Whitney Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin

60 F.3d 8, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 19465, 1995 WL 419138
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 1995
Docket94-2042
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 60 F.3d 8 (Whitney Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin) 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
Whitney Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin, 60 F.3d 8, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 19465, 1995 WL 419138 (1st Cir. 1995).

Opinion

*10 TORRUELLA, Chief Judge.

At issue here is whether the Defendants were properly required to pay the Plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees. Plaintiffs/appellees are Whitney Brothers Company (“Whitney Brothers”) and Griffin M. Stabler, Whitney Brothers’ president, chief executive officer and director. Defendants/appellants, David C. Sprafkin and Joan Barenholtz, are the trustees of the Bernard M. Barenholtz Trust, Whitney Brothers’ majority shareholder.

In the underlying litigation, Plaintiffs sued to compel Defendants to sell their stock in Whitney Brothers pursuant to a written buy/ sell contract. After two years of litigation, the district court ordered the sale at Defendants’ asking price and held that the Plaintiffs were entitled to satisfy the purchase price with a prepayable promissory note. The district court also concluded that the Defendants had resisted their obligations under the buy/sell agreement in bad faith, and accordingly used its inherent powers to shift the Plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees. The district court predicated its bad faith finding on, inter alia, the Defendants’ continuous insistence that the purchase price was not pre-payable.

On appeal, we reversed the district court’s judgment with respect to prepayment. The Defendants filed a Motion to Reconsider the imposition of attorneys’ fees in light of our reversal on the prepayability of the note. The district court held that the fee award was still justified but amended it to exclude fees earned in connection with the prepayment issue. Defendants now appeal. For the following reasons, we vacate that portion of the court’s order imposing fees and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Whitney Brothers is a New Hampshire corporation that produces wooden learning materials. Bernard Barenholtz acquired 62.6% of the company’s outstanding shares in 1969. Ten years later, he transferred these shares to the Bernard M. Barenholtz Trust (the “Trust”) and named himself and defendant David Sprafkin trustees. Plaintiff Griffin Stabler owned 32.7% of the shares, and his son, David Stabler, owned the remaining 4.7%.

On January 27, 1987, Whitney Brothers, the trustees, and Griffin Stabler executed a written buy/sell agreement (“The Agreement”). Under The Agreement, Whitney Brothers would buy the Trust’s shares within ninety days of the death of Bernard Baren-holtz and buy Griffin Stabler’s shares within ninety days of Stabler’s death. To determine the purchase price, the parties would plug an agreed-upon appraisal into a formula to determine the purchase price. If the parties could not agree on an appraisal, they would each get their own and plug the average into the formula. The contract also provided for payment by a promissory note, with monthly installments over ten years at 10% interest per annum. The Agreement did not mention whether prepayment of the note was permissible.

On February 3, 1987, Bernard Barenholtz’ (and Defendants’) attorney Samuel M. Spraf-kin wrote a letter advising Mr. Barenholtz that the promissory note should be prepay-able without penalty. The district court found that the parties orally agreed to the letter’s prepayment provision. Barenholtz then placed the letter in a file with the written contract.

When Bernard Barenholtz died, on August 5, 1989, his daughter, defendant Joan Baren-holtz, assumed his trustee position. A few days later, plaintiff Stabler and defendant Sprafkin discussed the contract’s required stock sale. One of the parties asked E.F. Greene to update a past appraisal of Whitney Brothers. 1 Sprafkin rejected Greene’s appraisal; Whitney Brothers accepted it. Relying on Greene’s appraisal, Whitney Brothers tendered to Defendants a prepayable promissory note for $1,178,000 for the stock. 2

*11 Instead of responding immediately, Defendants secured a significantly higher appraisal from Alfred Schimmel, a real estate appraiser from New York City. They then rejected Whitney Brothers’ tender by letter, without mentioning the note’s prepayment clause. When Stabler learned of Defendants’ appraisal, he rejected it as too high.

Ultimately, Plaintiffs sued to compel the transfer of the stock. Ten months later, on December 13, 1990, as part of their cross-motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs offered to tender either $1,349,343 3 immediately or, if the court found that The Agreement did not permit prepayment, that amount over ten years at 10% interest. Defendants again rejected the tender. They now contend that they rejected it because: (1) it omitted $145,-000 worth of interest that had accrued since November 3,1989, 90 days after the death of Bernard Barenholtz, and (2) it was invalid because the first option permitted prepayment, and the second option was conditioned upon a court judgment that prepayment was prohibited. Plaintiffs maintain that the Defendants continually and in bad faith resisted their obligations under The Agreement so that they could sell the stock to one of Whitney Brothers’ competitors at a higher price.

In response to the cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court: (1) ordered Defendants to sell their stock; (2) found that Plaintiffs were not entitled to prepay the note; and (3) decided that a trial was necessary on the issue of the stock price. See Whitney Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin, No. 90-54-S (D.N.H. filed June 5, 1991) (the “Summary Judgment Opinion”).

After a six-day trial, the court issued an order in which it: (1) required the Plaintiffs to pay $1,349,343 for the stock; 4 (2) reconsidered and reversed, sua sponte, its previous order and ruled that the parties’ oral agreement regarding the prepayability of the note was binding and, therefore, that the Plaintiffs could pay for the stock with a prepayable promissory note; (3) ruled that interest on the note would begin to accrue when it was executed, and not before; and (4) used its inherent powers to assess attorneys’ fees against the Defendants based on their bad faith conduct throughout the litigation. 5 Whitney Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin, No. 90-054-S, 1992 WL 686272 (D.N.H. Sept. 30, 1992) (“the Order”). The Order cited the Defendants’ refusal to accept a prepayable note despite their oral agreement to do so as one of five instances of their bad faith.

On appeal (the “First Appeal”), we, inter alia, reversed the district court’s judgment with respect to the prepayability of the note, holding that The Agreement precluded the Plaintiffs’ efforts to prepay regardless of whether a subsequent oral agreement provided for prepayment. Whitney Bros. Co. v. Sprafkin, 3 F.3d 530 (1st Cir.1993).

Defendants then filed a motion asking that the court reconsider the imposition of attorneys’ fees in light of our reversal on the prepayment issue. The court denied the Motion to Reconsider without a hearing, 6

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60 F.3d 8, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 19465, 1995 WL 419138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-bros-co-v-sprafkin-ca1-1995.