Vaughan v. Recall Total Information Management., Inc.

217 F. App'x 211
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 14, 2007
Docket05-1491
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 217 F. App'x 211 (Vaughan v. Recall Total Information Management., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughan v. Recall Total Information Management., Inc., 217 F. App'x 211 (4th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This dispute involves interpretation of a Stock Purchase Agreement (“SPA” or “Agreement”) entered into by the parties. The Agreement governs the terms of sale of a document shredding business previously owned and operated by Appellees Theda L. Vaughan (“Theda”) and James Ricky Vaughan and purchased by Appellants Recall Total Information Management, Inc. (“Recall”), and Brambles USA, Inc (“Brambles”). The Agreement provides that the purchase price is to be paid as follows: 1) a lump sum payment upon closing; and 2) a percentage of the business’s “Sales Revenues” for the following year (“Earnout” payment). The parties disagree on what constitutes “Sales Revenues” under the terms of the contract as well as the proper method of calculation of the Vaughans’ Earnout. Recall also asserts a Counterclaim that seeks to recover a portion of the Earnout monies already paid to the Vaughans or a set-off against any award the Vaughans receive. Appellant Recall challenges the trial court’s interpretation of certain portions of the Agreement and the dismissal of its Counterclaim.

I.

The Vaughans are former shareholders of Secured Data of America, Inc. (“SDA”), a Tennessee corporation. SDA was a document destruction company that specialized in the destruction of confidential documents and data. SDA was headquartered in Greenville, South Carolina, and maintained operating facilities located primarily on the East Coast. SDA also had a facility in Texas.

Recall is an information management company incorporated in Delaware with its principal place of business in Atlanta, Georgia. Recall provides services such as physical and electronic document storage and retrieval, protection of computer backup data, and destruction of sensitive documents. Brambles is the parent company of Recall, which likewise has its principal place of business in Atlanta, Georgia. 1

In November 1999, the Vaughans had an offering memorandum prepared for the purpose of determining the estimated market value of SDA. Among other things, the offering memorandum boasted SDA’s existing client base, operating capacity figures demonstrating an ability to expand, and the potential for significant growth in sales. The offering memorandum generated interest in SDA by other companies.

On August 2, 2000, the Vaughans contracted to sell SDA to Recall pursuant to a Stock Purchase Agreement. (J.A. at 530-83; Pl.’s Exh. 1) Theda Vaughan was the general manager of SDA and James Ricky Vaughan was Chief Executive Officer. The Agreement provided that Theda would remain employed at SDA as Executive Vice President and be responsible for eom *214 pany sales. In addition to retaining Theda, Recall entered into employment agreements with two other SDA employees, one of whom was Christopher Lupo (“Lupo”). 2 Recall agreed that if it materially changed the job positions of these employees, it would provide Theda with comparable or better support. Mr. Vaughan was to stay on as a consultant for up to six months after closing.

At closing, the Vaughans were paid $15,522,960. The Vaughans also had the potential to receive up to an additional $11,750,000 based on an Earnout formula contained in the Agreement. The parties agreed to the Earnout as a means for providing additional compensation to the Vaughans as the projected sales numbers approached their targets. 3 The Earnout was payable in two installments: 1) the Vaughans were entitled to a partial Earn-out after six months if sales revenues exceeded $6,150,000; and 2) the Vaughans were entitled to a final Earnout after 12 months if sales revenues exceeded $12,300,000. To maximize that final Earn-out payment, SDA needed to achieve sales revenues in the amount of $17,950,000 for the year following execution of the SDA— the period August 2, 2000 through August 1. 2001 (“Earnout period”). If accomplished, this gain in sales would represent a growth of nearly 50%.

During the Earnout period, Recall acquired several other document shredding businesses, including InstaShred, DocuShred(PA), DocuShred (TN), SecureShred (Greenville) and MobilShred. With the exception of MobilShred, Recall was entirely responsible for these acquisitions. Although Recall financed the purchase of MobilShred, Theda and Chris Lupo are credited with helping to facilitate the MobilShred acquisition.

In May 2001, after Recall acquired InstaShred, Recall reorganized its document destruction operations into two separate companies—“SDS West” and “SDS East” (or SDA). InstaShred was primarily serving the West Coast or western United States and SDA was primarily serving the East Coast plus Texas. Recall elected to divide the businesses geographically, placing SDA’s Texas operations under SDS West and all operations east of Texas under SDS East.

After acquisition, DocuShred (PA and TN) and SecureShred ceased to operate. The accounts previously serviced by these businesses were absorbed and serviced by SDS East (SDA). 4 SDA’s servicing of these accounts means SDA picked up, shredded, and baled the trash in addition to selling the paper and billing the client. SDA also took over former InstaShred operations in Virginia and Florida. The rest of InstaShred’s business made up Recall’s SDS West operations. MobilShred’s operations were placed under SDS West *215 since its operations were centered in Vancouver and Calgary.

SDA did not meet its sales goals for the Earnout period. Instead, based upon estimated sales revenues of $15,706,000, the Appellees were paid $1,236,000 after the first six months and an additional $5,847,000 at the end of the Earnout period, for a total Earnout payment of $7,083,000. 5 Thus, the total payout for the sale of SDA was $22,305,960.

In February 2002, the Vaughans commenced the underlying civil action alleging breach of contract. Specifically, the Vaughans complained that 1) Recall wrongfully excluded $522,649 of sales revenues generated by SDA during the Earn-out period; and 2) Recall, in violation of the “good faith” (express and implied) provisions of the SPA, prevented Theda from maximizing her Earnout.

In May 2003, Recall amended its Answer to include a counterclaim, the gist of which was that Recall had overpaid rather than underpaid Theda. According to Recall, the Earnout was not calculated properly because SDA had been over billing one of its clients—Bank of America. Following the Earnout period, Recall reached an agreement with Bank of America whereby Recall repaid a portion of the overcharge and negotiated a new contract.

The district court presided over a three-day bench trial. At the conclusion of the trial, the district court rejected the Vaughans’ allegation that Recall, in bad faith, prevented SDA from reaching its projected sales goal. 6 (J.A. at 1111-20, ¶¶ 21-84, and 1128, ¶ 1) However, the district court ruled in favor of the Vaughans on the acquisition revenue issue, finding that SDA performed the actual services and “generated” the revenue previously attributable to the acquired entities. (J.A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Branhaven, LLC v. BeefTek, Inc.
965 F. Supp. 2d 650 (D. Maryland, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 F. App'x 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-v-recall-total-information-management-inc-ca4-2007.