TriCor Automotive Group v. Haytham Elzayn

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 28, 2023
Docket22A-PL-01137
StatusPublished

This text of TriCor Automotive Group v. Haytham Elzayn (TriCor Automotive Group v. Haytham Elzayn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TriCor Automotive Group v. Haytham Elzayn, (Ind. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FILED Sep 28 2023, 8:48 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT TRICOR ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES AUTOMOTIVE GROUP Douglas D. Church F. Anthony Paganelli Alexander P. Pinegar Joshua R. Lowry Church Church Hittle & Antrim Paganelli Law Group Noblesville, Indiana Indianapolis, Indiana Stuart G. Parsell Zieger, Tigges & Little LLP ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT Columbus, Ohio ALLEGIANCE ADMINISTRATORS LLC John R. Maley Peter J. Rusthoven Kian J. Hudson Barnes & Thornburg LLP Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

Tricor Automotive Group, September 28, 2023

Appellant-Plaintiff, Court of Appeals Case No. and Allegiance Administrators 22A-PL-1137 LLC, Appeal from the Appellant-Defendant, Hamilton Circuit Court v. The Honorable Dealer VSC Ltd., and Haytham Paul A. Felix, Judge Elzayn, Trial Court Cause No. Appellees-Defendants. 29C01-2005-PL-3324

1 Opinion by Senior Judge Shepard Judges Riley and Kenworthy concur.

1 We held oral argument in this appeal on April 5, 2023, in the Court of Appeals Courtroom in Indianapolis. We commend counsel on their oral and written advocacy.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-PL-1137 | September 28, 2023 Page 1 of 31 Shepard, Senior Judge.

[1] In 2018, Dealer VSC, Ltd. (“Dealer”) and its sole owner Haytham ElZayn

(“ElZayn”) entered into a series of interrelated contracts with Tricor

Automotive Group (“Tricor”) pertaining to a business venture operated 2 through Allegiance Administrators LLC (“Allegiance”). Eventually, questions

arose as to whether a default event occurred under a binding Memorandum of

Understanding (“MOU”) that incorporated by reference several of these

interrelated contracts. Tricor took contractual steps—individually and on

behalf of Allegiance—as though a default occurred. However, Dealer and

ElZayn maintained there was no default.

[2] Eventually, litigation arose between all four parties, culminating in the entry of

summary judgment for Dealer and ElZayn on a series of claims and

counterclaims. Tricor now appeals, asserting the trial court erred in granting

2 For ease of reference, we provide the following record citations to interrelated contracts discussed herein:

• Formation and Contribution Agreement between Dealer and Tricor. See Appellant’s App. Vol. II, pp. 206–220. • Agreement for Purchase and Sale of Goodwill between Allegiance and ElZayn. See Appellant’s App. Vol. III, pp. 122–37 (including amendment). • Binding Memorandum of Understanding between Dealer, ElZayn, and Tricor. See id.at 138–41. • Convertible Secured Promissory Note executed by Dealer in favor of Tricor. See id. at 142–45. • Unit Pledge Agreement between Dealer and Tricor. See id. at 146–151. • Initial Operating Agreement for Allegiance (owned by Dealer and Tricor). See id. at 5–81. • Amended Operating Agreement for Allegiance. See id. at 82–121.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-PL-1137 | September 28, 2023 Page 2 of 31 summary judgment to Dealer and ElZayn because—among other things—the

designated evidence indicates that a default event occurred.

[3] Although the parties generally focus on whether there was a financial default,

we ultimately conclude that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether

an operational default occurred. In light of this potential default, Dealer and

ElZayn are not entitled to summary judgment. We therefore reverse the grant

of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings on the merits.

Facts and Procedural History [4] ElZayn is an Ohio resident with experience administering vehicle service

contracts through entities he has formed, acquired, or controlled. One such

company is Dimension Service Corporation (“Dimension”), an entity 3 headquartered in Ohio. Tricor is an Indiana Corporation that ElZayn does not

control. Tricor’s CEO is Joseph Campbell and its CFO is Brian Leslie.

[5] At some point, ElZayn and Campbell discussed a business venture involving

the formation of Allegiance, an Ohio entity. The plan—as eventually outlined

in several interrelated agreements—was for Allegiance to take over a line of

business ElZayn currently ran through Dimension (“Assurant Line of

Business”), with ElZayn overseeing the day-to-day business affairs by serving as

3 At times, documents in this case refer to Tricor as “TAGUS” (Tricor Automotive Group US).

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-PL-1137 | September 28, 2023 Page 3 of 31 the CEO of Allegiance. In preparation, ElZayn formed Dealer—an Ohio entity

he wholly owned—to hold equity in Allegiance. ElZayn then transferred to

Dealer all of Dimension’s contractual interest in the Assurant Business while

reserving the personal goodwill associated with the Assurant Business.

[6] As a contribution to the business venture with Tricor, Dealer would transfer to

Allegiance all contractual interest in the Assurant Business. Separately,

Allegiance would purchase the personal goodwill from ElZayn. To fund

Allegiance’s purchase of the goodwill from ElZayn, Tricor would make a

substantial capital contribution to Allegiance earmarked for the purchase.

Tricor would ultimately have some protection in the business arrangement in

that, if the Assurant Business fell short of targeted earnings, ElZayn would

personally reimburse Allegiance up to $2 million, and Allegiance would

distribute any reimbursement to Tricor as an excess capital contribution.

The Agreements [7] To carry out the agreement in principle, on April 1, 2018 (“Closing Date”),

Dealer and Tricor executed a Formation and Contribution Agreement

regarding the establishment and operation of Allegiance. See Appellants’ App.

Vol. II, pp. 205-220. The agreement contemplated the contemporaneous

execution of several interrelated transactions, which was a condition to closing.

Upon closing, Dealer would hold 51% of the interest in Allegiance and Tricor

would hold the remaining 49% (each unit of interest, an “Allegiance Unit”),

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-PL-1137 | September 28, 2023 Page 4 of 31 with each party making an initial pro rata capital contribution. Allegiance

would employ ElZayn as its CEO, with ElZayn performing the job duties

outlined in Allegiance’s Operating Agreement. Pursuant to the Operating

Agreement, Allegiance would be managed by a Board of Managers.

[8] The Formation and Contribution Agreement addressed the plan for Allegiance

to purchase the personal goodwill from ElZayn. That is, Recital (H) states:

Allegiance . . . desires to acquire Mr. ElZayn’s personal goodwill associated with the Assurant Business so that it can ensure the continued benefit derived from that goodwill. Thus, in addition to its cash contribution towards the initial capitalization of Allegiance [], [Tricor] also intends to contribute $7,000,000.00 in cash to Allegiance. . . . Pursuant to a personal goodwill purchase agreement (the “Goodwill Purchase Agreement”) to be entered into between Allegiance . . . and Mr. ElZayn—as set forth in this Agreement—Allegiance . . . will use the contributed funds to purchase Mr. ElZayn’s personal goodwill related to the Assurant Business.

Appellants’ App. Vol. II, p. 207. Section 3(c) contains an acknowledgement

that $7 million contribution would “be used by Allegiance . . . to purchase Mr.

ElZayn’s personal goodwill associated with the Assurant Business” through a

separate agreement between Allegiance and ElZayn. Id. at 209.

[9] On the Closing Date, Allegiance and ElZayn executed that separate agreement,

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TriCor Automotive Group v. Haytham Elzayn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tricor-automotive-group-v-haytham-elzayn-indctapp-2023.