TeleTracking v. Gori, F.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 28, 2015
Docket940 WDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of TeleTracking v. Gori, F. (TeleTracking v. Gori, F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TeleTracking v. Gori, F., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-A07009-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

TELETRACKING TECHNOLOGIES, INC. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellant

v.

FRANK J. GORI, MARK JULIANO, GENE NACEY, LORRAINE NACEY, STEPHEN P. NASH, BRIAN E. SCHULIGER, INSIGHT VENTURE MANAGEMENT, L.L.C. AND INSIGHT TTT, LLC.

Appellee No. 940 WDA 2014

Appeal from the Order Entered June 6, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Civil Division at No(s): GD 11-006531

BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., LAZARUS, J., and MUNDY, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.: FILED MAY 28, 2015

TeleTracking Technologies, Inc. (TeleTracking) appeals from the trial

court’s order: (1) reaffirming its May 2011 order finding Insight Venture

Management, L.L.C.’s (Insight) Fourth Offer to purchase the Minority

Shareholders’ stock is a bona fide offer; (2) enjoining TeleTracking from

undertaking any further efforts to impede or prevent the closing on the

Fourth Offer; and (3) directing TeleTracking, upon closing of the Fourth

Offer, to register the transfer of shares in the name of Insight and issue new

stock certificates in its name upon surrender of the Minority Shareholders’

stock certificates. Upon careful review, we affirm. J-A07009-15

In a prior appeal, our Court aptly summarized the relevant facts of the

underlying case as follows:

On April 7, 2011, TeleTracking instituted this lawsuit by filing a complaint against: 1) Frank J. Gori, Mark Juliano, Gene Nacey, Lorraine Nacey, Stephen P. Nash, and Brian E. Schuliger [the Minority Shareholders/Appellees] [and] 2) Insight []. The following allegations appear in the complaint. TeleTracking, a privately-held corporation in which the minority shareholders hold about twenty-seven percent of the stock, is a health-care information technology company that provides patient flow solutions to the health care industry.

Pursuant to a February 15, 1999 shareholder agreement, TeleTracking has a right of first refusal to purchase stock on the same terms and conditions as any bona fide offer that a shareholder receives for his shares. The pertinent provision of the shareholder agreement executed among TeleTracking and its shareholders, including the minority shareholders, is as follows:

In the event that any Shareholder shall receive a bona fide written offer to buy such Shareholder share, which such Shareholder desires to accept, such Shareholder shall give written notice thereto to the Corporation and the other Shareholders. The notice shall specify that number of shares (the “Offered Shares”) the Shareholder intends to dispose of [and] the identity and the address of the person to whom the Shareholder proposes to dispose of such shares. Attached to the notice shall be a copy of the written offer, including the price, terms and conditions of the proposed disposition. The notice shall also be accompanied by a counterpart of the Agreement, executed by the proposed purchaser of the shares. Appellant shall have an irrevocable and exclusive first option, but not an obligation, to purchase some or all of said shares on the same terms and conditions as set forth in said offer, exercisable by giving written notice to the Shareholder proposing to sell within thirty (30) days after receipt of the notice of the proposed offer.

Exhibit 1 at § 1(a) (emphasis added).

Insight [is an] investment banking firm[]. On March 31, 2011, the minority shareholders indicated to TeleTracking that they

-2- J-A07009-15

had received an offer from Insight, brokered through [another investment banking firm], for the purchase of their stock and that [they] intended to sell the stock to Insight. They proffered that TeleTracking had thirty days to match the offer under the shareholder agreement. The offer in question was the fourth offer that Insight had made for the stock, after TeleTracking had previously maintained that three prior offers from Insight were not bona fide and did not trigger its right of first refusal.

The complaint contained four counts. In count one, TeleTracking set forth a declaratory judgment cause of action. It sought a declaration that its obligation to match Insight’s fourth offer for the minority shareholders’ stock was not triggered under the shareholder agreement. Its position was two-fold. It claimed that the offer was not bona fide and also that it was impossible for it to purchase the shares on the same terms and conditions as those set forth in Insight’s offer. In the second count, TeleTracking sought a preliminary injunction preventing the minority shareholders from selling the stock to Insight. At count three, TeleTracking averred that the minority shareholders had breached the shareholder agreement and, in count four, that Insight [] had tortuously interfered with that accord.

Simultaneously with the complaint, TeleTracking filed a motion for preliminary injunction. . . . After a hearing conducted on April 26, 2011, the trial court denied the motion for preliminary injunction, thereby resolving count two of the complaint in favor of Insight and the minority shareholders, Appellees herein.

On May 10, 2011, Appellees answered the complaint and moved for partial summary judgment as to count one of the complaint, which, as noted, sought a declaration that Appellant’s right of first refusal was not triggered by Insight’s fourth offer that was submitted to TeleTracking on March 31, 2011. Appellees’ petition[ed] for a ruling that Insight’s fourth offer was bona fide and that TeleTracking’s matching rights and obligations under the shareholder agreement were triggered when that offer was delivered to TeleTracking on March 31, 2011.

The trial court ordered that discovery relevant to the summary judgment motion be conducted. After the submission of exhibits and briefs by the parties, on May 26, 2011, the trial court granted the motion for partial summary judgment. It ruled that the offer in question was a bona fide offer and that

-3- J-A07009-15

Appellant’s matching rights and obligations under the shareholder agreement were triggered when that offer was delivered to it on March 31, 2011. On June 22, 2011, the court entered a final order dismissing the two remaining breach of contract and tortious interference claims set forth in the complaint. TeleTracking assented, without prejudice, to the dismissal of the complaint since the breach of contract and tortious interference causes of action were premised upon the position that the offer in question did not trigger its right of first refusal.

TeleTracking Technologies, Inc., v. Gori, et al., No. 1066 WDA 2011, at

1-5 (Pa. Super. filed April 10, 2013). TeleTracking appealed from the trial

court’s order, asserting that the court erred in determining that the Fourth

Offer was “bona fide” and that it erred in concluding that the Fourth Offer

was structured in such a way that TeleTracking could match it on the same

terms and conditions as Insight.

On appeal, our Court affirmed the trial court’s order dismissing

TeleTracking’s complaint finding Insight’s offer to be bona fide as between

the offeror and offeree (but does not require that the offer be bona fide in

terms of its effects on TeleTracking) and that TeleTracking’s matching

rights and obligations under the shareholder agreement were triggered

because TeleTracking had been given the right to purchase the shares under

the same terms and conditions outlined in the stock purchase agreement

that the Minority Shareholders had executed with Insight.

In coming to its decision, our Court found that TeleTracking had

repeatedly obstructed the Minority Shareholders from selling their stock by

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Bluebook (online)
TeleTracking v. Gori, F., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teletracking-v-gori-f-pasuperct-2015.