Weinstein v. Appelbaum

193 F. Supp. 2d 774, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6993, 2002 WL 550103
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 2, 2002
Docket01 CIV.8515CMGAY
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 193 F. Supp. 2d 774 (Weinstein v. Appelbaum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weinstein v. Appelbaum, 193 F. Supp. 2d 774, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6993, 2002 WL 550103 (S.D.N.Y. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER DISMISSING PLAINTIFF’S COMPLAINT

McMAHON, District Judge.

Plaintiffs are former shareholders of defendant Tavolo, Inc., a privately-held company. They purchased shares of Series A and B Preferred Stock in 1998. In connection with a merger between Tavolo and defendant Our House, Inc., approved by the Tavolo Board December 8, 2000, plaintiffs’ shares were cancelled, because the shares to be received in the merger were valued at a mere $8.5 million, while holders of Series C through F Preferred Stock were entitled, under the Company’s certificate of incorporation, to the first $121 million in proceeds upon liquidation. Plaintiffs’ shares had no value unless the company could be sold for $121 million. The Company was in fact sold for less than 10% of that amount.

Under Delaware law, plaintiffs had 120 days to exercise their appraisal rights if they dissented from the merger. They did not do so.

*776 Last year, plaintiffs commenced an action in this Court, before the Hon. George Daniels, alleging various claims arising out of the Tavolo/Our House merger. (See Docket Entry 01 Civ. 0832.) They amended their complaint, then voluntarily discontinued their action on August 23, 2001, after a period of discovery. Less than one month later, plaintiffs filed the complaint in this action. Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint with prejudice. Plaintiffs opposed the motion. While the motion was sub judice, they filed an amended complaint — the second in this action, but the fourth overall. After a telephone conference with counsel, in which plaintiffs’ attorney represented that the amended complaint sought only to cure alleged deficiencies in pleading fraud with particularity, but did not alter or add to the underlying claims, the Court announced its intention to rule on the pending motion forthwith.

For the following reasons, the motion is granted, and the Complaint is dismissed without leave to replead.

The Complaint

Plaintiffs’ complaint, and even their amended complaint, are poorly drafted. Nonetheless, I will try to parse the allegations, construing them most favorably to plaintiffs (as I must).

The Complaint alleges that plaintiffs are holders of Series A and B preferred stock of defendant Digital Chef, which at some unspecified point changed its name to Ta-volo. Plaintiffs allegedly invested $3 million into Digital ChefiTavolo (hereinafter “Tavolo”). (Compl. ¶ 9).

Other groups of private equity investors and venture capitalists purchased stock in other preferred rounds, in amounts exceeding plaintiffs’ $3 million investment. In 1998, the corporation issued Series C and D shares in exchange for an additional $10 million in financing. (ComplJ 11). Plaintiffs alleged that, from at or about that time, Tavolo and its CEO (defendant Appelbaum) sought to eliminate their rights as shareholders and cause them to lose their investment. (Comply 9, 12-14). According to plaintiffs, the “sole goal” of Tavolo and Appelbaum was to “alter the capital structure, amend the certificate of incorporation and by-laws to covertly transfer total control of the Board of Directors to those making the new round or rounds of $10,000,000 financing ... in order to secretly permit a merger at any time after February, 1999 of the DCI-Tavolo corporation without voting control or financial benefit to the plaintiffs.” (Comply 19). They claim that Defendants never intended the new second round financing to be a bridge until sale to a strategic partner or until an IPO. (Comply 20).

Plaintiffs allege that Appelbaum and the Tavolo Board (who are not named as defendants) “informed” plaintiffs that the $10 million investment was merely a bridge to a liquidating event or sale to strategic purchasers for completion of an IPO. They allege that they were misled by these statements (Comply 16) — although they do not specify how they were misled. (At a later point in the complaint, they allege that their own investment was represented to be bridge financing pending some sort of sale to a strategic purchaser — see Compl. ¶¶ 35-37). They also claim to have been lulled into a false sense of security (Comply 18) by representations made at the time they invested that Tavolo was a profitable enterprise (Compl ¶ 28), and at later (unspecified) times that Tavolo was still profitable, though they do not say what action they took or refrained from taking in rebanee on their false sense of security. Plaintiffs allege that certain changes in the corporation’s voting rights and capital structure were not disclosed to them in advance, though they do not allege that they would have had any right to *777 prevent such changes. (Comply 27) They allege that certain business decisions and strategies of Appelbaum’s, including a plan to seek additional capital investment and nondisclosure of adverse financial information, “constituted a wrongful waste and spoliation of [Tavolo’s] assets, and a wrongful appropriation by the digital Chef directors for their own use and benefit of the inside information they had acquired from Appelbaum.” (ComplJ 41). Plaintiffs further allege that the defendants’ nondisclosure of the “true financial health of the defendant [Tavolo] was a waste of corporate assets.” (Id.) They also complain that they were not informed of new borrowing by defendants (ComplJ 45) — although they do'not indicate that they could have either prevented those borrowing or withdrawn their investment because of them. Plaintiffs allege that obtaining a loan from Silicon Valley Bank constituted “another form of self-dealing” on the part of Appelbaum (ComplJ 45) — although they do not allege that Appelbaum had any personal financial interest in the bank or in the loan. Rather, they complain that no efforts were made to repay their investment from newly acquired funds, as they had purportedly been promised. (Id.)

Finally, plaintiffs allege that defendants, as part of their plan and conspiracy to keep plaintiffs “from having their investment replaced as a bridge to a liquidating event or sale to a strategic partner or complete an IPO” (ComplJ 47), “defendant directors” (reference not logical, since Ap-pelbaum is the only individual named as a defendant) obtained a $1 million cash bonus that primarily benefitted Appelbaum while arranging the merger with defendant Our House. (Compl ¶ 47). Plaintiffs also claim that defendants (unspecified) made false and misleading statement to them about the impending SEC approval of an IPO (Compl,¶¶ 47, 49), all in violation of “their” fiduciary duty to plaintiffs.

Against this background, plaintiffs assert two counts. The First Count, sounding in common law fraud, contends — in language drawn directly from Section 10(b) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j — that defendants defrauded them between 1997 and 1999 by giving them false financial information; and by falsely telling them that the company would be the subject of an IPO, the proceeds of which would be used to buy plaintiffs out. They contend that these false statements defrauded and misled them into signing documents to dilute their shares in favor of the C and D preferred shareholders.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 F. Supp. 2d 774, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6993, 2002 WL 550103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinstein-v-appelbaum-nysd-2002.