Trigano v. Bain & Co., Inc.

380 F.3d 22, 2004 WL 1837727
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 2004
Docket03-1319
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 380 F.3d 22 (Trigano v. Bain & Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trigano v. Bain & Co., Inc., 380 F.3d 22, 2004 WL 1837727 (1st Cir. 2004).

Opinion

OBERDORFER, Senior District Judge.

Serge Trigano was the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Paris-based international resort and travel giant Club Méditerranée, S.A. (better known as “Club Med”). In October 1996, Trigano issued a warning that Club Med’s profits for the fiscal year ending that month would be significantly below market expectations. When the company’s financial results became available — which was not until February 1997, due to systemic delays — profits below what Trigano warned of, combined with significant restructuring charges, produced a loss of 740,000,000 French francs (over $100 million). That same month, Trigano resigned. Shortly thereafter, he sued Bain & Co., Inc. (“Bain”), the United States-based owner of a French management consulting company 1 Club Med hired to perform a strategic audit in the wake of the October profit warning.

The complaint alleged a variety of theories arising out of what Trigano termed a “boardroom coup” that forced him to resign. In essence, it alleged that Bain conspired with Club Med’s largest shareholder to produce a fraudulent and misleading report critical of Trigano. An alleged co-conspirator then secretly and improperly sent that report to a key Club Med shareholder. The report, says Trigano, cost him the support of that key shareholder. Trigano claims that this loss of support— and his reasonable expectation that others would follow that shareholder’s lead— caused him to resign.

The district court granted Bain’s motion for judgment as a matter of law at the close of Trigano’s case. Trigano appeals. Concluding that Trigano did not present enough evidence for a reasonable trier of fact to find that Bain’s alleged conduct was the “cause” of Trigano’s losing his job, we affirm.

I

We begin with a de novo examination of the record evidence, focusing on the key issue of causation.

*24 Club Med’s 12-member Board of Directors was composed primarily of representatives of its major shareholders, many of which had longstanding relationships with Club Med. In 1996 and 1997, when the events at issue unfolded, Club Med’s two largest shareholders — Exor, S.A. (“Exor”) and Caisse des Depots et Consig-nations (“CDC”) — had each invested over $100 million in Club Med and collectively owned over 23% of Club Med stock. Each had two Directors on the Board. Six other major shareholders held one seat each. The remaining two Directors were Trigano and his father, Gilbert Trigano, neither of whom owned shares in the company at that time. Gilbert Trigano had been with Club Med since shortly after its founding and was Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board until he resigned in 1993. His son, the plaintiff here, then assumed those positions, having worked with Club Med in various capacities for nearly three decades.

In October 1996, the price of Club Med’s stock dropped precipitously — 17% in a single day — after Trigano warned that Club Med’s profits for that fiscal year would be between 100 and 150 million French francs, well below analysts’ expectations. Those expectations were fueled in part by what Trigano described as misinterpretations of financial forecasts he had made the previous month. (Trigano acknowledged that he knew his remarks had been misunderstood, but decided not to issue a public correction at the time.) In response to the profit warning, an Exor representative on the Club Med Board of Directors— Tiberto Ruy Brandolini d’Adda (“Brandoli-ni”) — suggested Club Med hire a management consultant to review the company’s strategy.

Club Med solicited and received four bids, including one from Bain. Trigano, for Club Med, chose Bain, in part because Brandolini recommended Bain, which had done an earlier analysis of Club Med for Exor. On January 8, 1997, Bain signed an agreement with Club Med to perform a strategic audit of the company (the “Strategic Audit”). The Bain partner responsible for the Strategic Audit was Jean Marie Péan. Trigano created a Steering Committee headed by Antoine Cachin, Club Med’s Executive Vice President, to oversee the study. A subcommittee — consisting of Péan, Cachin, an Exor representative (Pascal Lebard), and an internal Club Med auditor — served as the “Working Group” of the Steering Committee.

Throughout this time — both before and after Club Med retained Bain — Péan met with various Exor executives to discuss, among other things, the Strategic Audit. Neither Péan nor Exor disclosed these meetings to Trigano or Cachin, or indeed to anyone at Club Med. Trigano theorizes that these meetings evidence a conspiracy between Bain and Exor, pursuant to which Bain helped Exor engineer Trigano’s ouster. Bain received substantial increased business (and income) from clients affiliated with Exor after Trigano resigned, thus, Trigano claims, demonstrating Bain’s incentive and reward for participating in the conspiracy.

In February 1997, Club Med’s accountants and auditors completed their accounting for fiscal 1996, which had ended on October 31. They advised Trigano of the financial results: a loss of 740,000,000 French francs (over $100 million), including significant restructuring charges and operating profits below those Trigano had predicted in October. Before announcing these results publicly, Trigano communicated directly or “through channels” to individual directors the amount of the loss and his explanation of it. Many of them were surprised and disappointed by these results. On February 6, 1997, the audit *25 committee of the Board met to review the financial results; Trigano was “uncomfortable” with the committee members’ lack of responsiveness and participation at the meeting and conceded that the meeting “didn’t seem right.”

On February 7, 1997, Club Med directors representing Exor (Gianluigi Ga-betti) and CDC (Phillippe Lagayette) called Trigano to a meeting in Paris. Their summons was so insistent that Trigano canceled a planned trip to the United States. At the meeting, Gabetti and La-gayette told Trigano that they were “very unhappy” with his performance and had decided to “get rid of [him] and to fire [him].” These directors proposed that Trigano relinquish control over day-to-day operations and become chair of a newly created “supervisory board.” When Trigano rejected this offer, Gabetti and Lagayette told him to “take a week” to consider things and then they would meet again.

Trigano then contacted the remaining directors to find out whether they would continue to support him. He assumed Exor and CDC were making similar contacts to consolidate support for their position. Trigano or his father received assurances of support from each of the six remaining directors over the next week. Nippon Life Insurance Company (“Nippon Life”) was a major Club Med shareholder and its Chairman, Josei Itoh, a Club Med director. On February 13, 1997, Trigano flew to Tokyo to meet with Itoh, who expressed his “full support” for Trigano and promised to send him a proxy for the upcoming Board meeting if he needed it.

Around this time, on February 14, at the direction of Exor, Péan produced the report that Trigano alleges to have been misleading and fraudulent (the “February 14 report”). Péan delivered that report to Exor on February 15, but — at Exor’s direction — did not provide it to Cachin or Trigano.

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Bluebook (online)
380 F.3d 22, 2004 WL 1837727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trigano-v-bain-co-inc-ca1-2004.