Timothy Glick v. KF Pecksland LLC

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 17, 2017
DocketCA 12624-CB
StatusPublished

This text of Timothy Glick v. KF Pecksland LLC (Timothy Glick v. KF Pecksland LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timothy Glick v. KF Pecksland LLC, (Del. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

TIMOTHY GLICK and RENEE ) GLICK, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 12624-CB ) KF PECKSLAND LLC, a Delaware ) limited liability company, THE ) BLEACHERS CORPORATION, a ) Delaware corporation, and SAMUEL ) KLEIN ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: August 10, 2017 Date Decided: November 17, 2017

Kenneth J. Nachbar, Zi-Xiang Shen, MORRIS, NICHOLS, ARSHT & TUNNELL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiffs.

P. Clarkson Collins, Jr., Albert J. Carroll, MORRIS JAMES LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Defendants.

BOUCHARD, C. In this post-trial decision, the Court finds that Samuel Klein fraudulently

induced Tim and Renee Glick into investing most of their life savings in a company

he used as his personal checking account on the promise that they would obtain an

ownership interest in another company called The Bleachers Corporation. Not long

after the Glicks entrusted Klein with their savings, Bleachers became defunct.

Klein lived lavishly and portrayed himself to the Glicks as a highly successful

businessman. He perpetrated the fraud by befriending the Glicks and gaining their

confidence before offering them the “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” to invest in a

“white hot” Bleachers. He pitched the investment as a favor he was doing for the

Glicks out of friendship so that Tim, a homebuilder in Jackson, Wyoming, could

earn some easy money and have “skin in the game” to invest in a real estate joint

venture with Klein, which never materialized. The Glicks were not sophisticated

investors, as was readily apparent to Klein, and they expressed reservations about

investing their savings in Bleachers. To close the deal, Klein promised to personally

buy back their shares if things did not work out.

When the relationship ruptured, Klein reneged on his promise to buy back the

shares, which the record shows he never intended to keep. This lawsuit followed.

For the reasons explained below, the Glicks have met their burden under Wyoming

law to prove fraudulent inducement and are entitled to damages for the amount they

invested with Klein ($433,000) plus costs.

1 I. BACKGROUND The facts recited in this opinion are my findings based on over 100 trial

exhibits, deposition testimony, and live testimony from three fact witnesses who

testified at trial: Tim and Renee Glick1 and Samuel Klein. I accord the evidence the

weight and credibility I find it deserves.

A. The Parties

Plaintiffs Tim and Renee Glick are married and reside together in Jackson,

Wyoming, with their three children.2 Tim owns and operates a business that designs

and constructs custom homes, named Dynamic Custom Homes (“Dynamic”).3

Renee is a stay-at-home mom who does some photography and makes gelato.4 Tim

attended Montana State University on a partial skiing scholarship, graduating in

1995.5 Renee graduated from the University of Massachusetts in 1999.6

Defendant Samuel Klein, who is in his early sixties, is a resident of

Greenwich, Connecticut.7 Klein does not have a college degree, but has a

1 I refer to the Glicks by their first names as they were used at trial for the sake of clarity. No disrespect is intended. 2 Tr. 123 (Renee). 3 Pre-Trial Order (“PTO”) § II.1; Tr. 10-11 (Tim). 4 Tr. 124 (Renee). 5 Tr. 7-9 (Tim). 6 Tr. 122-23 (Renee). 7 Tr. 149-150 (Klein).

2 background in real estate and commercial property development, and portrays

himself as a sophisticated and wealthy businessman.8 Before 2010, Klein primarily

engaged in property development and management, focusing on hotels and

healthcare facilities.9 He once pled guilty to a criminal misdemeanor for failing to

maintain adequate nursing staff at a nursing home he operated, which resulted in

restrictions being placed on his ability to operate nursing homes in New York.10

Defendant The Bleachers Corporation (“Bleachers”) is a Delaware

corporation that was formed in 2010.11 Bleachers ceased to operate as of February

2017 and is now defunct.12 Defendant KF Pecksland LLC (“KF Pecksland”) is a

Delaware limited liability company that Klein created to hold Bleachers shares.13

Klein admits he used KF Pecksland as his personal checking account.14

B. The Early Years of Bleachers

In 2010, Klein established Bleachers with the goal of streaming real-time

video of sporting events using operated and stationary high-definition cameras.15

8 Tr. 150-51 (Klein); Tr. 13-14 (Tim). 9 Tr. 150 (Klein). 10 Tr. 227-29 (Klein). 11 JX004; PTO § II.3. 12 PTO § II.3. 13 JX036 Glicks202-03; PTO § II.4. 14 Tr. 229 (Klein). 15 Tr. 151-54, 277-78 (Klein).

3 Klein claims he started the company with an initial investment of approximately $3

million.16 Over the next two and a half years, Bleachers beta tested its streaming

technology at two private schools in Greenwich17 and hired employees who had

experience in sports technology from another sports startup.18 Bleachers’ business

model evolved over time to focus on installing fixed cameras at private and boarding

schools, where there is a high level of participation in sports and the students’

families tend to be wealthy and do not live nearby.19 Bleachers initially offered its

service as a “live streaming subscription on either a monthly or an annual basis.”20

Bleachers ended 2013 with a shareholders’ deficit of approximately $2,600,000.21

C. Klein Hires Tim to Build a Home in Jackson, Wyoming

Klein and Tim first met in 2008, when Tim bid on a vacation home

construction project for Klein.22 In 2013, Klein called Tim to discuss building a

home on a different piece of property in Jackson, Wyoming.23

16 Tr. 151-54, 277-78 (Klein); see also JX095 at 33-34 (Mommsen Dep.). 17 Tr. 154 (Klein). 18 Tr. 154 (Klein). 19 Tr. 153 (Klein). 20 JX095 at 73-74 (Mommsen Dep). 21 JX006 BL114. 22 Tr. 11-12, 81-82 (Tim). 23 Tr. 12 (Tim).

4 In or around October 2014, Dynamic entered into a contract with Klein’s

company, Sleeping Indian III (“Sleeping Indian”), for Dynamic to serve as the

general contractor to build a 8,100 square foot custom home for Klein.24 The

contract anticipated a maximum price of roughly $5.8 million, with price overruns

to be borne by Dynamic.25 Construction began in October 2014. Klein flew out to

Jackson on a private jet with his daughters for a ground breaking ceremony on the

property and photographed the event with a $22,000 camera he had just purchased.26

D. Klein Befriends the Glicks and Discusses Bleachers

In November 2014, Klein flew out to Jackson, again on a private jet, with

several family members.27 Renee prepared some gelato for Klein for his arrival.28

Klein invited Tim to ski with his family at Grand Targhee, a Wyoming ski resort,

and hired Tommy Moe, the former U.S. Olympian skier, as a guide for the ski trip.29

Throughout late 2014, Klein and Tim spoke several times a week via text, e-

mail, and on the phone.30 Tim soon considered himself to be Klein’s good friend,

speaking with him “maybe three or four times each week” and discussing “almost

24 Tr. 11-13 (Tim); Tr. 179-80, 256-57 (Klein). 25 PTO § II.5, Tr. 180-82 (Klein); JX100 at 21, 122 (Tim Dep.). 26 Tr. 12-13, 83 (Tim); Tr. 189-90, 256-57 (Klein). 27 Tr. 14 (Tim). 28 Tr. 124-125 (Renee). 29 Tr. 83 (Tim). 30 Tr. 15-16 (Tim).

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