Stingfree Technologies Co. v. Americ Investments Capital Co. (In Re Stingfree Technologies Co.)

427 B.R. 337, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32496, 2010 WL 1381414
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 31, 2010
DocketCivil Action No. 09-cv-01119. Bankruptcy No. 08-16232(bif)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 427 B.R. 337 (Stingfree Technologies Co. v. Americ Investments Capital Co. (In Re Stingfree Technologies Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stingfree Technologies Co. v. Americ Investments Capital Co. (In Re Stingfree Technologies Co.), 427 B.R. 337, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32496, 2010 WL 1381414 (E.D. Pa. 2010).

Opinion

*341 OPINION

JAMES KNOLL GARDNER, District Judge.

This matter is before the court on the Notice of Appeal dated February 16, 2009 by debtor-appellant StingFree Technologies Company (“StingFree”), by which StingFree appeals the February 4, 2009 Order and accompanying Memorandum of United States Bankruptcy Judge Bruce Fox (“Memorandum”) dismissing Sting-Free’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding. 1

Also before the court is the Motion of Fonika Ventures, LLC to Intervene, which motion was filed June 17, 2009. 2

On January 12, 2010, I heard oral argument on the entire matter, including the motion to intervene, and took the matter under advisement. 3 Hence this Opinion. For the reasons articulated below, I deny Fonika’s motion to intervene, and I affirm the Order of the bankruptcy court.

JURISDICTION

This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this bankruptcy appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1).

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The facts and procedural history herein are gleaned from the February 4, 2009 Order and accompanying Memorandum of the bankruptcy court, the record of this matter, and, to the extent they are in agreement, the briefs of the parties. 4

Appellee Robert Vito previously served as president, chief executive officer, and chairman of the Board of StingFree, a Pennsylvania corporation which owned and developed patents for technology designed to reduce or absorb undesirable shock vibrations when using golf clubs. The company was originally formed by Dr. Thomas Fallone and Dr. Carmen DiMario as Pendulum Corp.

In June 2001, Drs. Fallone and DiMario formed a new Pennsylvania corporation called Inner Core, which purchased the patent rights held by Pendulum, changed the name in 2003 to Stingfree, and renamed the corporation in 2005 as Sting-Free Technologies. 5 StingFree operated from a basement office at the home of Mr. *342 Vito and his wife, Lisa Vito (appellees “the Vitos”). The Vitos charged StingFree rent. 6

StingFree hired an accountant, Christopher Nawn, CPA, to review its books and records. Mr. Nawn issued a report in January 2008 based on his review of limited corporate records. Also in January 2008, StingFree replaced Mr. Vito with Richard Rudinger as its chief executive officer and board chairman. Litigation ensued, involving Mr. Vito, StingFree, Mr. Rudinger, and StingFree director Dr. Thomas Fallone.

Ultimately, the Vitos and StingFree entered into a “Stock Redemption, Separation and Settlement Agreement” (“Settlement Agreement”) dated February 29, 2008. 7 The bankruptcy court summarized the Settlement Agreement, in part, as follows. 8

This agreement provided for the Vitos to sell 68,219,000 shares of Stingfree stock titled in their names (and to transfer 6,460,000 options to purchase stock) to Stingfree for $3,900,000, plus the assumption by Stingfree of certain corporate debts payable, or otherwise guaranteed, by the Vitos. The Vitos received a promissory note in this amount, with payments to be made at three stated intervals over roughly a 25-month period, from February 29th. The first payment of $1 million was due by May 19, 2008. The promissory note contained a confession of judgment provision.
The Settlement Agreement also provided that Mr. Vito would resign immediately as Stingfree’s president; a June 2006 employment agreement between Stingfree and Mr. Vito was terminated immediately; and Mr. Vito agreed not to compete with Stingfree for 12 months and to keep confidential corporate information. Furthermore, the two pending lawsuits involving Stingfree and the Vi-tos were to be withdrawn. A mutual release attached to the settlement agreement was signed that included all claims “in law or equity which the Relea-sors ever had, [or] now have.... ”
The settlement agreement also recited that Stingfree was the sole owner of its patents. However, as security for promised payments from the corporation, the Vitos received a pledge of the stock being sold to the corporation as well as a “first lien security interest in the patents held by the Company on the date hereof,” along with an assignment of patent rights. 9

The Vitos also promised to return all property belonging to StingFree including, but not limited to, all corporate records, including “corporate accounting records, corporate bank account statements, [and] corporate correspondence”. 10

The Settlement Agreement included a mandatory arbitration clause, which provided, in part, that “[a]ny controversies or disputes arising out of or relating to this Agreement shall be resolved by binding arbitration in accordance with the then current Commercial Arbitration Rules of *343 the American Arbitration Association.” 11

Additionally, the Settlement Agreement contained a section titled “Default”, which provided, in part, that “A default under the terms of any of the Transaction Agreements shall be considered a default under all such agreements. All defaults, except monetary defaults, are curable, and if not so cured shall be resolved according to the Dispute Resolution Section herein.” 12

The bankruptcy court found that Mr. Vito delivered certain boxes of records and materials that Mr. Rudinger found deficient, and that digital copies of corporate financial records had been altered since their original entries. The bankruptcy court further found that StingFree refrained from seeking further investors “because it considered the corporation’s financial records unauditable ... and because recent tax returns had not been filed for the debtor.” 13

The bankruptcy court found that on March 28, 2008, StingFree sent the Vitos a notice of default under the terms of the Settlement Agreement. The Vitos responded that they had cured any alleged defaults, which StingFree rejected, and sent their own notices to StingFree when they did not receive their $1 million payment by the extended deadline of May 81, 2008. Thereafter, the Vitos confessed judgment against StingFree in Pennsylvania state court in the amount of $4.11 million, and recorded that judgment in California and possibly Maryland. 14

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Bluebook (online)
427 B.R. 337, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 32496, 2010 WL 1381414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stingfree-technologies-co-v-americ-investments-capital-co-in-re-paed-2010.