on objections to the 10-day call provision. However, plaintiff was at that point unaware that a change had been made to the original warrant agreement; its objections were based on claimed defects in the change from the 20-trading-day call provision in the preliminary prospectus to the 10-calendar-day provision in the final prospectus and on an alleged ambiguity in the 10-day provision. After plaintiff obtained from Audiohighway a copy of the disputed warrant agreement (which was not yet disputed), indicating that the 10-day provision controlled, plaintiff went ahead and exercised its warrants rather than continuing with efforts to stop the call. Plaintiff now contends that, if it had realized that the original warrant agreement *300 contained a 20-day call provision, “it would have easily halted the warrant call in Federal Court in New York.”

After the warrants were called, plaintiff sued Audio-highway in federal court in New York for breach of contract and other claims relating to the warrant call. In December 1999, in response to a subpoena from plaintiff, defendant produced a copy of the “fix it” e-mail. A letter from plaintiffs counsel to Audiohighway’s counsel dated January 6, 2000 (the January 2000 letter), asserts, “We are confident that this e-mail along with other documentation we have found demonstrates the impropriety of the [w] arrant [c]all.” From that point on, representatives of plaintiff identified the “fix it” e-mail in depositions as evidence of improper conduct by defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P.3d 1194, 212 Or. App. 295, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spirit-partners-lp-v-stoel-rives-llp-orctapp-2007.